blackascoal
The Force is With Me
They are making gains because we never committed a level of troops there that was designed to take and hold ground. Despite my disagreement with the Iraq war, things are getting better in Iraq. People are moving back into mixed neighborhoods. Marriages between Sunnis and Shi'a are beginning to come back to numbers that look like they did when the government was secular and run by Saddam. Granted, there are still car bombs going off pretty regularly, but Iraqi's themselves are feeling better about their future.
All of that was accomplished because the US and our allies, but Iraqi and non Iraqi, went into neighborhoods and took on the guerrilla fighters and defeated them. It will probably take another 2 decades to rebuild all of Iraq and there is still the risk of them becoming a seriously radical fundamentalist Islamic country.
The Afghan people lived in hell under the Taliban, we through them out of power and then stepped back to the point that only Kabul is held by people who are friendly to the US. We have a moral obligation to the people there to fix this.
Things are getting better in Iraq?
Bombs targeting Shiites in Iraq kill at least 48, wound more than 250
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2009/08/10/bombs-targeting-shiites-i_n_255318.html
Is it getting worse again?
On June 20th, a huge lorry bomb exploded in Taza, a Turkmen town just south of the disputed city of Kirkuk, killing at least 70 people. Two days later at least seven bombs went off in and around Baghdad, including a roadside blast, a car bomb and a suicide attack, killing some 30 people altogether. And on June 24th another big bomb killed at least 70 people in Baghdad, perhaps the single deadliest attack in Iraq this year. The insurgents, knowing that the Americans are poised to pull out, are aiming to make Iraq as unstable as ever.
http://drjohnrobertson.blogspot.com/2009/06/economistasks-is-iraq-getting-worse.html
Strange that you find the benchmark of security as things getting back to where they were under Saddam.
There is no other way to see our invasion of Iraq as anything other than an abomination of humanity and the trashing of international law.
And in case you forgot, the Iraqi people never asked us to invade their country and mass-murder their citizens. We did that on our own. Nothing personal .. just business.
You can attempt to make koolaid out of that if you choose.
And you can commit your own son or daughter to die in the desert for your less than noble cause if you choose .. but like Iraq, Americans will mostly be doing the dying on their own.
UK poll: Afghan war is ‘unwinnable’
http://www.infowars.com/uk-poll-afghan-war-is-unwinnable/
and then there is this ...
Support for Afghan war drops, CNN poll finds
http://edition.cnn.com/2009/POLITICS/08/06/poll.afghanistan/
and this ...
Poll: More view Afghan war as 'mistake'
http://www.usatoday.com/news/world/2009-03-16-poll_N.htm
and there is this ...
Global Poll Finds Widespread Belief that Afghans Want NATO Forces Out
http://article.wn.com/view/2009/07/...Widespread_Belief_that_Afghans_Want_NATO_F_c/
Resentful Afghans unlikely to welcome, support government, foreign troops or Taliban
LASHKAR GAH - Incoming American forces are likely to continue to face a hostile Afghan population, even as they seek to reverse their military losses to a resurgent Taliban.
So hopeless is the prevailing situation in the landlocked country; that observers say that Afghan civilians are unlikely to take sides or offer unconditional support to either the foreign troops, the Afghan Government or the Taliban.
Villagers in some districts have taken up arms against foreign troops to protect their homes or in anger after losing relatives in air strikes, the New York Times quotes several community representatives, as saying.
Others have been moved to join insurgents out of poverty or simply because the Taliban’s influence is overtly pervasive.
Taliban control of the countryside is so extensive in provinces like Kandahar and Helmand that winning districts back will involve tough fighting and may ignite further tensions, residents and local officials warn.
The government has no presence in five of southern Helmand’s 13 districts, and in several others, like Nawa, it holds only the district town, where troops and officials live virtually under siege.
In rural areas, the local population has accepted Taliban rule and is watching the United States troop buildup with trepidation.
The southern provinces of Afghanistan have suffered the worst civilian casualties since NATO’s deployment to the region in 2006.
“Now there are more people siding with the Taliban than with the government,” the NYT quoted Abdul Qadir Noorzai, head of the Afghan Independent Human Rights Commission in southern Afghanistan, as saying.
“People are hostages of the Taliban, but they look at the coalition also as the enemy, because they have not seen anything good from them in seven or eight years,” adds Hajji Abdul Ahad Helmandwal, a district council leader from Nadali in Helmand Province.
Foreign troops continue to make mistakes that enrage whole sections of this deeply tribal society, like the killing of a tribal elder’s son and his wife as they were driving to their home in Helmand two months ago.
The infusion of more American troops into southern Afghanistan is aimed at ending a stalemate between NATO and Taliban forces.
http://blog.taragana.com/n/resentfu...t-government-foreign-troops-or-taliban-98479/
In the end, history will record our presence in Afghanistan as just another failed American for-profit war .. no differently than our atrocity-laden misadventure in Iraq.