The Orange Man, along with the rest of the world, wanted to end international involvement in a never-ending battle that was consuming servicemen's lives and cash while enriching powerful Afghanis. The agreement was endorsed by the UN and NATO.When he negotiated the future of Afghanistan with the Taliban, other representatives were not present. Basically the vast majority of Afghanistan was not given a say in what their future would look like because orange Twat wanted a sound bite rather than something thoughtfully crafted that would actually give the inhabitants of the country something to look forward to other than “hey, we are off now but the nice Taliban said they would treat you all very well”.
When would be the right time? The country has been upside down since the beginning of recorded history, do you think hanging around for a few more decades would make a difference? I think 20 years of funding and training ought to be enough investment to hand the keys back to the people. If they don't want them, what else can you do?started by W - right response to 9/11
expanded by Obama, the troop surge was needed and it worked
deal to wind it down by Trump, not a good one, see his track record
Biden got stuck with it, politics made him stick with it, ****** outcome
So is the corruption of Afgan gov't officials who channeled billions of US cash into their own pockets. As is the well-documented apathy of Afghan soldiers who regularly refused literacy training, habitually used drugs on the job, cowered in the face of their enemy, and deserted their fellow soldiers when the going got tough. Not debatable.the idea was to bring stability and allow an elected, secular government to form
that was impossible with daily Taliban bombings in the towns and cities
the troop surge stopped that, they ran an election, the place had some semblance of order
this is all known and well documented, it's not debatable
if the goal was to bring security and stability to the placeWhen would be the right time?
You have eloquently said what an Afghani told me years ago.When would be the right time? The country has been upside down since the beginning of recorded history, do you think hanging around for a few more decades would make a difference? I think 20 years of funding and training ought to be enough investment to hand the keys back to the people. If they don't want them, what else can you do?
Sending mountains of cash and soldiers to die there had to end sometime.
The Orange Man, along with the rest of the world, wanted to end international involvement in a never-ending battle that was consuming servicemen's lives and cash while enriching powerful Afghanis. The agreement was endorsed by the UN and NATO.
The deal outlined conditions for the drawdown of NATO troops and the uptick in responsibility for Taliban to control terrorist activity in the area. Afghans were supposed to continue talks with the Taliban to sort out their domestic issues without US interference, they had 2 years to do so. They sat on their hands.
Here are a couple of meaningful quotes from those at the table, they help rationalize the deal.
"US troops had been killing terrorists in Afghanistan by the thousands and now it is time for someone else to do that work and it will be the Taliban and it could be surrounding countries. I really believe the Taliban wants to do something to show we're not all wasting time If bad things happen, we'll (the USA ) go back with a force like no-one's ever seen."
“Afghanistan needs to begin to stand up on its own. … You have got Afghan leaders with beautiful homes all over the Middle East, in Europe. There’s corruption everywhere. It’s time for the Afghan people to do the hard work, the heavy lifting, and demand that they push back against the Taliban, not just militarily, but politically, exercise their own rights, secure their own freedom. We have provided all the resources the Afghan National Security Forces could possibly ever have dreamed of and all the training over two decades.”
What can one possibly say to the families of the servicemen that were just killed by terrorists while helping evacuate Afghans? Personally, I can't rationalize another soldier or dollar spent there until the locals step up to the plate.
Occupations never work out.
Worked out in Japan,
Germany
and South Korea.
The Romans occupied most of Europe for 1000 years,
from the church
to the government
to the common law and the judicial systems.
I’m kind of torn on this one.Former Canadian military commanders explaining that we only got 3700 out because of layers of bureaucracy and political micro-management.
If there weren't some safeguards would we have ended up with a bunch of queue jumping criminals?I’m kind of torn on this one.
1. do you forego all due process in this situation? Where do you draw the line of what documents are / are not required?
2. Do you risk additional soldier lives to go search out those beyond the immediate vicinity of the airport?
3. Do you risk lives for Canadians that have a passport but choose to live elsewhere and then cry to Canada for help even though their only tie here is the passport?
4. Fairly easy to criticize the operation and make yourself blameless. No matter if it was 3,000…5,000…10,000 when will the effort be ‘sufficient’ to not be criticized?
As one of the commanders suggested, a reasonable middle ground could have been cursory check then evacuate to secure location (military base?). Complete the process there with background checks, interviews etc to attempt the limit undesirables in the rush.I’m kind of torn on this one.
1. do you forego all due process in this situation? Where do you draw the line of what documents are / are not required?
2. Do you risk additional soldier lives to go search out those beyond the immediate vicinity of the airport?
3. Do you risk lives for Canadians that have a passport but choose to live elsewhere and then cry to Canada for help even though their only tie here is the passport?
4. Fairly easy to criticize the operation and make yourself blameless. No matter if it was 3,000…5,000…10,000 when will the effort be ‘sufficient’ to not be criticized?
I’m kind of torn on this one.
1. do you forego all due process in this situation? Where do you draw the line of what documents are / are not required?
2. Do you risk additional soldier lives to go search out those beyond the immediate vicinity of the airport?
3. Do you risk lives for Canadians that have a passport but choose to live elsewhere and then cry to Canada for help even though their only tie here is the passport?
4. Fairly easy to criticize the operation and make yourself blameless. No matter if it was 3,000…5,000…10,000 when will the effort be ‘sufficient’ to not be criticized?
Former Canadian military commanders explaining that we only got 3700 out because of layers of bureaucracy and political micro-management.