Sponsor yes, but removing the Taliban from power did really do anything to prevent another 9/11. Revenge alone, on the Taliban or Osama, is not worth the price in lives or dollars we have spent.Braddock wrote:
I'd argue with that. Iraq had NOTHING to do with 9/11 whereas the Taliban was a known sponsor and supporter of Al Qaeda. Bin Laden was also thought to be located somewhere in the Bora Bora region at the time and the Taliban were refusing to give him up.Flaming_Maniac wrote:
Afghanistan had just about as much to do with 9/11 as Iraq did.
Braddock wrote:
I don't get your mentality, do you find it more acceptable to send thousands of Americans to die in the Middle East than to stand in line at a security check-point?Flaming_Maniac wrote:
We have the Patriot Act, and yet increasing security in airports that led to any more time spent in security would be completely unacceptable. Acts like that were really only passed because the right took advantage of the present situation, and had some excellent spin.
It's not me, its the American people. We have been so complacent for the past thirty years or so that we just don't understand what kind of world we live in now. People talk about how terrible 9/11 is and how much better airport security should be, but when it comes to paying those extra taxes, or waiting in that security line, suddenly it loses a lot of importance.Braddock wrote:
If you honestly don't want another 9/11 style attack to happen again you're going to have to deal with Israeli level security... welcome to the real world my friend. The US have had a cosy time of it up until 9/11, Timothy McVeigh was the closest thing you got to terrorism but now you get to see what life has been like in Israel, Northern Ireland and all the other trouble spots of the world.Flaming_Maniac wrote:
Again, the American people aren't going to put up with Israeli-level security. We aren't worried about an ICBM, we're worried about poisoned water supplies, dirty bombs snuck into the country, or running another plane into a building.
Suicide bombing isn't all that different than conventional fighting. People going into battle know that there is a significant chance they are not going to survive, but they do it anyways, people on both sides. They hold the ideals they are fighting for higher than their own life, and when you can do that, it isn't much further to knowingly giving your life for a cause. We've had some threads recently on soldiers diving on grenades to save their comrades, why would they do that? They value the life of their friends and the ideals they are fighting for more than their own life.Braddock wrote:
Maybe suicide bombing will got old eventually too!?Flaming_Maniac wrote:
Christianity gave up the Crusades eventually. The religion didn't particularly change, but sending a whole bunch of people to slaughter got old.
Am I directly equating blowing yourself up in a shopping mall with saving friends? No, but you have to put it all in perspective, not everyone values the same things that we do in our society. In their point of view the suicide bomber is just as heroic. Only when this kind of indoctrination stops, when recruitment by terror organization drops off, will we ever be able to stop a practice like suicide bombing.
Braddock wrote:
If you honestly don't want another 9/11 style attack to happen again you're going to have to deal with Israeli level security... welcome to the real world my friend. The US have had a cosy time of it up until 9/11, Timothy McVeigh was the closest thing you got to terrorism but now you get to see what life has been like in Israel, Northern Ireland and all the other trouble spots of the world.Flaming_Maniac wrote:
Again, the American people aren't going to put up with Israeli-level security. We aren't worried about an ICBM, we're worried about poisoned water supplies, dirty bombs snuck into the country, or running another plane into a building.
Where does sport end and the real world begin? It's a game being played with very high stakes.Braddock wrote:
Laughable. 'Attack is the best form of defence' only holds true in sport. If you really want to stop it at the source you're going to have to wipe them out genocide style.Flaming_Maniac wrote:
We really can't do much about these type of attacks, except stop them at the source.
They must be removed completely, yes. To completely end terrorism, you would have to stop all recruitment, and kill all the current members. Obviously neither one of those is ever going to happen.
I didn't say we did it the right way. In fact I would say we definitely did it the wrong way.Braddock wrote:
This is not a Chuck Norris film. That nonsensical macho attitude will have the US going the same way as the Romans did. You have to fight smart, if you continue down the heavy-handed road you'll end up with no friends in the International community and the minute China take over top spot no one will put up with your shit anymore. There is no clean decisive win in the 'war on terror', you've declared war on a concept... all you can do is monitor and contain terrorist activity and that is not done by invading countries, it is done using intelligence agencies and stealth.Flaming_Maniac wrote:
Now that they know they can fuck with us, they have to understand that if they do fuck with us, there will be consequences.
I do not blame the Bush administration in particular for the pitfalls, just politics in general. I have no reason to believe anyone else that could have been elected would have done a better job. The fact is politics have royally screwed up our situation there, in its presentation to the American people, and by limiting the number of troops committed initially against recommendations by the Pentagon. If the experts had been listened to and the President had been a little more direct about why we were going into Afghanistan and especially Iraq, we would have actually been able to declare an obvious achievement of goals, not say mission accomplished on a boat after the easy part was over.
If you're going to do something, commit to it. Honestly, I don't really see why, logically, we needed to go into Iraq or Afghanistan. The fact however is the American people were bloodthirsty after 9/11 and something had to be done, so we went to war. Now if we're put in a war, even if it's one we don't want to or shouldn't be in, you have to commit. You half-ass it, and you get the kind of situation we are in presently or like we were in Vietnam. If you aren't willing to go the whole way with it, it probably wasn't a good enough reason to start a war for in the first place.