I'm afraid your bottomline doesn't hold with popular sentiment on the ground and it's how we're perceived by them that matters - that's what made the Islamic Republic of Iran possible. The current governments dependence on the occupying force does not make it free will. You can invade any nation on earth and engage in patronising and degrading statecraft, ensuring through military force that the newly installed rulers - friendly to the occupiers of course - will disregard the sovereign will of the people through weakness and realities on the ground. That is not 'spreading freedom'.FEOS wrote:
Oh. So when it suits your argument, it's agreeable. It's only when it's a sovereign country we were once at war with...no, that's not it. It's only when it's a Middle Eastern country...no, that's not it. It's only when it's convenient to your argument that the US military being in a foreign country at that country's request is "occupation".
Bottomline: If either the Iraqi or Afghan government asked the US and other Coalition forces to leave, they would. "Full stop" to use your vernacular. That's not at all "occupation" or "imperialism" by any definition.
And for your information FEOS - this holds for any fucking nation on earth. The UK, Poland, all of the rest. They're all culpable. It goes for Russia in Chechnya, China in Tibet, Spain in the Basque Country, the UK in Ireland, Israel in Palestine, Russia in the caucasus... If you want to make stupid allegations then that's fair enough.
Do I want to make friends over there? The warlords control where all the drug money that feeds the Taliban is grown - and some food when they get around to it....FEOS wrote:
Well...aren't we the ethnocentric elitist? "Tribal warlord-centric barbarians". I bet you'd make a TON of friends over there. The warlords control the rural areas. The government controls the urban areas...where most of the population is.
Do the Taliban not represent a portion of Afghan society? Where do they fit in to the 'New Afghanistan'? You speak of asking the Afghans what they want - where do the Taliban fit with that?FEOS wrote:
As is Petraeus. What's your point?
Those captures if I recall correctly occurred at a time when significant political pressure was being exerted on Pakistan - with talk of 'Is Pakistan a friend or an enemy?'. Hey presto they produce two fine catches..... and almost nothing since. The captures indicate the leadership had fled well beyond FATA as early as 2002. Finding these people would be like finding a needle in a haystack in dense, dirty and friendly Pakistan.FEOS wrote:
How so? You imply that they will be moving to the cities from the "mud huts" of the FATA. That there's no way they would stay there if they weren't insane. Yet they are...specifically because the Pakistani government has no control over those areas. When they go to the areas where the government does hold sway, they get captured or killed.
So...reinforcing my point. And doing the opposite for yours.
That was intelligence services budget cuts, incompetence and laziness. All you guys really need is a secret service that is as good as Mossad. Mossad takes care of business and it is only in very extreme circumstances that Israel engage in foolish ventures like occupation - e.g. Lebanon in the 80s - which ultimately and inevitably turned out to be a huge and costly mistake from which they were forced to withdraw. Why do you believe Afghans and Iraqis would like the US/UK/etc. occupation any better than they would like Israeli occupation?FEOS wrote:
Because doing what you describe led to the safe haven that allowed 9/11 to be planned, trained, and executed.
Maybe that?
There was no guarantee the US would do anything. They sat tight and said 'fuck off USA'. They didn't say 'please commence bombing raids, we welcome them with open arms'. Do you think they are actually clinically insane or something?FEOS wrote:
"Literal terms"? Is that the best you've got?
They knew full well the consequences of saying no. So they rogered up to a fight. How is that not--in fact--asking for what they got?
Correction: Good relations with the governments of all but two countries. Many of these governments as you well know are despotic sheikhdoms, dictatorships and 'quasi' democracies. They do not represent the will of the people. Honest question: what kind of government do you think the people of Saudi Arabia would elect? Pro-American? Anti-American?FEOS wrote:
I fully realize that our support of Israel is not popular in the ME. Yet we've got good relations with all but two countries in the region. Hmmm...wonder how that happened if our relationship with Israel is the driver of all ill will in the world?
And again, the Muj were pissed (and rightly so) not because of anything involving Israel, but because we pulled the rug out from under them after the Soviets left. That had ZERO to do with our support of Israel.
When the mujahideen got the USSR out of their country they started fighting with each other. What were the US going to do: ask them to play nice? Take the place of the USSR as 'regional administrator'? You may believe that democracy is right for everywhere in the world right now but the fact of the matter is that civil wars are part and parcel of state building. You would have been putting a sticky plaster on a festering wound of tension, just like in Iraq - although the drive to oust the US seemed to unite the various factions at the marches last week.
I find it odd that you can't see how terror attacks cause significant economic loss. Especially as you probably live within a few hundred miles of New York City.FEOS wrote:
The impact they have on the lives of the people they kill and maim for one.
Oh, but that's right...I don't care about people getting killed. Yet supposedly you do. But only money is worth fighting for, apparently.
As I said before, the impact of those attacks on the markets pales in comparison to other, non-terrorist attack-related economic drops. Perspective.
My comment referred to the predominantly Muslim region encompassing Morocco to Pakistan. I will concede that Afghanistan is a different kettle of fish from Iraq. Do you think the Iraqi government however, whose people clearly want the US gone, could afford to say 'go home'? How is that not 'over a barrel'? It may not be coercion but it has the same effect.FEOS wrote:
The Afghans aren't screaming for us to leave, and I know of no such thing. I suppose any country that is friendly to the US is "over a barrel" and is being coerced incessantly by the evil imperialistic occupation forces, right?
Why don't you give those nations some fucking credit? Your attitude in your posts is revealing an unfortunate elitist ethnocentricity that I wouldn't have predicted in you.
Basically, you've described the Afghan people as a bunch of barbarians who can't/won't think for themselves or do what they feel is in the best interest of their people...utter nonsense, Cam. Utter nonsense.
I'll give those nations credit when they rule themselves with absolutely zero direct external intervention in their civil and political affairs, in the same manner as I will not give credit to any African nation that has developed a dependency on international aid.
Last edited by CameronPoe (2008-11-24 16:28:32)