Originally posted by: cwjerome
Originally posted by: Jaskalas
Originally posted by: chucky2
It's just not as simple as leaving Afghanistan.
You?re suppose to take the fight to the enemy, not sit around on the streets waiting to die. If we?re not in it to win it, then we shouldn?t be in it at all. If we?re not willing to use the manpower or policies necessary in order to achieve victory, then GTFO.
This is as simple as leaving Afghanistan.
There is an interesting article in Foreign Policy (October 12, 2009) that is critical of the war and basically makes your argument. The title is Get Nasty or Go Home. Check the website.
A primary issue as I see it is one cannot win when one is on the defensive. Defensive wars almost never, ever work. Any student of military doctrine knows this. They also know that an offense is only successful when overwhelming forces are brought to bear on the enemy. Victory is probably unattainable except via measures like a total invasion or an unrestricted air attack on its population... strategies that were never seriously considered by either civilian or military authorities. Both of these activities are offensive strategies? not defensive ones.
It's easy to win a war but we try to win the peace (and nationbuild) at the same time. If anyone can figure out how to crack that nut then please tell.
I've said since 9/11:
It's an issue when the bar for war is lowered. It's one thing to 'defend your nation', and quite another to rule the world so you need to go to war for corporate interests and such.
Or as with the Neocons, to look for a war to 'send a message to the world' and as a 'show of force'.
When we're going to war just to try to get people we like people who will sell theiir nation's resources to us cheapy, in power, it gets harder as we try to overcome their political interests. And when our goal is to say 'nowhere in the world can there be a safe haven for a small number of militants to plot against us', that sort of requires us to be able to dominate every square mile in the world with a few hundred people who act up.
That's a pretty tall order. Remember the 'threat' Vietnam posed to us? The Honduras? Gutamala? El Salvador? Nicaragua? Chile? Panama? Iran in the 50's? And so on.
That's not defeating an enemy army who is invading us. It's trying to dominate other countries so much that they can't have a small numver of people who are our enemies.
Is that a good idea, when you consider how oppresive it is for us to dominate them that way? Those aren't our values. And we create enemies doing it.
How many nations target Canada for terrorism? Don't they hate Canaidans for their freedom, too? Or Swedes? Or Swiss?
Our tolerance for there being any enemy in the world is so low that we'll invade other nations, spend hundreds of billions, trying to dominate any nation with such a group.
Does that make any sense? Or is it just mindlessly acting like an imperial power because people don't consider that we should put up with some enemies as the price of freedom?
It's one thing if we're really fighting for 'a good cause' as rare as that is (very rare). But in Afghanistan, are we empowering the people to get a good government and replace the Taliban and Warlords? Not really, we hand picked a former US oil company figure who is corrupt and had a corrupt election.
We need the people of the US to get past this feeling that if they aren't exercising military power somewhere, they're 'weak' as a nation, to stop enabling the warmongers.
Afghanistan is complicated to deal with, but our country is far too willing to use force in trying to come up with a plan.
Leaving them alone when they had a leftist government would have been better. Supporting democracy and development after the USSR was driven out would have been better. Not encouraging Saddam's aggressiveness that led to Al Queda's formation (our telling Saddam he could have Kuwait if he'd defeat our 'enemy' Iran) would have been better.
When Vietnam was an issue, many argued that we couldn't leave because it would make the previous casualties for nothing, it would make us look weak, it would undermine our allies' confidence - all things that could have been prevented had we not made the bad choice to begin with, but having done so, were argued as why we couldn't get out. Funny how that works, that a bad war perpetuates more bad wat.
Maybe we should stay in Afghanistan and maybe we shouldn't, but we should not have a militaristic bias for the policy choice.