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  1. #26
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    "It was set up that way, CC In our system, civil power calls the shots"

    The MIC and VRWC have been calling the shots for 30 years, at least. War is just profits for the them. The politicians are hired to go along.

  2. #27
    dangerous floater Winehole23's Avatar
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    War is a business that lobbies the government. Politicians come and go, but the store never closes.

  3. #28
    Lab Animal Capt Bringdown's Avatar
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    A decade long war in Afghanistan in response to a few Saudis with boxcutters. Support the troops!

  4. #29
    I am that guy RandomGuy's Avatar
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    When military decisions are made for political reasons they usually end badly.
    I disagree.

    War is not merely a political act but a real political instrument, a continuation of political intercourse, a carrying out of the same by other means.
    War has always been subject to politics.

    Vietnam was less the fault of political decision-making and that of upper military brass trying to re-fight WW2 in Europe in SE Asia in 1968. Could better political decisions been made? Sure. But I would not say that they "usually" end badly, simply because military operations are effected by politics.

    To be clear:
    I do think that politics can *definitely* make military affairs worse, I just don't think that one necessarily precedes the other by definition.

  5. #30
    I am that guy RandomGuy's Avatar
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    a decade long war in afghanistan in response to a few saudis with boxcutters [trained and supported in camps permitted by the afghanistani taliban]. Support the troops!
    fify.

  6. #31
    dangerous floater Winehole23's Avatar
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    When Republicans vote to undermine the President's war aims, you might take that as a sign the relentlessly pro-war edifice is showing a few cracks.

  7. #32
    Lab Animal Capt Bringdown's Avatar
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    OK, a decade long war on training camps.

  8. #33
    dangerous floater Winehole23's Avatar
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    For about ten years there it was like everybody's face froze.

  9. #34
    I am that guy RandomGuy's Avatar
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    OK, a decade long war on training camps.
    The training camps were gone long ago.

    If you don't take out the government that allowed them in the first place, then you simply get them right back after you leave.

    We can't go until we have a government there capable and willing to keep those kinds of camps from coming right back.

    As I said, we let central Asia fester once, and it didn't do us much good, although it would be highly amusing to me to see this area become China's problem.

  10. #35
    dangerous floater Winehole23's Avatar
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    As I said, we let central Asia fester once, and it didn't do us much good...
    Fighting the previous war, waving the bloody shirt.

    Coming from you, that's a rather weak rhetorical sally, don't you think?

  11. #36
    Lab Animal Capt Bringdown's Avatar
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    The training camps were gone long ago.

    If you don't take out the government that allowed them in the first place, then you simply get them right back after you leave.

    We can't go until we have a government there capable and willing to keep those kinds of camps from coming right back.

    As I said, we let central Asia fester once, and it didn't do us much good, although it would be highly amusing to me to see this area become China's problem.
    A 10 year occupation/nation-building effort in order to prevent the possibility of training camps.

  12. #37
    Believe. mingus's Avatar
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    U.S. is going to need to invest a lot militarily in major terrorist centers as long as we continue to help Israel the way we are. and U.S. support for Israel will never stop.

    the worst thing that can happen would be for one of these groups to get their hands on a nuke because we've let them grow and prosper because we're not there to police what's going on.

    ty, ty situation we're in. but an even tier one would be one where these idiots get their hands on a nuke and drop it on D.C. or NY.

  13. #38
    Believe. mingus's Avatar
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    We will be in Afghanistan for another decade or so, quite possibly a bit longer.

    Obama seems to be angling a high-risk strategy that provides cover for him to say he is drawing down the war for the 2012 election.

    No matter who wins the 2012 election, Obama or Republican A/B/C, a "review" will be called for in early 2013, and it will be found that the goverment in Kabul is weak, ineffectual, and likely to lose out to the Taliban. Yeah, I predict that. Suck it, save it, and throw it in my face if I am wrong.

    This will be used as the justification for staying there in strength for the foreseeable future. This may be cynical, but I have little doubt that it was part of the calculus.

    I think we will, in the long run, win out. We will have pulled Afghanistan out of the 14th century, and that will have some long-running repercussions, hopefully positive.

    A threatened pull-out will sharpen the resolve of those in charge to actually get off their asses and quit letting the Americans take care of everything. That will be a good thing.

    Lastly, I think we should be there, and stay there, until we can cut them loose with some skeleton of an army and functioning government.

    The alternative, is to abandon central Asia to the al Qaeda ideology, and let it fester for another generation. That didn't work out so well for us the first time we tried it.
    exactly. 9/11 scratches the surface of what can happen to this country if we let these groups grow. all this work for absolutely nothing.

  14. #39
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    "what can happen to this country if we let these groups grow"

    total bull .

    WTC occurred because the Repugs were too busy vacationing in summer of 2001 after ramming through with Senate reconciliation their tax cuts for the wealthy (themselves) while totally ignoring AQ and terrorism, and Clinton's and other's departing warnings.

    Iraq and Afghanistan prove we waste more $Ts and 100Ks lives fighting these useless wars while "we're broke".

  15. #40
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    The training camps were gone long ago.

    If you don't take out the government that allowed them in the first place, then you simply get them right back after you leave.

    We can't go until we have a government there capable and willing to keep those kinds of camps from coming right back.

    As I said, we let central Asia fester once, and it didn't do us much good, although it would be highly amusing to me to see this area become China's problem.
    UCA is totally corrupt and its democracy is a charade. But you think the UCA can establish "freedom and democracy" in backward, tribal, ethnically divided, totally corrupt, ins ution-less Afghanistan, and you support spending $110B+/year until <years>, until "their government there capable and willing"?

    Guns or butter? no contest, guns will always win it because UCA makes $Ts from the guns, while there's no butter, "we're broke", for the poor, sick, young, old, disabled, schools, public services.

  16. #41
    I am that guy RandomGuy's Avatar
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    Fighting the previous war, waving the bloody shirt.

    Coming from you, that's a rather weak rhetorical sally, don't you think?
    What exactly is this non-sequitur supposed to mean??? I am genuinely at a loss as to exactly what you are trying to get across.

    Could you, for once, maybe, please, expand the idea a bit, instead of some snarky pissant one-liner?

  17. #42
    dangerous floater Winehole23's Avatar
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    Aesthetic observation.

    Your attempt to persuade was perfunctory, your sauce was weak, and don't blame me if you can't keep up.

  18. #43
    dangerous floater Winehole23's Avatar
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    (Waving the bloody shirt of 9/11 got old years ago, but it never got any less pompous.)

  19. #44
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    Does anyone know if RG was such a hawk when Bush was in office or did this just come about because "his guy" is the neocon in chief now.

  20. #45
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    According to extreme leftist/socialist/communist/anti-American NPR, $20B/year for only running A/C alone in Iraq and Afghanistan. UCA always chooses guns over butter.

  21. #46
    I am that guy RandomGuy's Avatar
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    Does anyone know if RG was such a hawk when Bush was in office or did this just come about because "his guy" is the neocon in chief now.
    I have always been something of a hawk.

    That said, Iraq was a bad idea, executed with what amounts to criminal negligence for the first 3 years. Bush deserves to be in jail.

    Afghanistan on the other hand was the right war, fought for the right reasons, but fought poorly and without sufficient resources because of Bush's ed adventure in Iraq.

  22. #47
    I am that guy RandomGuy's Avatar
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    Aesthetic observation.

    Your attempt to persuade was perfunctory, your sauce was weak, and don't blame me if you can't keep up.
    There is a vast difference between cleverness and obscurity. I will blame you if you can't tell the difference. It is your job to make yourself clear, not mine.

  23. #48
    I am that guy RandomGuy's Avatar
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    (Waving the bloody shirt of 9/11 got old years ago, but it never got any less pompous.)
    Sorry I didn't get your "can't draw any logical conclusions from 9/11" memo.

    Just because you might find the reference "old" or "pompous", doesn't make the point any less valid. Had I but known you were the arbiter of coolness in regards to logical arguments, I would have vetted it before posting.

    The reality is that our security threats don't come from large nation states anymore. It comes from the parts of the world with less-than-functional governments.

    China, for all the concern, is severely limited in its ability to threaten us militarily by the amount of trade it conducts.

    We are left with having to cope with other nation's failings, such as Yemen, Somalia, and Afghanistan. These countries have historically not had much in the way of government, and have harbored individuals with caustic ideas, sometimes with the blessings of the nominal government, often not.

    Somalia, a nation where we are not so engaged as we are in Afghanistan, has become something of a magnet for wannabe mujahadeen to establish a new theocratic islamic state. Were we not to attempt to counter this, the fanaticism and financing of these elements would quite possibly give them the upper hand in the squabbles.

    These kinds of second and third order consequences from what we do or don't do, catch up with us.

    Our abandonment of Afghanistan provided perfect opportunity for the Pakistani-supported muslim fanatic groups to seize power in the vacuum left by the Soviet withdrawal. This was the first order consequence. The second order consequence was that these groups, having used the outside arab fighters to kick out the Sovs, felt obligated to give them a free hand, and tacitly supported the training camps there.

    These groups have not been so thoroughly discredited not to regain power should we leave, and create a similar vacuum.

    The point that we ignored these areas once before and it bit us in the ass, is a very succinct way of summing this up.

  24. #49
    Believe. mingus's Avatar
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    According to extreme leftist/socialist/communist/anti-American NPR, $20B/year for only running A/C alone in Iraq and Afghanistan. UCA always chooses guns over butter.
    Just curious. What's your answer to containing terrorist groups in Afghanistan? You think these groups won't grow and get stronger w/o our being there?

    We've basically just found out Pakistan has been an accomplice with these terrorists and it's widely thought that Pakistan has nuclear capability Iirc.

    Were learning worse about the Middle East and your answer to this is what? Because it means nothing to criticize w/o providing a more viable alternative.

  25. #50
    right about pizzagate Blake's Avatar
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    Just curious. What's your answer to containing terrorist groups in Afghanistan? You think these groups won't grow and get stronger w/o our being there?

    We've basically just found out Pakistan has been an accomplice with these terrorists and it's widely thought that Pakistan has nuclear capability Iirc.

    Were learning worse about the Middle East and your answer to this is what? Because it means nothing to criticize w/o providing a more viable alternative.
    Who exactly do you think the terrorists groups will terrorize if/when we leave?

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