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8th Anniversary Afghanistan

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  • 8th Anniversary Afghanistan

    Taliban posted a statement on their website, shahamat.org, saying they pose no threat to the West.

    According to Reuters, the statement reads: “We had and have no plan of harming countries of the world, including those in Europe … our goal is the independence of the country and the building of an Islamic state.” the statement went on to say that the Afghan Taliban were prepared for "a long war" if foreign troops "want to colonize the country of proud and pious Afghans under the baseless pretext of a war on terror."



    Here is the analysis from a source that brings an interesting perspective

    Comment: The point worth noting is that the Taliban posting reinforces the statement on Sunday by US National Security Advisor Jones that there are fewer than 100 al Qaida in Afghanistan. Al Qaida is not welcome in Afghanistan by either side of the fight.

    After their ouster from Kandahar in 2001, the Taliban openly derided the Arabs of al Qaida and blamed them for the Taliban’s misfortunes. They vowed never to allow the foreigners -- especially the haughty, insensitive Arabs -- back into Afghanistan, consistent with the history of Pashtun xenophobia. They have been true to that vow ever since, as General Jones confirmed, indirectly.

    The premise that Afghanistan would become an al Qaida safe haven under any future government is alarmist and bespeaks a lack of understanding of the Pashtuns on this issue and a superficial knowledge of recent Afghan history.

    In December 2001, Omar was ridiculed in public by his own commanders for inviting the “Arabs” and other foreigners, which led to their flight to Pakistan. The worst atrocities committed by the vice and virtue cops of the Taliban government were committed by the foreign thugs who accompanied bin Laden, according to media reports at the time. The Afghans did not behave that way against their own people, though they were brutish against the Soviets.

    There is no factual basis for presuming that support for international Islamic terror is the norm in Afghanistan, rather than a tragic mistake. More than a thousand years of history reinforces the ethnic trait of visceral hatred of outsiders of all kind. Omar’s experience with the bin Laden and the Arabs revalidates the ancient wisdom.


    There are no good guys, but any successful strategy in Afghanistan will include the Pashtuns in some kind of power sharing arrangement. No matter who governs in Kabul in the future, bin Laden and al Qaida will not find a safe haven in Afghanistan again because almost all Afghans continue to agree on that point after eight years.

    For the record, the leading exporters of violent revolutionary doctrines today are the remnants of al Qaida in Pakistan and Iran via the Revolutionary Guards Quds force and its Hizballah proxies. Pakistan is just a regional supporter of terror against its neighbors, but so is India from time to time.
    It doesn't seem that there really is a strategy for Afghanistan, and it almost seem like we moving down the path of the USSR. If his analysis is correct then a solution to Afghanistan could be found in a matter of months. It seems like U.S. foreign policy is focusing on everything but what really matters.
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  • #2
    I don’t think it is a simple as you make out.

    However, the point you raise is the spin/reasoning/rationale, whatever you want call it, emanating from the White House on this issue: Basically, that the Taliban in Afghanistan are not a direct threat to the United States. They have no interest in letting al Qaeda back into Afghanistan because that “mistake” was what cost them their power in the first instance.

    Afghan War Debate Now Leans to Focus on Al Qaeda - from the NYT

    Putting aside a whole host of issues that would arise should we fail: I will acknowledge that the Afghan people, in general, do not favor foreign interlopers, to put it mildly (but I am not convinced they like the Taliban, either). Even so, I find the “leaks”, like those in the NYT article, coming from the White House strange. The Taliban opted for war with the United States rather than turn over their al Qaeda allies in 2001. They've now been fighting an insurgency against the United States and alongside al Qaeda for more than eight years. So it seems to me it is self-evident that some linkage exists, in fact, this linkage was recognized by President Obama a few months ago.

    I would have to go back and read Gen. McChrystal’s report; however, I don’t recall the general describing the situation on the ground in the terms suggested in your post. Remember, McChrystal “made his bones” in special-ops and is a leading expert in that type of warfare but his report does not recommend that type of strategy in Afghanistan. If you believe the situation on the ground is similar to what is described in your post – then special-ops might be a better fit – which is, sort of, what the opponents of McChrystal’s plan seem to be arguing. And you would think, of all people, McChrystal would have proposed such a strategy – he didn’t.

    Oh and McChrystal’s strategy for the Afghanistan conflict is not at all similar to what the Soviets attempted. The Soviets failed in Afghanistan for many reasons, not the least of which was the brutality of their military campaigns and the implausibility of their political strategy.

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    • #3
      Jimmy Fallon 'Thank You Note':

      Thank you, Barack Obama, for still not pulling out of Afghanistan, even though you're 9 months into your presidency. Just a heads up. Things usually get a lot more complicated 9 months after not pulling out.

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      • #4
        Time to pullout! That country has never been or will never be tamed.
        I have come here to chew bubblegum and kickass ... and I'm all out of bubblegum.

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