Hayabusa Rider
Admin Emeritus & Elite Member
- Jan 26, 2000
- 50,879
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No, they're not. We're pushing them out of Afghan. Sure its a slow process, but its happening. Who knows what will happen when they leave though.
First things first. There is no military solution for Afghanistan and there never was and never will be. The military is good for precisely one thing. Smashing stuff and people. Think of it as a sledgehammer. Well, that should do it, right? Trudge down to the local pond in summer and break the water.
It's been said that war is an extension of diplomacy and it's largely true. You cannot go into an area and demonstrate military superiority and expect people to say "Whoa, impressive. We'll be good and do whatever you want." That's plain dumb, but that's what we expected in Iraq and pretty much wherever wage war. We don't prepare for productive peace. When the Taliban "leave" it will return or another like group will take it's place because to Afghan culture our concept of a centralized federal government makes no sense. So we install the government of Kabul (which people from Afghanistan have laughingly called it) and promptly dismiss it for their preferred way of rule, which is mostly tribal in nature.
For all our military might, the Afghans don't care about us. We are irrelevant. We might have been when we went into the region initially, but when we virtually abandoned them for Iraq, it demonstrated that there wasn't any reason to bother listening to us. Threaten them? Like that's anything new. Kill them? They know their existence is tenuous at best in any case. No threat.
The best we can do right now is bribery. We haven't any credibility, and the moment we leave things will return to the way they've always been with the exception of a fledgling government based entirely on corruption. Our legacy to them.

