REAL WORLD EVENT DISCUSSIONS

Taliban winning in Afghanistan

POSTED BY: MAGONSDAUGHTER
UPDATED: Sunday, January 14, 2024 06:22
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Tuesday, August 17, 2021 5:55 PM

6IXSTRINGJACK


Quote:

Originally posted by second:
Quote:

Originally posted by 6IXSTRINGJACK:

After 9/11, we should have just turned Mecca to glass and the entire world would be a much better place right now.

Nuking Japan, followed by Republican Senators publicly saying Russia should be nuked next, caused a multi-trillion dollar nuclear arms race, which that dimwitted President Harry Truman couldn't see coming when he allowed the nukes to drop. Nuking Mecca would be an even stupider move, and eventually more expensive, than nuking Japan.

The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at https://www.mediafire.com/two



It wouldn't have been more expensive than the last 20 years were with nothing to show for it.

We had the world on our side back then. We would have been justified.

P.S. Despite the lack of squiggly lines under it in your browser, "Stupider" is not a word.

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Tuesday, August 17, 2021 6:34 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Quote:

Originally posted by 6IXSTRINGJACK:
I wouldn't worry about the Taliban and China teaming up.

One suicide bombing will end that relationship very quick.


The Taliban is what Antifa would be if they were feral and took 2000 year old fantasy books as the literal truth of the universe.

I don't think you understand the nature of what will probably happen between the Chinese and the Taliban. They've been learning diplomacy from the Russians, and with the Russians it's not an "all or nothing" reaction.

Very good at details: expectations, red lines, rewards, and consequences. For example, Russia has been tolerant (until now) of Israeli bombing of Iranian positions in Syria bc THEIR positions weren't targeted. Even when Turkey shot down a Russian jet (this, after Russia saved Erdogan's bacon by warning him of the coup) the Russians reacted harshly but kept on building their Turk Stream pipeline.

So if the Chinese are listening to the Russians on diplomacy, I don't expect to see the Chinese getting miffed over a single event and overturning everything.

*****

BTW, I don't think the American intervention was all for naught. It definitely raised expectations for the status of women, and made it LESS likely that the Taliban will revert to their view of women as subhuman.

-----------
Pity would be no more,
If we did not MAKE men poor - William Blake


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Tuesday, August 17, 2021 6:54 PM

SECOND

The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at https://www.mediafire.com/folder/1uwh75oa407q8/Firefly


Quote:

Originally posted by 6IXSTRINGJACK:

P.S. Despite the lack of squiggly lines under it in your browser, "Stupider" is not a word.

6ix, I doubt you will read because you are you, but Which Is Correct: “Stupider” Or “Stupidest”? Stupider or more Stupid?

Is stupider a word?

It turns out stupider is an actual word. The word stupid is an adjective that refers to someone or something that’s foolish or senseless.

This adjective, however, only gets you so far. When you want to compare two nouns, you’ll need what’s called a comparative adjective. For example, in the sentence “Sam is bigger than Selena,” the adjective bigger is comparative. It tells you that Sam is larger in size than Selena.

If you want to compare two things that are stupid, you would use the comparative form of the adjective stupid to describe which has a greater level of stupidity. In most cases, comparative and superlative adjectives follow a simple pattern. You add the suffix –er to the original adjective when you want to form the comparative. Stupider is one acceptable form of the comparative form.

But there is another.

Stupider or more stupid

More stupid is also accepted as a comparative form of the adjective stupid. Stupider and more stupid are used interchangeably. In the English language, stupid is one of just a few adjectives that have two grammatically correct options for their comparative form.

Why is that? Well, some two-syllable adjectives (in particular, adjectives ending with –y, –er, –le, and –ow) follow the –er rule above. This includes dirty (which becomes dirtier and dirtiest), little (littler and littlest), and narrow (narrower and narrowest).

In most other cases, adjectives with two syllables use the words more and most to create their comparative and superlative forms. For example, important and public are both adjectives with multiple syllables. Their comparative forms are more important and more public. Their superlative forms are most important and most public.

Stupid is a two-syllable adjective. Based on the rule above, it should use the words more and most to form its comparative and superlative forms, and it does. However, it also breaks this rule by using –er and –est as alternative forms.

A few other adjectives use –er and –est as well as more and most, such as clever, likely, and pleasant. This means both of these sentences are grammatically correct: “Betty is more likely to win the election than Bobby” and “Betty is likelier to win than Bobby.”

Much more at https://www.thesaurus.com/e/grammar/stupider-vs-more-stupid/

The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at https://www.mediafire.com/two

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Tuesday, August 17, 2021 7:50 PM

6IXSTRINGJACK


Quote:

Originally posted by SIGNYM:
Quote:

Originally posted by 6IXSTRINGJACK:
I wouldn't worry about the Taliban and China teaming up.

One suicide bombing will end that relationship very quick.


The Taliban is what Antifa would be if they were feral and took 2000 year old fantasy books as the literal truth of the universe.

I don't think you understand the nature of what will probably happen between the Chinese and the Taliban. They've been learning diplomacy from the Russians, and with the Russians it's not an "all or nothing" reaction.

Very good at details: expectations, red lines, rewards, and consequences. For example, Russia has been tolerant (until now) of Israeli bombing of Iranian positions in Syria bc THEIR positions weren't targeted. Even when Turkey shot down a Russian jet (this, after Russia saved Erdogan's bacon by warning him of the coup) the Russians reacted harshly but kept on building their Turk Stream pipeline.

So if the Chinese are listening to the Russians on diplomacy, I don't expect to see the Chinese getting miffed over a single event and overturning everything.



Putin isn't just going to let all that happen the way you explain it in his backyard.

Quote:

BTW, I don't think the American intervention was all for naught. It definitely raised expectations for the status of women, and made it LESS likely that the Taliban will revert to their view of women as subhuman.



That's what their religion tells them is true.

Best case scenario they start making sure that they don't beat their women in the face and keep it in areas that are going to be covered while they're out in public.

Or they could just revert to the old standby and say they don't know where their wife disappeared to.

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Tuesday, August 17, 2021 8:28 PM

SECOND

The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at https://www.mediafire.com/folder/1uwh75oa407q8/Firefly


GOP removes page praising Donald Trump’s ‘historic’ peace deal with Taliban.
I wonder why.

https://web.archive.org/web/diff/20201010184542/20210815231342/https:/
/gop.com/president-trump-is-bringing-peace-to-the-middle-east-rsr
/

PRESIDENT TRUMP HAS CONTINUED TO TAKE THE LEAD IN PEACE TALKS AS HE SIGNED A HISTORIC PEACE AGREEMENT WITH THE TALIBAN IN AFGHANISTAN, WHICH WOULD END AMERICA'S LONGEST WAR

On February 2, 2020 , the Trump Administration signed a preliminary peace agreement with the Taliban that sets the stage to end America's longest war.

Under the agreement , the U.S. will withdraw nearly 5,000 troops from the country in 135 days in exchange for a Taliban agreement to not allow Afghanistan to be used for transnational terrorism.

Time Magazine reported that other components of the agreement included an agreement that U.S. counterterrorism forces stay in the country, permissions for the CIA to operate in Taliban-held areas, and details of how the Taliban's promises to reduce violence will be monitored and verified.

The deal has been called the " best chance to end this conflict ," a " decisive move " towards peace, and " the best path " for the United States.

The war in Afghanistan is the longest in U.S. history, a conflict that has killed more than 3,500 U.S. and NATO troops and cost U.S. taxpayers nearly 900 billion dollars.

As part of the peace agreement, the Taliban and the Afghan government recently began historic peace, talks which would end decades of war that Afghanistan has consumed.

The negotiations will cover the terms of a " permanent ceasefire, the rights of women and minorities, and the disarmament of the country's many militia groups ."

PRESIDENT TRUMP HAS DELIVERED ON HIS PROMISE TO END ENDLESS WARS BY BRINGING OUR TROOPS BACK HOME

Due to President Trump's leadership, the United States will pull out thousands of troops from Iraq and Afghanistan by November.
President Trump has been pushing for a reduction since 2016 and has fulfilled his promise by taking action to ensure the Iraqi Security Forces to have the ability to operate independently .
The reduction in Iraq troops from 5,200 to about 3,000 " reflects the Trump Administration's confidence in the ability of U.S. trained Iraqi security forces to handle the militant threat from the Islamic State group ."
Iraq, Marine Gen. Frank McKenzie, the Commander of U.S. Central Command, said that with the reduction, the U.S. will still be able to accomplish core tasks, and " we've shown more than ample goodwill and our willingness to demonstrate that we don't want to be an occupying force in this country ."
" The U.S. Decision is a clear demonstration of our continued commitment to the ultimate goal, which is an Iraqi security force that is capable of preventing an ISIS resurgence and of securing Iraq's sovereignty without external assistance ."
Iraqi forces have improved their ability to fight ISIS and that " the fact we're getting smaller is actually a sign of campaign progress."
Starting in March, U.S. forces began pulling back from bases across Iraq, turning them over to Iraqi security partners .
The reduction is part of a long-planned consolidation which reflects the " success of the anti-ISIS fight ."

WHILE PRESIDENT TRUMP HAS CHAMPIONED PEACE, JOE BIDEN HAS TAKEN THE LEAD IN PUSHING FOR ENDLESS WARS, INCLUDING THE DECADES LONG WAR IN IRAQ

While President Trump has continued to push for peace in the Middle East successfully, Joe Biden has had a history of pushing for endless wars, and failed leadership:
In 2001, then-Senator Joe Biden supported an invasion of Iraq and said that the U.S. should move forward regardless if there were no support of others .
In 2002, Biden affirmed his previous statement and voted for the use of force in Iraq ; the decision led to tens of thousands of deaths .
During the Senate debate in 2002, Biden fought against alternatives to work with the U.N. to authorize an invasion on Iraq, and insisted Democrats should vote on the " resolution to go to war ."
Before his vote, he claimed that his decision to support the Iraq war was a " march to peace and security ."
Following his vote, Biden continued to support the war and even expressed the use of more forces.
In 2003, Biden said the U.S. should have had more forces in Afghanistan over the previous year.
In 2006, Biden said that the U.S. should be pushing for " more force " in Afghanistan.
In 2007, Biden called for a surge of troops in Afghanistan , and even said the use of force " is justified and necessary ."
Biden also continued to back the surge and said that the U.S. went into Afghanistan " the right way ."
In an attempt to push back on his 2002 vote, Biden has falsely claimed that he was responsible for pulling out 150,000 combat troops from Iraq.
Biden has said that Americans can trust his judgment on questions of war because, as Vice President, he was in charge of pulling U.S. combat troops from Iraq .
The Washington Post found that Biden was actually part of the Obama Administration's effort to return thousands of U.S. troops to Iraq , and ranked his claim as false.

The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at https://www.mediafire.com/two

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Tuesday, August 17, 2021 11:39 PM

6IXSTRINGJACK


Quote:

Originally posted by second:
GOP removes page praising Donald Trump’s ‘historic’ peace deal with Taliban.
I wonder why.



I don't wonder why. It's a great thing, so of course the Legacy Media is against it, and they're going to try spinning the blame for whatever fallout there is over there on Trump and the GOP.

The only thing that baffles me is why Biden* actually went through with it.

All of your shit-show Lefty trash online sites are not behind Uncle Joey's decision to do so.

--------------------------------------------------

Vaccinated People: "You need to get muh vaccination shots that don't work because I got muh vaccination shots that don't work and I'm afraid of people that didn't get muh vaccination shots that don't work because muh vaccination shots that don't work don't work."

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Wednesday, August 18, 2021 12:07 AM

SECOND

The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at https://www.mediafire.com/folder/1uwh75oa407q8/Firefly


Quote:

Originally posted by 6IXSTRINGJACK:
Quote:

Originally posted by second:
GOP removes page praising Donald Trump’s ‘historic’ peace deal with Taliban.
I wonder why.



I don't wonder why. It's a great thing, so of course the Legacy Media is against it, and they're going to try spinning the blame for whatever fallout there is over there on Trump and the GOP.

The only thing that baffles me is why Biden* actually went through with it.

All of your shit-show Lefty trash online sites are not behind Uncle Joey's decision to do so.

You would be wrong. Everybody who knows what they are doing knows that Afghanistan War was scheduled to end 3 months ago. But that goddamn General David Petraeus wants the War to continue because ending it makes him look bad. The CIA wants the War to continue because they were having so much fun. Even Trump wants the War to continue because he is not President, so he is even more uncaring than in 2020. He actually believed he would get a Nobel Prize for ending the War in 2020. What a fat idiot.

The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at https://www.mediafire.com/two

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Wednesday, August 18, 2021 12:25 AM

SECOND

The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at https://www.mediafire.com/folder/1uwh75oa407q8/Firefly


What We Need to Learn: Lessons From Twenty Years of Afghanistan Reconstruction
https://www.sigar.mil/pdf/lessonslearned/SIGAR-21-46-LL.pdf

The mission was doomed to fail, regardless of how much longer U.S. troops were kept there.
https://slate.com/news-and-politics/2021/08/sigar-report-afghanistan-d
ebacle.html


Want more detail?
Quote:

The U.S. failed in every aspect of its strategy, and often for reasons that are endemic to the way that its bureaucracy functions or to the limits — social, political, and economic — of Afghanistan. The failures were so broad and deep that they raise “questions about the ability of U.S. government agencies to devise, implement, and evaluate reconstruction strategies” in any foreign country.
The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at https://www.mediafire.com/two

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Wednesday, August 18, 2021 4:04 AM

1KIKI

Goodbye, kind world (George Monbiot) - In common with all those generations which have contemplated catastrophe, we appear to be incapable of understanding what confronts us.



The Propaganda Multiplier

A Study by Swiss Propaganda Research

Translated by Terje Maloy

2016 / 2019

“Therefore, you always have to ask yourself: Why do I get this specific information, in this specific form, at this specific moment? Ultimately, these are always questions about power.” (*)
Dr. Konrad Hummler, Swiss banking and media executive


It is one of the most important aspects of our media system, and yet hardly known to the public: most of the international news coverage in Western media is provided by only three global news agencies based in New York, London and Paris.

The key role played by these agencies means Western media often report on the same topics, even using the same wording. In addition, governments, military and intelligence services use these global news agencies as multipliers to spread their messages around the world.

A study of the Syria war coverage by nine leading European newspapers clearly illustrates these issues: 78% of all articles were based in whole or in part on agency reports, yet 0% on investigative research. Moreover, 82% of all opinion pieces and interviews were in favor of a US and NATO intervention, while propaganda was attributed exclusively to the opposite side.

“How does the newspaper know what it knows?” The answer to this question is likely to surprise some newspaper readers: “The main source of information is stories from news agencies. The almost anonymously operating news agencies are in a way the key to world events. So what are the names of these agencies, how do they work and who finances them? To judge how well one is informed about events in East and West, one should know the answers to these questions.” (Höhne 1977, p. 11)

A Swiss media researcher points out: “The news agencies are the most important suppliers of material to mass media. No daily media outlet can manage without them. () So the news agencies influence our image of the world; above all, we get to know what they have selected.” (Blum 1995, p. 9)

Even the head of a news agency noted: “There is something strange about news agencies. They are little known to the public. Unlike a newspaper, their activity is not so much in the spotlight, yet they can always be found at the source of the story.” (Segbers 2007, p. 9)

In view of their essential importance, it is all the more astonishing that these agencies are hardly known to the public: “A large part of society is unaware that news agencies exist at all … In fact, they play an enormously important role in the media market. But despite this great importance, little attention has been paid to them in the past.” (Schulten-Jaspers 2013, p. 13)

So what are the names of these agencies that are “always at the source of the story”? There are now only three global news agencies left:



The American Associated Press (AP) with over 4000 employees worldwide. The AP belongs to US media companies and has its main editorial office in New York. AP news is used by around 12,000 international media outlets, reaching more than half of the world’s population every day.
The quasi-governmental French Agence France-Presse (AFP) based in Paris and with around 4000 employees. The AFP sends over 3000 stories and photos every day to media all over the world.
The British agency Reuters in London, which is privately owned and employs just over 3000 people. Reuters was acquired in 2008 by Canadian media entrepreneur Thomson – one of the 25 richest people in the world – and merged into Thomson Reuters, headquartered in New York.

In addition, many countries run their own news agencies. These include, for instance, the German DPA, the Austrian APA, and the Swiss SDA. When it comes to international news, however, national agencies usually rely on the three global agencies and simply copy and translate their reports. ...

However, there is a simple reason why the global agencies, despite their importance, are virtually unknown to the general public. To quote a Swiss media professor: “Radio and television usually do not name their sources, and only specialists can decipher references in magazines.” (Blum 1995, P. 9)

The motive for this discretion, however, should be clear: news outlets are not particularly keen to let readers know that they haven’t researched most of their contributions themselves.

(And) (o)ccasionally, newspapers use agency material but do not label it at all. A study in 2011 from the Swiss Research Institute for the Public Sphere and Society at the University of Zurich came to the following conclusions (FOEG 2011):

“Agency contributions are exploited integrally without labeling them, or they are partially rewritten to make them appear as an editorial contribution. In addition, there is a practice of ‘spicing up’ agency reports with little effort: for example, unpublished agency reports are enriched with images and graphics and presented as comprehensive articles.”

The agencies play a prominent role not only in the press, but also in private and public broadcasting. " The editor working on a news topic only needs to select a few text passages on the screen that he considers essential, rearrange them and glue them together with a few flourishes.”

In fact, not only the text, but also the images, sound and video recordings that we encounter in our media every day, are mostly from the very same agencies. What the uninitiated audience might think of as contributions from their local newspaper or TV station, are actually copied reports from New York, London and Paris.






https://swprs.org/the-propaganda-multiplier/

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Wednesday, August 18, 2021 4:23 AM

1KIKI

Goodbye, kind world (George Monbiot) - In common with all those generations which have contemplated catastrophe, we appear to be incapable of understanding what confronts us.



Most of the journalists who work for the 3 news agencies report the same things in the same ways (stay ensconced at the same hotels, tap the same sources, focus on the same topics).

In addition, they don't pick the news that they'll be covering. That's done by the chief editor.

And news is done as cheaply as possible, which means transcribing government reports, press releases, and press conferences.

Finally, while the talking heads and more local reporters may. or may not. be liberal, they don't determine what gets disseminated. The Editor in Chief (or station chief) does that.



The 'liberal' media is anything but. It's a highly truncated narrative created by an extreme focus, and packaged into a narrative that fits into the business 'infotainment' model. Any apparent bias in either direction is merely part of the Punch-and-Judy show that does everything but tell people what they need to know.

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Wednesday, August 18, 2021 7:22 AM

SECOND

The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at https://www.mediafire.com/folder/1uwh75oa407q8/Firefly


Opinion: After spending trillions of dollars on wars in Afghanistan, Iraq, Syria and Libya, the U.S. has nothing to show for its efforts but blood in the sand

U.S. military and CIA interventions have been disasters, but the foreign-policy establishment and the media still can’t face the extent of American foolishness and failure

https://www.project-syndicate.org/commentary/afghanistan-latest-debacl
e-of-us-foreign-policy-by-jeffrey-d-sachs-2021-08


https://web.archive.org/web/20210818060836/https://www.project-syndica
te.org/commentary/afghanistan-latest-debacle-of-us-foreign-policy-by-jeffrey-d-sachs-2021-08


Even a cursory look at America’s spending in Afghanistan reveals the stupidity of its policy there. According to a recent report by the Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction, the US invested roughly $946 billion between 2001 and 2021. Yet almost $1 trillion in outlays won the US few hearts and minds.

Here’s why.
Of that $946 billion, fully $816 billion, or 86%, went to military outlays for US troops. And the Afghan people saw little of the remaining $130 billion, with $83 billion going to the Afghan Security Forces. Another $10 billion or so was spent on drug interdiction operations, while $15 billion was for US agencies operating in Afghanistan. That left a meager $21 billion in “economic support” funding. Yet even much of this spending left little if any development on the ground, because the programs actually “support counterterrorism; bolster national economies; and assist in the development of effective, accessible, and independent legal systems.”

In short, less than 2% of the US spending on Afghanistan, and probably far less than 2%, reached the Afghan people in the form of basic infrastructure or poverty-reducing services. The US could have invested in clean water and sanitation, school buildings, clinics, digital connectivity, agricultural equipment and extension, nutrition programs, and many other programs to lift the country from economic deprivation. Instead, it leaves behind a country with a life expectancy of 63 years, a maternal mortality rate of 638 per 100,000 births, and a child stunting rate of 38%.

The US could and should have fostered a more stable and prosperous Afghanistan by investing in maternal health, schools, safe water, nutrition, and the like. Such humane investments – especially financed together with other countries through institutions such as the Asian Development Bank – would have helped to end the bloodshed in Afghanistan, and in other impoverished regions, forestalling future wars.

Yet American leaders go out of their way to emphasize to the American public that we won’t waste money on such trivialities. The sad truth is that the American political class and mass media hold the people of poorer nations in contempt, even as they intervene relentlessly and recklessly in those countries. Of course, much of America’s elite holds America’s own poor in similar contempt.

In the aftermath of the fall of Kabul, the US mass media is, predictably, blaming the US failure on Afghanistan’s incorrigible corruption. The lack of American self-awareness is startling. It’s no surprise that after trillions of dollars spent on wars in Iraq, Syria, Libya, and beyond, the US has nothing to show for its efforts but blood in the sand.

The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at https://www.mediafire.com/two

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Wednesday, August 18, 2021 8:37 AM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Propaganda multiplier deserves its own thread. Posted separately.

-----------
Pity would be no more,
If we did not MAKE men poor - William Blake


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Wednesday, August 18, 2021 9:08 AM

6IXSTRINGJACK


Quote:

Originally posted by second:
Quote:

Originally posted by 6IXSTRINGJACK:
Quote:

Originally posted by second:
GOP removes page praising Donald Trump’s ‘historic’ peace deal with Taliban.
I wonder why.



I don't wonder why. It's a great thing, so of course the Legacy Media is against it, and they're going to try spinning the blame for whatever fallout there is over there on Trump and the GOP.

The only thing that baffles me is why Biden* actually went through with it.

All of your shit-show Lefty trash online sites are not behind Uncle Joey's decision to do so.

You would be wrong.



No. I'm right.

--------------------------------------------------

Vaccinated People: "You need to get muh vaccination shots that don't work because I got muh vaccination shots that don't work and I'm afraid of people that didn't get muh vaccination shots that don't work because muh vaccination shots that don't work don't work."

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Wednesday, August 18, 2021 9:59 AM

SECOND

The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at https://www.mediafire.com/folder/1uwh75oa407q8/Firefly


Why Biden was so set on withdrawing from Afghanistan?

Even in 2009, he didn’t believe the military had a strategy for victory. (In 2021, the military clowns can't even run a airlift without accidentally killing Afghans on the runways)

To understand President Joe Biden’s decision to withdraw troops from Afghanistan against the advice of the US military establishment, you need to go back to a debate that played out more than a decade ago, during the early years of Barack Obama’s presidency.

Then-Vice President Biden was consistently one of the biggest skeptics of the military’s recommendations. Throughout months of debate, he repeatedly raised the inconvenient point that the generals’ preferred strategy seemed extremely unlikely to lead to actual victory. “We have not thought through our strategic goals!” he shouted during the Obama administration’s first meeting on the war in Afghanistan.

All this was documented at the time in Bob Woodward’s deeply reported 2010 book Obama’s Wars. Biden did not actually support withdrawal at the time — he pushed for a more limited mission focused on counterterrorism, accompanied by a smaller troop surge than the military wanted.

But his dark view of the long-term picture was clearly vindicated in the decade since. Now that Biden is president and has actually withdrawn from the war — leading to a Taliban takeover of Afghanistan — it’s worth revisiting that past debate, as outlined in Woodward’s book, to understand why his mind was so firmly made up.

More at https://www.vox.com/2021/8/18/22629135/biden-afghanistan-withdrawal-re
asons


The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at https://www.mediafire.com/two

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Wednesday, August 18, 2021 5:34 PM

6IXSTRINGJACK


I'm surprised he went through with it.

It's going to be the one thing he can hang his hat on after his failed presidency.


I'll shit talk Uncle Joey all day long on just about everything else under the sun, but the man actually did it.

And the fallout from that is watching the hypocrisy on both sides of the pro-war Legacy Media beating the shit out of him for it.



Wake up sheep. They lie to you every day about everything.

If more than just a handful of you could remember what happened more than two weeks ago you wouldn't need somebody to try to convince you of that.

--------------------------------------------------

Vaccinated People: "You need to get muh vaccination shots that don't work because I got muh vaccination shots that don't work and I'm afraid of people that didn't get muh vaccination shots that don't work because muh vaccination shots that don't work don't work."

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Thursday, August 19, 2021 8:17 AM

SECOND

The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at https://www.mediafire.com/folder/1uwh75oa407q8/Firefly


Quote:

Originally posted by 6IXSTRINGJACK:

Wake up sheep. They lie to you every day about everything.

If more than just a handful of you could remember what happened more than two weeks ago you wouldn't need somebody to try to convince you of that.

The sheep were told the truth, but sheep don't read:

For nearly a decade, the Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction (SIGAR) warned in report after report that fraud, waste and abuse had wormed its way into the $145 billion U.S. taxpayers spent to rebuild Afghanistan. The squandering included $43 million on a useless gas station and $28 million on uniforms for Afghan soldiers with camouflage suited to a tiny fraction of the country.

"It was a little bit of hubris here that we thought it was easy to turn Afghanistan into, you know, Iowa," Sopko said. "Turn it into a sparkling city on a hill, like Boston. It was always going to be tough. But it could have turned out better." John Sopko is special inspector general for Afghanistan reconstruction. Pay attention, sheep. TL;DR

https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2021/08/18/afghanistan-in
spector-general-john-sopko-reflects-waste-abuse/8180105002
/

The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at https://www.mediafire.com/two

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Thursday, August 19, 2021 10:15 AM

6IXSTRINGJACK


Are you behind Biden's* actions regarding this issue Second?

--------------------------------------------------

Vaccinated People: "You need to get muh vaccination shots that don't work because I got muh vaccination shots that don't work and I'm afraid of people that didn't get muh vaccination shots that don't work because muh vaccination shots that don't work don't work."

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Thursday, August 19, 2021 10:25 AM

DREAMTROVE


Second,

pretending that people who disagree don't pay attention isn't an argument, it's a rhetorical trick. They paid attention, they just didn't obey.

That said, the disaster that is military spending got an excellent breakdown by Pirate News here a few years back. It's mostly lost in the corruption of the subcontracting

Also, I feel like, just on a personal level, we took the wrong approach in afghanistan. Our position was that the Taliban were evil. That didn't resonate. The locals don't really hate the Taliban. They don't really hate the Northern Alliance, they don't really hate Al Qaeda or the Mujahideen. These are their political parties in a way. These groups do not bomb their weddings, torture their children, and set up concentration camps. We do that. They probably hate us. And the Russians

It was a completely lost cause

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Thursday, August 19, 2021 3:07 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Quote:


How Russia-China Are Stage-Managing the Taliban
Pepe Escobar • August 18, 2021

The first Taliban press conference after this weekend’s Saigon moment geopolitical earthquake, conducted by spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid, was in itself a game-changer.

The contrast could not be starker with those rambling pressers at the Taliban embassy in Islamabad after 9/11 and before the start of the American bombing – proving this is an entirely new political animal.

Yet some things never change. English translations remain atrocious.

Here is a good summary of the key Taliban statements, and here (in Russian) is a very detailed roundup.

These are the key takeaways.

No problem for women to get education all the way to college, and to continue to work. They just need to wear the hijab (like in Qatar or Iran). No need to wear a burqa. The Taliban insist, “all women’s rights will be guaranteed within the limits of Islamic law.”

The Islamic Emirate “does not threaten anyone” and will not treat anyone as enemies. Crucially, revenge – an essential plank of the Pashtunwali code – will be abandoned, and that’s unprecedented. There will be a general amnesty – including people who worked for the former NATO-aligned system. Translators, for instance, won’t be harassed, and don’t need to leave the country.

Security of foreign embassies and international organizations “is a priority.” Taliban special security forces will protect both those leaving Afghanistan and those who remain.

A strong inclusive Islamic government will be formed. “Inclusive” is code for the participation of women and Shi’ites.

Foreign media will continue to work undisturbed. The Taliban government will allow public criticism and debate. But “freedom of speech in Afghanistan must be in line with Islamic values.”

The Islamic Emirate of Taliban wants recognition from the “international community” – code for NATO. The overwhelming majority of Eurasia and the Global South will recognize it anyway. It’s essential to note, for example, the closer integration of the expanding SCO – Iran is about to become a full member, Afghanistan is an observer – with ASEAN: the absolute majority of Asia will not shun the Taliban.

For the record, they also stated that the Taliban took all of Afghanistan in only 11 days: that’s pretty accurate. They stressed “very good relations with Pakistan, Russia and China.” Yet the Taliban don’t have formal allies and are not part of any military-political bloc. They definitely “won’t allow Afghanistan to become a safe haven for international terrorists”. That’s code for ISIS/Daesh.

On the key issue of opium/heroin: the Taliban will ban their production. So, for all practical purposes, the CIA heroin rat line is dead.

As eyebrow raising as these statements may be, the Taliban did not even get into detail on economic/infrastructure development deals – as they will need a lot of new industries, new jobs and improved Eurasian-wide trade relations. That will be announced later.

The go-to Russian guy

Sharp US observers are remarking, half in jest, that the Taliban in only one sitting answered more real questions from US media than POTUS since January.

What this first press conference reveals is how the Taliban are fast absorbing essential P.R. and media lessons from Moscow and Beijing, emphasizing ethnic harmony, the role of women, the role of diplomacy, and deftly defusing in a single move all the hysteria raging across NATOstan.

The next bombshell step in the P.R. wars will be to cut off the lethal, evidence-free Taliban-9/11 connection; afterwards the “terrorist organization” label will disappear, and the Taliban as a political movement will be fully legitimized.

Moscow and Beijing are meticulously stage-managing the Taliban reinsertion in regional and global geopolitics. This means that ultimately the SCO is stage-managing the whole process, applying a consensus reached after a series of ministerial and leaders meetings, leading to a very important summit next month in Dushanbe.

The key player the Taliban are talking to is Zamir Kabulov, Russia’s special presidential envoy for Afghanistan. In yet another debunking of NATOstan narrative, Kabulov confirmed, for instance, “we see no direct threat to our allies in Central Asia. There are no facts proving otherwise.”

The Beltway will be stunned to learn that Zabulov has also revealed, “we have long been in talks with the Taliban on the prospects for development after their capture of power and they have repeatedly confirmed that they have no extraterritorial ambition, they learned the lessons of 2000.” These contacts were established “over the past 7 years.”

Zabulov reveals plenty of nuggets when it comes to Taliban diplomacy: “If we compare the negotiability of colleagues and partners, the Taliban have long seemed to me much more negotiable than the puppet Kabul government. We proceed from the premise that the agreements must be implemented. So far, with regard to the security of the embassy and the security of our allies in Central Asia, the Taliban have respected the agreements.”

Faithful to its adherence to international law, and not the “rules-based international order”, Moscow is always keen to emphasize the responsibility of the UN Security Council: “We must make sure that the new government is ready to behave conditionally, as we say, in a civilized manner. That’s when this point of view becomes common to all, then the procedure [of removing the qualification of the Taliban as a terrorist organization] will begin.”

So while the US/EU/NATO flee Kabul in spasms of self-inflicted panic, Moscow practices – what else – diplomacy. Zabulov: “That we have prepared the ground for a conversation with the new government in Afghanistan in advance is an asset of Russian foreign policy.”

Dmitry Zhirnov, Russia’s ambassador to Afghanistan, is working overtime with the Taliban. He met a senior Taliban security official yesterday. The meeting was “positive, constructive…The Taliban movement has the most friendly; the best policy towards Russia… He arrived alone in one vehicle, with no guards.”

Both Moscow and Beijing have no illusions that the West is already deploying Hybrid War tactics to discredit and destabilize a government that isn’t even formed and hasn’t even started working. No wonder Chinese media is describing Washington as a “strategic rogue.”

What matters is that Russia-China are way ahead of the curve, cultivating parallel inside tracks of diplomatic dialogue with the Taliban. It’s always crucial to remember that Russia harbors 20 million Muslims, and China at least 35 million. These will be called to support the immense project of Afghan reconstruction – and full Eurasia reintegration.

The Chinese saw it coming

Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi saw it coming weeks ago. And that explains the meeting in Tianjin in late July, when he hosted a high-level Taliban delegation, led by Mullah Baradar, de facto conferring them total political legitimacy. Beijing already knew the Saigon moment was inevitable. Thus the statement stressing China expected to “play an important role in the process of peaceful reconciliation and reconstruction in Afghanistan”.

What this means in practice is China will be a partner of Afghanistan on infrastructure investment, via Pakistan, incorporating it into an expanded China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) bound to diversify connectivity channels with Central Asia. The New Silk Road corridor from Xinjiang to the port of Gwadar in the Arabian Sea will branch out: the first graphic illustration is Chinese construction of the ultra-strategic Peshawar-Kabul highway.

The Chinese are also building a major road across the geologically spectacular, deserted Wakhan corridor from western Xinjiang all the way to Badakhshan province, which incidentally, is now under total Taliban control.

The trade off is quite straightforward: the Taliban should allow no safe haven for the East Turkestan Islamic Movement (ETIM), and no interference in Xinjiang.

The overall trade/security combo looks like a certified win-win. And we’re not even talking about future deals allowing China to exploit Afghanistan’s immense mineral wealth.

Once again, the Big Picture reads like the Russia-China double helix, connected to all the “stans” as well as Pakistan, drawing a comprehensive game plan/road map for Afghanistan. In their multiple contacts with both Russians and Chinese, the Taliban seem to have totally understood how to profit from their role in the New Great Game.

The extended New Axis of Evil

Imperial Hybrid War tactics to counteract the scenario are inevitable. Take the first proclamation of a Northern Alliance “resistance”, in theory led by Ahmad Masoud, the son of the legendary Lion of the Panjshir killed by al-Qaeda two days before 9/11.

I met Masoud father – an icon. Afghan insider info on Masoud son is not exactly flattering. Yet he’s already a darling of woke Europeans, complete with a glamour pose for AFP, an impromptu visit in the Panjshir by professional philosopher swindler Bernard-Henri Levy, and the release of a manifesto of sorts published in several European newspapers, exhibiting all the catchphrases: “tyranny”, “slavery”, “vendetta”, “martyred nation”, “Kabul screams”, “nation in chains”, etc.

The whole set up smells like a “son of Shah” [of Iran] gambit. Masoud son and his mini-militia are completely surrounded in the Panjshir mountains and can’t be de facto effective even when it comes to regimenting the under 25s, two-thirds of the Afghan population, whose main worry is to find real jobs in a nascent real economy.

Woke NATOstan “analyses” of Taliban Afghanistan don’t even qualify as irrelevant, insisting that Afghanistan is not strategic and even lost its tactical importance for NATO. It’s a sorry spectacle illustrating how Europe is hopelessly behind the curve, drenched in trademark neo-colonialism of the White Man’s Burden variety as it dismisses a land dominated by clans and tribes.

Expect China to be one of the first powers to formally recognize the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan, alongside Turkey and, later on, Russia. I have already alluded to the coming of a New Axis of Evil: Pakistan-Taliban-China. The axis will inevitably be extended to Russia-Iran. So what? Ask Mullah Baradar: he couldn’t care less.




-----------
Pity would be no more,
If we did not MAKE men poor - William Blake


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Friday, August 20, 2021 8:40 AM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Discussion would not be complete without a conspiracy theory ...

Quote:

The Afghanistan Exit Debacle: Incompetence, Distraction, Or Something More Sinister?
Thursday, Aug 19, 2021 - 11:40 PM

Authored by Brandon Smith via Alt-Market.us,

My first instinct has been to ignore the circus surrounding Biden’s apparent bungle of the troop exit from Afghanistan, primarily because I think it distracts from the much bigger danger of despotic covid mandates and vaccine passports that Biden and his handlers are trying to push forward right now on our home soil. That said, I have received numerous requests from readers to discuss the situation and I’ve found certain aspects of the pull-out rather suspicious.

The basic assumption here is that Biden is senile and his handling of the exit is tainted by his stupidity, but maybe there is more to this than meets the eye…

First, I think it’s important to dispel a propaganda narrative being circulated by the media that conservatives are somehow calling for troops to stay in Afghanistan by criticizing Biden’s exit strategy. This is typical leftist gaslighting. One can be in favor of a troop draw-down and still be critical of Biden’s handling of it....

The real shock has been the speed of Biden’s exit agenda after Trump had already removed the bulk of US troops. This rapid draw-down has included cutting almost all US troops and cutting private contractor numbers by at least 60%, and all of this has been undertaken in the span of a few months.

I wonder if the contractors make up the bulk of Americans stuck in Afghanistan. The press has allowed us to imagine hapless American citizens ... do-gooders and tourists... caught out in the hinterlands, but I suspect that most Americans still in Afghanistan knew exactly what they signed up for when they went there.

Quote:

This has allowed the Taliban to overrun the last secure provinces surrounding the capital of Kabul and then overrun Kabul itself.
Another part of the conspiracy theory, not mentioned here, is the irrationality of abadoning Bagram AFB and all of its equipment and supplies in the middle of the night, without ever telling the Afghan govt. WHEN you are withdrawing, you hang on to your airfields until the last moment. The way Bagram was abandoned smells of panic, or treason, or coverup.

Quote:

... It has been the common practice of multiple US administrations to pay lip service to public concerns over the endless war in Afghanistan, telling people an exit is imminent, then shrugging their shoulders when they are caught lying. ...
Biden apologists would make the argument that the gibbering commander-in-chief has given us exactly what we wanted, so we should be applauding him. However, the chaotic manner in which Biden is executing the troop draw-down is increasingly suspect.

It feels more like a desperate retreat in the face of an overwhelming attack, rather than a controlled exit with a defensive plan in the face of a limited insurgency...

An exit strategy should have taken at least another year to complete, with a secure zone surrounding Kabul and the provinces bordering Pakistan...

And that brings us to current day, in which Afghans are piling onto the landing gear of planes leaving Air Force bases outside Kubul as the capital is overtaken by Taliban fighters in scenes reminiscent of the end of US involvement in the Vietnam War..

I’m not buying the “Biden is incompetent” story because it is too simplistic and it doesn’t take the bigger picture into account. Biden is a muppet, a mascot, a front-man for the public to love or hate, and that’s all he is. Yes, he can barely read from a teleprompter, but it’s his puppeteers that make the big decisions, not Biden. They are evil people, but not incompetent.

So we have to ask some important questions:

Why now? And, who benefits? After decades of presidents lying to us about “mission accomplished” and impending troop exits, why is Biden suddenly committing to an exit strategy in the most hysterical way possible?

Why did the Biden Admin choose September 11th as the end date for the troop exit? It’s certainly symbolic of further US failure and defeat, but is it also symbolic of a new phase in the establishment’s plans for the US as a whole? Is there another major event like 9/11 or larger on the way, and is the sudden exit from Afghanistan in preparation for that event?

As I mentioned, there are scenes here that remind me of Vietnam, but I am also reminded of Benghazi – There is a rotten smell to this event, as if the goal is to deliberately spark an inferno to hide another motive in smoke.

There was a CIA "rat line" of arms from Libya to Syria via Benghazi, which our ambassador was fully "read in" to. [Seymour Hersh https://www.voltairenet.org/article183223.html nd others. When they say that an ambassador is "experienced" they often mean the ambassador him/herself is a dual employee of the State Dept/CIA.]

There was also significant CIA activity in Vietnam (drug smuggling, Air America)

And significant CIA activity in Afghanistan - opium production and smuggling.

If I draw a direct analogy between Afghanistan and Benghazi and Vietnam, since there was SIGNIFICANT CIA activity in all three nations, perhaps the disorderliness is due to CIA presence and coverup.

Quote:

To be sure, the insanity in Afghanistan is quite a distraction away from the implementation of vaccine passports and other illegal mandates in the US...The DHS has just released a statement indicating that anyone who refuses to submit to restrictions and the experimental mRNA vaccines “might” be a potential terrorist. ...

The Biden Admin will certainly try to announce vaccine passport requirements at the federal level in the near future. Is the plan to bring US troops and maybe even private contractors home to the US to help enforce illegal directives through martial law? ...

Or, is there another war on the way that is designed to siphon off able-bodied Americans to fight in some other foreign hell hole when they would otherwise be fighting for freedom in the US? ...

A regional conflict with China or any other country at this stage would completely undermine the already fragile US economy and the global supply chain, not to mention further devalue the US dollar and increase price inflation to a crippling degree. It’s something to consider.

What has me most concerned, again, is the speed at which all of this is being implemented. In my latest articles I have outlined the fact that the government and the corporate establishment is bombarding the public with propaganda on the vaccine passports and covid restrictions at a level not seen since the height of the pandemic in January. It is as if they MUST get these measures in place by the end of this year or the beginning of the next. By extension, the exit from Afghanistan also seems like a scramble. Maybe this is because the resources being used there will be needed elsewhere by the end of this year?

I can’t predict what the exact event will be, but it seems obvious that the establishment is making preparations for another crisis in the near term. The abrupt equote]nd of the occupation of Afghanistan is a warning sign of more pressing threats ahead.

Well, if I had edited the opinion I would have made it come out a lot differently. Apparently the author doesn't know how to keep his arguments together instead of scattering them throughout. That's why all the ellipses.

If I were to compare Afghaninstan to Vietnam, the withdrawal from Vietnam was a rout. There was no conspiracy to use the troops "at home" ... at least, none ever played out.

If I were to compare Bagram AFB to Benghazi, Benghazi was also a rout. It was an interruption of a conspiracy in progress. Perhaps the speed and secrecy of the withdrawal from Bagram was to prevent another Benghazi: take the drugs and run, leave everything else behind.

So IMHO there doesn't need to be a grand conspiracy to explain the precipitous w/drawal of forces from Afghanistan.

anyway, just putting this here for the sake of completeness

-----------
Pity would be no more,
If we did not MAKE men poor - William Blake


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Friday, August 20, 2021 11:11 AM

6IXSTRINGJACK


Quote:

Originally posted by 6IXSTRINGJACK:
Are you behind Biden's* actions regarding this issue Second?




Simple Yes/No question.

Not surprised it wasn't answered.

--------------------------------------------------

Vaccinated People: "You need to get muh vaccination shots that don't work because I got muh vaccination shots that don't work and I'm afraid of people that didn't get muh vaccination shots that don't work because muh vaccination shots that don't work don't work."

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Friday, August 20, 2021 11:53 AM

JO753

rezident owtsidr


Interesting history:
https://www.history.navy.mil/content/history/nhhc/research/library/onl
ine-reading-room/title-list-alphabetically/a/afghan-wars-1839-42-and-1878-80.html


A cursed land.

----------------------------
DUZ XaT SEM RiT TQ YQ? - Jubal Early

The real pandemic solution: http://uvpk.net/

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Friday, August 20, 2021 1:27 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Link does not work.

Too busy, the message says.

"Graveyard of empires."

Mountainous lands are often filled with fractious groups who war with each other and successfully resist invasion.



-----------
Pity would be no more,
If we did not MAKE men poor - William Blake


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Friday, August 20, 2021 1:43 PM

SECOND

The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at https://www.mediafire.com/folder/1uwh75oa407q8/Firefly


Quote:

Originally posted by 6IXSTRINGJACK:
Quote:

Originally posted by 6IXSTRINGJACK:
Are you behind Biden's* actions regarding this issue Second?




Simple Yes/No question.

Not surprised it wasn't answered.

Yes.

Congressman Seeking to Relaunch Afghan War Made Millions in Defense Contracting

Florida Republican Michael Waltz made up to $25 million from the sale of Metis Solutions, a defense contractor with a spotty record training Afghan security forces.

August 20 2021, 9:19 a.m.

Few lawmakers are as outspoken about the end of the war in Afghanistan as Michael Waltz, a Republican from Florida’s 6th Congressional District.

In recent weeks, Waltz has called on President Joe Biden to “reverse course,” relaunch military operations in the region, and “crush the Taliban offensive by committing American air power” supported by “special forces.” The Florida congressman has warned darkly of an “Al-Qaeda 3.0” and stated that no negotiations should take place with the Taliban “until the situation is stabilized militarily.”

Leading this push, in the pages of newspapers, over talk radio, and on cable television, Waltz couches his advocacy in his identity and experience. Not only is he a sitting member of Congress, but he is a former Green Beret, a former aide to Dick Cheney, and “a father … sickened by what’s to come for the Afghan women and girls that are being mercilessly abused by the Taliban and sold into sex slavery,” as he wrote in opinion column published last week in Fox News.

There’s one crucial part of Waltz’s experience he tends to leave out: Before his successful run for Congress in 2018, he managed a lucrative defense contracting firm with offices in Afghanistan. The company was recently sold to Pacific Architects and Engineers, or PAE, one of the largest war contractors the U.S. has hired to train and mentor Afghan security forces. The deal personally enriched Waltz by up to $26 million, a figure made public by a filing disclosed this month.

PAE’s stock is now down nearly 20 percent since last year, with the greatest drop in value occurring over the last month. The company has been reported as among the most harmed by the decision to draw down forces in Afghanistan.

Waltz has said America’s 20-yearlong engagement in Afghanistan is only the beginning.

“We are in a multi-decade war and we are only 15-years in,” said Waltz, speaking to the Scout Warrior and the National Interest for a story published in January 2017. The future congressman and defense contractor said he expected a 100 year war.

More at https://theintercept.com/2021/08/20/mike-waltz-afghanistan/

The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at https://www.mediafire.com/two

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Friday, August 20, 2021 2:32 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Quote:

VP Harris Refused To Face America, Said ‘You Will Not Pin This Shit On Me’ Despite Key Role In Afghanistan Withdrawal Planning – Report

https://nationalfile.com/vp-harris-refused-to-face-america-said-you-wi
ll-not-pin-this-shit-on-me-despite-key-role-in-afghanistan-withdrawal-planning
/

Looks like Kamala Harris is doing the same fine job with this as she did at our southern border.

Poor Joe Biden*. Everyone is running away from this shitpile as fast as they can, leaving him to go it alone.

Nobody wants to step up and take charge.



-----------
Pity would be no more,
If we did not MAKE men poor - William Blake


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Friday, August 20, 2021 2:35 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Quote:

WTH? Canadian PM Spoke With HILLARY CLINTON About Afghanistan Because Biden And Harris Were AWOL

https://summit.news/2021/08/20/wth-canadian-pm-spoke-with-hillary-clin
ton-about-afghanistan-because-biden-and-harris-were-awol
/


-----------
Pity would be no more,
If we did not MAKE men poor - William Blake


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Friday, August 20, 2021 3:19 PM

SECOND

The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at https://www.mediafire.com/folder/1uwh75oa407q8/Firefly


Pompeo Is Lying About Afghanistan

He laid the groundwork for the Taliban takeover. Now he’s blaming Biden.

Under the deal, signed on Feb. 29, 2020, the U.S. government pledged “to withdraw from Afghanistan all military forces of the United States, its allies, and Coalition partners … within fourteen (14) months.” (That is before May 1, 2021.)

American forces immediately began to vacate bases and pull out. But the Taliban, contrary to its commitments, escalated its attacks. Pompeo responded by making excuses. “We have seen the senior Taliban leadership working diligently to reduce violence from previous levels,” he asserted on March 5, 2020. “We still have confidence that the Taliban leadership is working to deliver on its commitments.” He argued that critics were making too much of the latest attacks, since violence in Afghanistan was “common.”

As the United States closed its air bases and stripped its troop presence to a minimum, the Taliban advanced, seizing provincial capitals. In November, Defense Secretary Mark Esper warned that the American retreat was undercutting the Afghan government. Trump responded by firing Esper. The Afghan government asked Pompeo to slow the U.S. withdrawal and press the Taliban for a cease-fire. Pompeo, in reply, offered only to “sit on the side and help where we can.” He argued that because terrorist networks were global, the United States didn’t need troops in Afghanistan.

Pompeo maintained this position after leaving office. Last month, when he was asked about warnings from U.S. military officials “that Kabul could fall within a few months,” he scoffed that “President Trump had the same kind of resistance from the military … to reducing our footprint in Afghanistan.”

More at https://slate.com/news-and-politics/2021/08/pompeo-lies-afghanistan-ta
liban-biden.html


The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at https://www.mediafire.com/two

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Friday, August 20, 2021 4:15 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Quote:

Originally posted by second:
Pompeo Is Lying About Afghanistan

He laid the groundwork for the Taliban takeover. Now he’s blaming Biden.

Under the deal, signed on Feb. 29, 2020, the U.S. government pledged “to withdraw from Afghanistan all military forces of the United States, its allies, and Coalition partners … within fourteen (14) months.” (That is before May 1, 2021.)

American forces immediately began to vacate bases and pull out. But the Taliban, contrary to its commitments, escalated its attacks. Pompeo responded by making excuses. “We have seen the senior Taliban leadership working diligently to reduce violence from previous levels,” he asserted on March 5, 2020. “We still have confidence that the Taliban leadership is working to deliver on its commitments.” He argued that critics were making too much of the latest attacks, since violence in Afghanistan was “common.”

As the United States closed its air bases and stripped its troop presence to a minimum, the Taliban advanced, seizing provincial capitals. In November, Defense Secretary Mark Esper warned that the American retreat was undercutting the Afghan government. Trump responded by firing Esper. The Afghan government asked Pompeo to slow the U.S. withdrawal and press the Taliban for a cease-fire. Pompeo, in reply, offered only to “sit on the side and help where we can.” He argued that because terrorist networks were global, the United States didn’t need troops in Afghanistan.

Pompeo maintained this position after leaving office. Last month, when he was asked about warnings from U.S. military officials “that Kabul could fall within a few months,” he scoffed that “President Trump had the same kind of resistance from the military … to reducing our footprint in Afghanistan.”

More at https://slate.com/news-and-politics/2021/08/pompeo-lies-afghanistan-ta
liban-biden.html


The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at https://www.mediafire.com/two

The Taliban did not attack American troops during the drawdown, and it was not IMHO our business to prop up a corrupt client state.

Quote:

US goes one year without a combat death in Afghanistan as Taliban warn against reneging on peace deal

https://www.stripes.com/theaters/middle_east/us-goes-one-year-without-
a-combat-death-in-afghanistan-as-taliban-warn-against-reneging-on-peace-deal-1.661464


In your eagerness to criticize the GOP, you wound up supporting the kind of war you said we shouldn't wage.
Please check your anti-GOP hatred against logic, reality, and consistency with previously-posted opinion b4 posting.

-----------
Pity would be no more,
If we did not MAKE men poor - William Blake


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Friday, August 20, 2021 5:25 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


And now for something completely different

Quote:

Britain Wants A Rerun Of The War On Afghanistan

Immediately after the Taliban victory an enormous dis-information campaign was launched to again badmouth them.

There are now suddenly all kinds of allegations that the Taliban are doing this or that bad. These are mostly based on hearsay and no or very little evidence is presented. Don't believe them without direct confirmation from original sources.

The launch of Amrullah Saleh and Ahmed Massoud as leaders of a new resistance against the Taliban must have been long prepared. One does not get op-ed space in the Washington Post and several big European papers just some three days after Kabul falls without some lead time and without serious 'western' backing.

While Saleh is an old CIA spy Ahmed Massoud has been prepared by the Brits:

After finishing his secondary school education in Iran, Massoud spent a year on a military course at the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst.In 2012, he commenced an undergraduate degree in War Studies at King's College London where he obtained his bachelor's degree in 2015. He obtained his master's degree in International Politics from City, University of London in 2016.

The type of disinformation campaign combined with the well prepared launch of the 'resistance campaign', allegedly with SAS trained Afghan soldiers, and the regional op-ed placements let me conclude that he is run by the Brits. They are quite excellent in their 'strategic communication' disinformation business.

The conservatives speaking in their special parliament session were also the most angry about the outcome of their imperial war on Afghanistan and about their own inability to stop its end while claiming to be a 'Global Britain'.

As Richard Murphey remarks on Withering Britain:

This then is a massive moment for the role of the US in the world. It does not create a vacuum, but the risk that one might follow – which China will all too willingly seek to fill – seems very real at present.

And where does Britain fit into this? In a sense it does not. The US did not consults us, and is still not apparently telling us what it is doing in Kabul. We were not a player. There was no special, relationship. Our opinion was not worth having. It did not matter to the US. The pretence is over.

With that the vestige of British power, built on the coat-tails of the 1940s and the mutually advantageous myths formed since then, has gone. We are now just a rather remote, small, and fairly insignificant state who is just one amongst many. The delusion that we are otherwise has to go.

But will the delusion disappear? Will we, with its demise, stop building aircraft carriers that were strategically useless decades before they were designed? Will we stop thinking ourselves exceptional? And will an England thwarted become ever more aggressive towards its last vestiges of empire – those states it subjects to its rule within the supposed United Kingdom, which increasingly feels anything but that?

These are big questions. Only time can provide the answers. But I have a feeling that everything has changed. The image of British power has withered away. If all involved now deal with the reality for the these islands and their future that might be for the better. If at the same time we stop hectoring and abusing the world and actually learn to live with and work alongside it, so much the better too. But will we do that? That’s anyone’s guess. The wise will hope that we do.

That hope is, see above, in vain.

Stories about alleged Taliban acts 'against Afghan women' will now again get special features. Women have been used to sell the long war on Afghanistan since its very beginning. But how many women were actually killed by Soviet, British and U.S. bombs during the war?

On the abuse of feminism to promote the never ending war on Afghanistan, the badmouthing of the Taliban please read the excellent piece Afghanistan: The End of the Occupation which was co-written by a female anthropologist who has done field work there.



https://www.moonofalabama.org/



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Pity would be no more,
If we did not MAKE men poor - William Blake


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Friday, August 20, 2021 5:29 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


I have not had a chance to read all of this article, but I hope you find it as interesting s I did, so far.

Quote:

Nancy Lindisfarne and Jonathan Neale write: A lot of nonsense about Afghanistan is being written in Britain and the United States. Most of this nonsense hides a number of important truths.

First, the Taliban have defeated the United States.

Second, the Taliban have won because they have more popular support.

Third, this is not because most Afghans love the Taliban. It is because the American occupation has been unbearably cruel and corrupt.

Fourth, the War on Terror has also been politically defeated in the United States. The majority of Americans are now in favor of withdrawal from Afghanistan and against any more foreign wars.

Fifth, this is a turning point in world history. The greatest military power in the world has been defeated by the people of a small, desperately poor country. This will weaken the power of the American empire all over the world.

Sixth, the rhetoric of saving Afghan women has been widely used to justify the occupation, and many feminists in Afghanistan have chosen the side of the occupation. The result is a tragedy for feminism.

This article explains these points. Because this a short piece, we assert more than we prove. But we have written a great deal about gender, politics and war in Afghanistan since we did fieldwork there as anthropologists almost fifty years ago. We give links to much of this work at the end of this article, so you can explore our arguments in more detail.[1]

A military victory

This is a military and political victory for the Taliban. It is a military victory because the Taliban have won the war. For at least two years the Afghan government forces – the national army and the police – have been losing more people dead and wounded each month than they are recruiting. So those forces are shrinking.

Over the last ten years the Taliban have been taking control of more and more villages and some towns. In the last twelve days they have taken all the cities.

This was not a lightning advance through the cities and then on to Kabul. The people who took each city had long been in the vicinity, in the villages, waiting for the moment. Crucially, across the north the Taliban had been steadily recruiting Tajiks, Uzbeks and Arabs.

This is also a political victory for the Taliban. No guerilla insurgency on earth can win such victories without popular support.

But perhaps support is not the right word. It is more that Afghans have had to choose sides. And more of the Afghan people have chosen to side with the Taliban than have chosen the American occupiers. Not all of them, just more of them.

More Afghans have also chosen to side with the Taliban than with the Afghan government of President Ashraf Ghani. Again, not all of them, but more than support Ghani. And more Afghans have chosen to side with the Taliban than with the old warlords. The defeat of Dostum in Sheberghan and Ismail Khan in Herat is stunning evidence of that.

The Taliban of 2001 were overwhelmingly Pushtuns, and their politics was Pushtun chauvinist. In 2021 Taliban fighters of many ethnicities have taken power in Uzbek and Tajik dominated areas.

The important exception is the Hazara dominated areas in the central mountains. We come back to this exception.

Of course, not all Afghans have chosen to side with the Taliban. This is a war against foreign invaders, but it is also a civil war. Many have fought for the Americans, the government or the warlords. Many more have made compromises with both sides to survive. And many others were not sure which side to take and are waiting with different mixtures of fear and hope to see what will happen.

Because this is a military defeat for American power, calls for Biden to do this or that are simply silly. If American troops had remained in Afghanistan, they would have had to surrender or die. This would be a even worse humiliation for American power than the current debacle. Biden, like Trump before him, was out of options.

Why so many Afghans chose the Taliban

The fact that more people have chosen the Taliban does not mean that most Afghans necessarily support the Taliban. It means that given the limited choices available, that is the choice they have made. Why?

The short answer is that the Taliban are the only important political organization fighting the American occupation, and most Afghans have come to hate that occupation.

It was not always thus. The US first sent bomber planes and a few troops to Afghanistan a month after 9/11. The US was supported by the forces of the Northern Alliance, a coalition of non-Pushtun warlords in the north of the country. But the soldiers and leaders of the Alliance were not actually prepared to fight alongside the Americans. Given the long history of Afghan resistance to foreign invasion, most recently to the Russian occupation from 1980 to 1987, that would just be too shameful.

On the other side, though, almost no one was prepared to fight to defend the Taliban government then in power. The troops of the Northern Alliance and the Taliban faced each other in a phony war. Then the US, the British and their foreign allies began to bomb.

The Pakistani military and intelligence services negotiated an end to the stalemate. The United States would be allowed to take power in Kabul and install a president of their choice. In return, the Taliban leaders and rank and file would be allowed to go home to their villages or into exile across the border in Pakistan.

This settlement was not widely publicized in the US and Europe at the time, for obvious reasons, but we reported on it, and it was widely understood in Afghanistan.

For best evidence for this negotiated settlement is what happened next. For two years there was no resistance to the American occupation. None, in any village. Many thousands of former Taliban remained in those villages.

This is an extraordinary fact. Think of the contrast with Iraq, where resistance was widespread from Day One of the occupation in 2003. Or think of the Russian invasion of Afghanistan in 1979, met with the same wall of anger.

The reason was not simply that the Taliban were not fighting. It was that ordinary people, even in the Taliban heartland in the south, dared to hope that the American occupation would bring Afghanistan peace and develop the economy to end the terrible poverty.

Peace was crucial. By 2001 Afghans had been trapped in war for twenty-three years, first a civil war between communists and Islamists, then a war between Islamists and Soviet invaders, then a war between Islamist warlords, and then a war in the north of the country between Islamist warlords and the Taliban.

Twenty-three years of war meant death, maiming, exile and refugee camps, poverty, so many kinds of grief, and endless fear and anxiety. Perhaps the best book about what that felt like is Klaits and Gulmanadova Klaits, Love and War in Afghanistan (2005). People were desperate for peace. By 2001 even Taliban supporters felt a bad peace was better than a good war.

Also, the United States was fabulously rich. Afghans believed the occupation could lead to development that would rescue them from poverty.

Afghans waited. The US delivered war, not peace.

The US and UK military occupied bases throughout the villages and small towns of the Taliban heartland, the mainly Pushtun areas of the south and east. These units were never told of the informal settlement negotiated between the Americans and the Taliban. They could not be told, because that would shame the government of President Bush. So the US units saw it as their mission to root out the remaining “bad guys”, who were obviously still there.

Night raids crashed through doors, humiliating and terrifying families, taking men away to be tortured for info about the other bad guys. It was here, and in black sites all over the world, that the American military and intelligence developed the new styles of torture that the world would briefly glimpse from Abu Ghraib, the American prison in Iraq.

Some of the men detained were Taliban who had not been fighting. Some were just people betrayed to the Americans by local enemies who coveted their land or held a grudge.

The American soldier Johnny Rico’s memoir Blood Makes the Grass Grow Green provides a useful account of what then happened next. Outraged relatives and villagers took a few potshots at the Americans in the dark. The American military kicked in more doors and tortured more men. The villagers took more potshots. The Americans called in airstrikes and their bombs killed family after family.

War returned across the south and east of the country.

Inequality and corruption spiraled.

Afghans had hoped for development that could lift both the rich and the poor. It seemed like such an obvious, and such an easy thing to do. But they did not understand American policy abroad. And they did not understand the deep dedication of the 1% in the United States to spiraling inequality in their own country.

So American money poured into Afghanistan. But it went the people in the new government headed by Hamid Karzai. It went to the people working with the Americans and the occupying troops of other nations. And it went to the warlords and their entourages who were deeply involved in the international opium and heroin trade facilitated by the CIA and the Pakistani military. It went to the people lucky enough to own luxury, well-defended homes in Kabul they could rent out to expatriate staff. It went to the men and women who worked in foreign-funded NGOs.

Of course people in these groups all overlapped.

Afghans had long been used to corruption. They both expected it and hated it. But this time the scale was unprecedented. And in the eyes of the poor and middle income people, all the obscene new wealth, no matter how garnered, seemed to be corruption.

Over the last decade the Taliban have offered two things across the country. The first is that they are not corrupt, as they were also not corrupt in office before 2001. They are the only political force in the country this has ever been true of.

Critically, the Taliban have run an honest judicial system in the rural areas they have controlled. Their reputation is so high that many people involved in civil lawsuits in the cities have agreed that both parties will go to Taliban judges in the countryside. This allows them swift, cheap and fair justice without massive bribes. Because the justice was fair, both parties can live with it.

For people in Taliban-controlled areas, fair justice was also a protection against inequality. When the rich can bribe the judges, they can do anything they want to the poor. Land was the crucial thing. Rich and powerful men, warlords and government officials could seize or steal or cheat their way into control of the land of small farmers, and oppress the even poorer sharecroppers. But Taliban judges, everyone understood, were willing to rule for the poor.

Hatred of corruption, of inequality, and of the occupation merged together.

20 Years On

2001, when the Taliban fell to the Americans after 9/11, is twenty years ago now. Enormous changes happen to political mass movements over twenty years of war and crisis. The Taliban have learned and changed. How could it be otherwise. Many Afghans, and many foreign experts, have commented on this. Giustozzi has used the useful phrase neo-Taliban.[2]

This change, as publicly presented, has several aspects. The Taliban have realized that Pushtun chauvinism was a great weakness. They now emphasize that they are Muslims, brothers to all other Muslims, and that they want and have the support of Muslims of many ethnic groups.

But there has been a bitter split in Taliban forces over the last few years. A minority of Taliban fighters and supporters have allied themselves with Islamic State. The difference is that Islamic State launch terror attacks on Shias, Sikhs and Christians. The Taliban in Pakistan do the same, and so dp the small Haqqani network sponsored by Pakistani intelligence. But the Taliban majority have been reliable in condemning all such attacks.

We return to this division later, as it has implications for what will happen next.

The new Taliban have also emphasized their concerns for the rights of women. They say they welcome music, and videos, and have moderated the fiercest and most puritanical sides of their former rule. And they are now saying over and over again that they want to rule in peace, without revenge on the people of the old order.

How much of this is propaganda, and how much is truth, is hard to tell. Moreover, what happens next is deeply dependent on what happens to the economy, and on the actions of foreign powers. Of that, more later. Our point here is that Afghans have reasons for choosing the Taliban over the Americans, the warlords and Ashraf Ghani’s government.

What About Rescuing Afghan Women?

Many readers will now be feeling, insistently, but what about Afghan women? The answer is not simple.

We have to start by going back to the 1970s. Around the world, particular systems of gendered inequality are entangled with a particular system of class inequality. Afghanistan was no different.

Nancy did anthropological fieldwork with Pushtun women and men in the north of the country in the early 1970s. They lived by farming and herding animals. Nancy’s subsequent book, Bartered Brides: Politics and Marriage in a Tribal Society, explains the connections between class, gender and ethnic divisions at that time. And if you want to know what those women themselves thought about their lives, troubles and joys, Nancy and her former partner Richard Tapper have recently published Afghan Village Voices, a translation of many of the tapes that women and men made for them in the field.

That reality was complex, bitter, oppressive and full of love. In that deep sense, it was no different from the complexities of sexism and class in the United States. But the tragedy of the next half century would change much of that. That long suffering produced the particular sexism of the Taliban, which is not an automatic product of Afghan tradition.

The history of this new turn starts in 1978. Then civil war began between the communist government and the Islamist mujahedin resistance. The Islamists were winning, so the Soviet Union invaded late in 1979 to back up the Communist government. Seven years of brutal war between the Soviets and the mujahedin followed. In 1987 the Soviet troops left, defeated.

When we lived in Afghanistan, in the early 1970s, the communists were among the best people. They were driven by three passions. They wanted to develop the country. They wanted to break the power of the big landowners and share out the land. And they wanted equality for women.

But in 1978 the communists had taken power in a military coup, led by progressive officers. They had not won the political support of the majority of villagers, in an overwhelming rural country. The result was that the only ways they could deal with the rural Islamist resistance were arrest, torture and bombing. The more the communist led army did such cruelties, the more the revolt grew.

Then the Soviet Union invaded to prop up the communists. Their main weapon was bombing from the air, and large parts of the country became free fire zones. Between half a million and a million Afghans were killed. At least another million were maimed for life. Between six and eight million were driven into exile in Iran and Pakistan, and millions more became internal refugees. All this in a country of only twenty-five million people.

When they came to power, the first thing the communists tried to do were land reform and legislation for the rights of women. When the Russians invaded, the majority of communists sided with them. Many of those communists were women. The result was to smear the name of feminism with support for torture and massacre.

Imagine that the United States was invaded by a foreign power who killed between twelve million and twenty-four million Americans, tortured people in every town, and drove 100 million Americans into exile. Imagine also that almost all feminists in the United States supported the invaders. After that experience, how do you think most Americans would feel about a second invasion by another foreign power, or about feminism?

How do you think most Afghan women feel about another invasion, this time by the Americans, justified by the need to rescue Afghan women? Remember, those statistics about the dead, the maimed and the refugees under Soviet occupation were not abstract numbers. They were living women, and their sons and daughters, husbands, brothers and sisters, mothers and fathers.

So when the Soviet Union left, defeated, most people breathed a sigh of relief. But then the local leaders of the mujahedin resistance to the communists and the invaders became local warlords and fought each other for the spoils of victory. The majority of Afghans had supported the mujahedin, but now they were disgusted by the greed, the corruption and the endless useless war.

The Class and Refugee Background of the Taliban

In the autumn of 1994, the Taliban had arrived in Kandahar, a mostly Pashtun city and the largest in southern Afghanistan. The Taliban were like nothing before in Afghan history. They were products of two quintessentially twentieth century innovations, aerial bombing and the refugee camps in Pakistan. They belonged to a different social class from the elites who had governed Afghanistan.

The Communists had been the sons and daughters of the urban middle classes and the middle level farmers in the countryside with enough land to call their own. They had been led by people who attended the country’s sole university in Kabul. They wanted to break the power of the big landowners and modernize the country.

The Islamists who fought the Communists had been men of similar class backgrounds, and mostly former students at the same university. They too wanted to modernize the country, but in a different way. And they looked to the ideas of the Muslim Brotherhood and Al-Alzhar University in Cairo.

The word Taliban means students in an Islamic school, not a state school or a university. The fighters of the Taliban who entered Kandahar in 1994 were young men who had studied in the free Islamic schools in the refugee camps in Pakistan. They had been children with nothing.

The leaders of the Taliban were village mullahs from Afghanistan. They did not have the elite connections of many of the imams of city mosques. Village mullahs could read, and they were held in some respect by other villagers. But their social status was well below that of a landlord, or a high school graduate in a government office.

The Taliban were led by a committee of twelve men. All twelve had lost a hand, a foot or an eye to Soviet bombs in the war. The Taliban were, among other things, the party of poor and middling Pushtun village men. [3]

Twenty years of war had left Kandahar lawless and at the mercy of warring militias. The turning point came when the Taliban went after a local commander who had raped a boy and two (possibly three) women. The Taliban caught and hung him. What made their intervention striking was not just their determination to put an end to the murderous infighting and restore people’s dignity and safety, but their disgust at the hypocrisy of the other Islamists.

From the first the Taliban were funded by the Saudis, the Americans and the Pakistani military. Washington wanted a peaceful country that could house oil and gas pipelines from Central Asia. The Taliban stood out because they brooked no exceptions to the injunctions they sought to impose, and the severity with which they enforced the rules.

Many Afghans were grateful for the return of order and a modicum of security, but the Taliban were sectarian and unable to control the country, and, in 1996, the Americans withdrew their support. When they did so, they unleashed a new, and deadly, version of Islamophobia against the Taliban.

Almost overnight, Afghan women were deemed helpless and oppressed, while Afghan men – aka the Taliban – were execrated as fanatical savages, paedophiles and sadistic patriarchs, hardly people at all.

For four years before 9/11 the Taliban had been targeted by the Americans, while feminists and others clamored for the protection of Afghan women. By the time the American bombing started, everyone was meant to understand that the Afghan women needed help. What could possibly go wrong?

9/11 and the American War

The bombing began on October 7th. Within days, the Taliban had been forced into hiding – or were literally castrated – as a photograph on the front page of the Daily Mail crowed. The published images of the war were truly shocking in the violence and sadism they portrayed. Many people in Europe were appalled by the scale of the bombing and the utter carelessness of Afghan lives.[4]

Yet in the United States that autumn, the mixture of vengeance and patriotism meant dissenting voices were rare and mostly inaudible. Ask yourself, as Saba Mahmood did at the time, ‘Why were conditions of war, (migration, militarization) and starvation (under the mujahideen) considered to be less injurious to women than the lack of education, employment and most notably, in the media campaign, western dress styles (under the Taliban)?’ [5]

Then ask again even more fiercely – how could you possibly ‘save Afghan women’ by bombing a civilian population that included, along with the women themselves, their children, their husbands, fathers and brothers? It should have been the question that ended the argument, but it was not.

The most egregious expression of feminist Islamophobia came little over a month into the war. A vastly unequal war of revenge doesn’t look very good in the eyes of the world, so better to be doing something that looks virtuous. In anticipation of the American Thanksgiving holiday, on the 17th of November 2001, Laura Bush, the President’s wife, loudly lamented the plight of the veiled Afghan women. Cherie Blair, the British Prime Minister’s wife echoed her sentiments a few days later. These wealthy war-mongers’ wives were using the full weight of the Orientalist paradigm to blame the victims and justify a war against some of the poorest people on earth. And ‘Saving Afghan Women’ became the persistent cry of many liberal feminists to justify the American war.[6]

With the election of Obama in 2008, the chorus of Islamophobia became hegemonic among American liberals. That year the American anti-war alliance effectively dissolved itself to aid Obama’s campaign. Democrats and those feminists who supported Obama’s war hawk Secretary of State, Hillary Clinton, could not accept the truth that Afghanistan and Iraq were both wars for oil.[7]

They had only one justification for the endless wars of oil – the sufferings of Afghan women. The feminist spin was a clever ploy. It precluded comparisons between the undoubted sexist rule of the Taliban and sexisms in the United States. Far more shocking, the feminist spin domesticated and effectively displaced the ugly truths about a grossly unequal war. And it separated those notional ‘women to be saved’ from the tens of thousands of actual Afghan women, and men and children killed, wounded, orphaned or made homeless and hungry by the American bombs.

Many of our friends and family members in America are feminists who believed with decent hearts much of this propaganda. But they were being asked to support was a web of lies, a perversion of feminism. It was the feminism of the invader and the corrupt governing elite. It was the feminism of the torturers and the drones.

We believe another feminism is possible.

But it remains true that the Taliban are deeply sexist. Misogyny has won a victory in Afghanistan. But it did not have to be that way.

The communists who sided with the cruelties of the Soviet invaders had discredited feminism in Afghanistan for at least a generation. But then the United States invaded, and a new generation of Afghan women professionals sided with the new invaders to try to win rights for women. Their dream too has ended in collaboration, shame and blood. Some were careerists, of course, mouthing platitudes in exchange for funding. But many others were motivated by an honest and selfless dream. Their failure is tragic.

Stereotypes and Confusions

Outside Afghanistan, there is a great deal of confusion about stereotypes of the Taliban elaborated over the last twenty-five years. But think carefully when you hear the stereotypes that they are feudal, brutal and primitive. These are people with laptops, who have been negotiating with the Americans in Qatar for the last fourteen years.

The Taliban are not the product of medieval times. They are the product of some of the worst times of the late twentieth century and early twenty-first century. If they look backward in some ways to an imagined better time, that is not surprising. But they have been moulded by life under aerial bombardment, refugee camps, communism, the War of Terror, enhanced interrogation, climate change, internet politics and the spiralling inequality of neoliberalism. They live, like everyone else, now.

Their roots in a tribal society can also be confusing. But as Richard Tapper has argued, tribes are not atavistic institutions. They are the way that peasants in this part of the world organise their entanglement with the state. And the history of Afghanistan has never been simply a matter of competing ethnic groups, but rather of complex alliances across groups and divisions within groups.[8]

There is a set of prejudices on the left which incline some people to ask how the Taliban could be on the side of the poor and anti-imperialist if they are not “progressive”. Leave aside for the moment that the word progressive means little. Of course the Taliban are hostile to socialism and communism. They themselves, or their parents or grandparents, were killed and tortured by socialists and communists. Moreover, any movement that has fought a twenty-year guerrilla war and defeated a great empire is anti-imperialist, or words have no meaning.

Reality is what it is. The Taliban are a movement of poor peasants, against an imperial occupation, deeply misogynist, supported by many women, sometimes racist and sectarian, and sometimes not. That’s a bundle of contradictions produced by history.

Another source of confusion is the class politics of the Taliban. How can they be on the side of the poor, as they obviously are, and yet so bitterly opposed to socialism? The answer is that the experience of the Russian occupation stripped away the possibility of socialist formulations about class. But it did not change the reality of class. No one has ever built a mass movement among poor peasants that took power without being seen as on the side of the poor.

The Taliban talk not in the language of class, but in the language of justice and corruption. Those words describe the same side.

None of this means that the Taliban will necessarily rule in the interests of the poor. We have seen enough peasant revolts come to power in the last century and more, only to become governments by urban elites. And none of this should distract from the truth that the Taliban intend to be dictators, not democrats.

A Historic Change in America

The fall of Kabul marks a decisive defeat for American power around the world. But it also marks, or makes clear, a deep turning away from the American empire among Americans.

One piece of evidence is the opinion polls. In 2001, right after 9/11, between 85% and 90% of Americans approved of the invasion of Afghanistan. The numbers have been dropping steadily. Last month, 62% of Americans approved of Biden’s plan for total withdrawal, and 29% were opposed.

This rejection of the war is common on both the right and the left. The working class base of the Republican Party and Trump are against foreign wars. Many soldiers and military families come from the rural areas and the south where Trump is strong. They are against any more wars, for it is they and those they loved who served, died and were wounded.

Right wing patriotism in America now is pro-military, but that means pro-soldier, not pro-war. When they say ‘Make America Great Again’, they mean that America is not great now for Americans, not that the US should be more engaged in the world.

Among Democrats, too, the working class base is against the wars.

There are people who support further military intervention. They are the Obama democrats, the Romney republicans, the generals, many liberal and conservative professionals, and almost everyone in the Washington elite. But the American people as a whole, and especially the working class, black, brown and white, have turned against the American Empire.

After the fall of Saigon, the American government was unable to launch major military interventions for the next fifteen years. It may well be longer after the fall of Kabul.

The International Consequences

Since 1918, 103 years ago, the United States has been the most powerful nation in the world. There have been competing powers – first Germany, then the Soviet Union and now China. But the US has been dominant. That ‘American Century’ is now coming to an end.

The long-term reason is the economic rise of China and the relative economic decline of the United States. But the covid pandemic and the Afghan defeat make the last two years a turning point.

The covid pandemic has revealed the institutional incompetence of the ruling class, and the government, of the United States. The system has failed to protect the people. This chaotic and shameful failure is obvious to people around the world.

Then there’s Afghanistan. If you judge by expenditure and hardware the United States is overwhelmingly the dominant military power globally. That power has been defeated by poor people in sandals in a small country who have nothing but endurance and courage.

The Taliban victory will also give heart to Islamists of many different sorts in Syria, Yemen, Somalia, Pakistan, Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan, Tajikistan and Mali. But it will be true more widely than that.

Both the covid failure and the Afghan defeat will reduce the soft power of the US. But Afghanistan is also a defeat for hard power. The strength of the informal empire of the United States has relied for a century on three different pillars. One is being the largest economy in the world, and domination of the global financial system. The second is a reputation in many quarters for democracy, competence and cultural leadership. The third was that if soft power failed, the United States would invade to support dictatorships and punish its enemies.

That military power is gone now. No government will believe that the US can rescue them from a foreign invader, or from their own people. Drone killings will continue and cause great suffering. But nowhere will drones on their own be militarily decisive.

This is the beginning of the end of the American century.

What Happens Now?

No one knows what will happen in Afghanistan in the next few years. But we can identify some of the pressures.

First, and most hopeful, is the deep longing for peace in the hearts of Afghans. They have now lived through forty-three years of war. Think how only five or ten years of civil war and invasion have scarred so many countries. Now think of forty-three years.

Kabul, Kandahar and Mazar, the three most important cities, have all fallen without any violence. This is because the Taliban, as they keep saying, want a country at peace, and they do not want revenge. But it is also because the people who do not support, indeed those who hate the Taliban, also chose not to fight.

The Taliban leaders are clearly aware they must deliver peace.

For that it is also essential that the Taliban continue to deliver fair justice. Their record is good. But the temptations and pressures of government have corrupted many social movements in many countries before them.

Economic collapse is also quite possible. Afghanistan is a poor and arid country, where less than 5% of the land can be farmed. In the last twenty years the cities have swelled immensely. That growth has been dependent on money flowing from the occupation, and to a lesser extent money from growing opium. Without very substantial foreign aid from somewhere, economic collapse will threaten.

Because the Taliban know this, they have been explicitly offering the United States a deal. The Americans will give aid, and in return the Taliban will not provide a home for terrorists who could launch attacks like 9/11. Both the Trump and Biden administrations have accepted this deal. But it is not at all clear that the US will keep that promise.

Indeed, something worse is entirely possible. Previous US administrations have punished Iraq, Iran, Cuba and Vietnam for their defiance with long running and destructive economic sanctions. There will be many voices raised in the US for such sanctions, to starve Afghan children in the name of human rights.

Then there is the threat of international meddling, of different powers supporting different political or ethnic forces inside Afghanistan. The United States, India, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Iran, China, Russia and Uzbekistan will all be tempted. It has happened before, and in a situation of economic collapse it could provoke proxy wars.

For the moment, though, the governments of Iran, Russia and Pakistan clearly want peace in Afghanistan.

The Taliban have also promised not to rule with cruelty. That is easier said than done. Confronted with families who have amassed great fortunes through corruption and crime, what do you think the poor soldiers from the villages will want to do?

And then there is climate. In 1971 a drought and famine across the north and center devastated flocks, crops and lives. It was the first sign of the effects of climate change on the region, which has brought further droughts over the last fifty years. Over the medium and long term, farming and herding will become more precarious.[9]

All these dangers are real. But the often insightful security expert Antonio Giustozzi is in touch with the thinking among both the Taliban and foreign governments and the Taliban. His article in The Guardian on August 16 was hopeful. He ended it:

Since most of the neighbouring countries want stability in Afghanistan, at least for the time being any fissures in the new coalition government are unlikely to be exploited by external actors to create rifts. Similarly, the 2021 losers will struggle to find anybody willing or able to support them in starting some kind of resistance. As long as the new coalition government includes key allies of its neighbours, this is the beginning of a new phase in the history of Afghanistan.[10]

What Can You Do? Welcome Refugees.

Many people in the West now are asking, “What can we do to help Afghan women?” Sometimes this question assumes that most Afghan women oppose the Taliban, and most Afghan men support them. This is nonsense. It is almost impossible to imagine the kind of society in which that would be true.

But there is a narrower question here. Specifically, how can they help Afghan feminists?

This is a valid and decent question. The answer is to organize to buy them airplane tickets and give them refuge in Europe and North America.

But it is not just feminists who will need asylum. Tens of thousands of people who worked for the occupation are desperate for asylum, with their families. So are larger numbers of people who worked for the Afghan government.

Some of these people are admirable, some are corrupt monsters, many lie in between, and many are just children. But there is a moral imperative here. The United States and the NATO countries have created immense suffering for twenty years. The least, the very least, they should do it rescue the people whose lives they have wrecked.

There is another moral issue here too. What many Afghans have learned in the last forty years has also been clear in the last decade of the torment of Syria. It is all too easy to understand the accidents of background and personal history which lead people to do the things they do. Humility compels us to look at the young communist woman, the educated feminist working for an NGO, the suicide bomber, the American marine, the village mullah, the Taliban fighter, the bereaved mother of a child killed by American bombs, the Sikh money changer, the policeman, the poor farmer growing opium, and to say, there but for the grace of God go I.

The failure of the American and British governments to rescue the people who worked for them has been both shameful and revealing. It is not really a failure, but a choice. Racism against immigration has weighed more strongly with Johnson and Biden than the debts of humanity.

Campaigns to welcome Afghans are still possible. Of course such a strong moral argument will come up against racism and Islamophobia at every turn. But in the last week the governments of Germany and Netherlands have both suspended any deportations of Afghans.

Every politician, anywhere, who speaks in support of Afghan women must be asked, again and again, to open the borders to all Afghans.

And then there is what might happen to the Hazaras. As we have said, the Taliban have stopped being simply a Pushtun movement and have gone national, recruiting many Tajiks and Uzbeks. And also, they say, some Hazaras. But not many.

The Hazaras are the people who traditionally lived in the central mountains. Many also migrated to cities like Mazar and Kabul, where they worked as porters and in other low paid jobs. They are about 15% of the Afghan population. The roots of enmity between Pushtuns and Hazaras lie partly in long standing disputes over land and rights to grazing.

But more recently it also matters a good deal that Hazaras are Shias, and almost all other Afghans are Sunnis.

The bitter conflicts between Sunnis and Shias in Iraq have led to a split in the militant Islamist tradition. This split is complicated, but important, and needs a bit of explanation.

In both Iraq and in Syria the Islamic State have committed massacres against Shias, just as Shia militias have massacred Sunnis in both countries.

The more traditional Al Qaeda networks have remained staunchly opposed to attacking Shias and argued for solidarity between Muslims. People often point out that Osama Bin Laden’s mother was herself a Shia – actually an Alawite from Syria. But the necessity of unity has been more important. This was the main issue in the split between Al Qaeda and the Islamic State.

In Afghanistan the Taliban have also argued strongly for Islamic unity. The sexual exploitation of women by Islamic State is also deeply repugnant to Taliban values, which are deeply sexist but puritanical and modest. For many years the Afghan Taliban have been consistent in their public condemnation of all terror attacks on Shias, Christians and Sikhs.

Yet those attacks happen. The ideas of Islamic State have had a particular influence on the Pakistani Taliban. The Afghan Taliban are an organization. The Pakistani Taliban are a looser network, not controlled by the Afghans. They have carried out repeated bombings against Shias and Christians in Pakistan.

It is Islamic State and the Haqqani network who have carried out the recent racist terror bombings of Hazaras and Sikhs in Kabul. The Taliban leadership have condemned all those attacks.

But the situation is in flux. Islamic State in Afghanistan is a minority breakaway from the Taliban, largely based in Ningrahar province in the east. They are bitterly anti-Shia. So are the Haqqani network, a long-standing mujahedin group largely controlled by Pakistani military intelligence. Yet in the present mix, the Haqqani network have been integrated into the Taliban organization, and their leader is one of the leaders of the Taliban.

But no one can be sure what the future holds. In 1995 an uprising of Hazara workers in Mazar prevented the Taliban gaining control of the north. But Hazara traditions of resistance go much deeper and further back than that.

Hazara refugees in neighboring countries may also be in danger now. The government of Iran are allying with the Taliban, and begging them to be peaceful. They are doing this because there are about three million Afghan refugees already in Iran. Most of them have been there for years, most are poor urban workers and their families, and the majority are Hazaras. Recently the Iranian government, in desperate economic straights themselves, have begun deporting Afghans back to Afghanistan.

There are about a million Hazara refugees in Pakistan too. In the region around Quetta more than 5,000 of them have been killed in sectarian assassinations and massacres in the last few years. The Pakistani police and army do nothing. Given the long support of the Pakistani army and intelligence for the Afghan Taliban, those people will be at greater risk right now.

What should you do, outside Afghanistan? Like most Afghans, pray for peace. And join protests for open borders.

We will leave the last word to Graham Knight. His son, Sergeant Ben Knight of the British Royal Air Force, was killed in Afghanistan in 2006. This week Graham Knight told the Press Association the UK government should have moved quickly to rescue civilians:

“We’re not surprised that the Taliban have taken over because as soon as the Americans and the British said they were going to leave, we knew this was going to happen. The Taliban made their intent very clear that, as soon as we went out, they would move in.

As for whether people’s lives were lost through a war that wasn’t winnable, I think they were. I think the problem was we were fighting people that were native to the country. We weren’t fighting terrorists, we were fighting people who actually lived there and didn’t like us being there.” [11]


https://annebonnypirate.org/2021/08/17/afghanistan-the-end-of-the-occu
pation
/

-----------
Pity would be no more,
If we did not MAKE men poor - William Blake


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Saturday, August 21, 2021 6:29 AM

JAYNEZTOWN


US troops left the Kabul Airport grounds and rescued 169 Americans


Biden was correct to pull back, to finally end that war
its the way he pulled Troops out that is the problem, the news and propaganda tv reports will look bad and it wll leave a crazy toxic terroristic mess behind

Lots and Lots of Americans are stuck inside enemy land, 'Thousands Trapped'.

America might have done good and bad things in the past and with war but they tried to also build sopmething in Afghanistan
The Afghans already seem to be ready to destroy anything positive left behind

An evil enemy will burn his own nation to the ground to rule over the ashes. –Sun Tzu (from The Art of War)


Oliver North: Taliban Now Has Names, Addresses and Phone Number of Every Afghan Who Worked for US
https://rumble.com/vlfh2x-oliver-north-taliban-now-has-names-addresses
-and-phone-number-of-every-afgh.html


Taliban Quash Afghanistan Protests, Tightening Grip on Country
https://www.democraticunderground.com/10142788299

White House Sends Junior Official to Explain ‘Mission Was Accomplished’ at Kabul Airport
https://freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/3986768/posts#comment

Afghan central bank chief flees Kabul
http://www.ronpaulforums.com/showthread.php?555329-Bad-news-out-of-Afg
hanistan


Rush To FLEE KABUL >>> not a mail link if it doesnt open copy the entire url address
https://odysee.com/@PaulyFrog64:2/rush-to-flee-kabul-warning!-graphic:4

This is TruNews' it can be a bit conspiracy-ish so take it with a pinch of salt but the report is worth listening to
https://tv.gab.com/channel/trunews/view/trunews-headlines-with-kerry-k
insey-82021-611ffdbedaad396401c3944a


Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau revealed earlier this week that after the Taliban took Kabul, he spoke not with Joe Biden or even Kamala Harris, but with Hillary Clinton instead.
https://www.minds.com/newsfeed/1275388749785600005

Afghan president a 'political crook' for fleeing during recapture of Kabul
https://www.bitchute.com/video/0xHdJ20YbtE/

In Vietnam Helicopters were pushed into the sea to save more for the trip home and not allow US technology to fall into another foreign powers hands
Many times in Iraq the USA would blow up their own stuff when pulling back if they did not trust nearby Iraqi, basically made burn pules in iraq and burned everything besides the buildings when the United States left the Syrian border
The USA would take equipment out but also bomb its own helicopter rather than allow it to fall into an enmy hand
dig a whole but all caputured guns and bombs, put all equipment and cover it in dirt, set an explosive and boom!

So now Afghanistan and despite the USA beating the Taliban's ass, it did not 100% control Afghanistan, terrain landscape afghanistan is difficult, Geography of Afghanistan is hard unforgiving and unique valleys moutains caves etc they these Taliban terrorists still faded into the population and hid inside caves and they would come back every season. It seems security was bad for a while, clothes were switched Taliban would even dress in NATO US uniforms and they had ways to stab Americans in the back... green-on-blue attack they called it...it would be a bad idea to give these terroristic connected type peoples your High-Technologies
One thing happening many many times was people getting shot in the back, so then the USA set up this digital biological camera surveillance, every person, every blood, every DNA, all phones, coin payments from banks, streets at villages, every eyeball iris, digital payment into banks, every body shape, every finger print on the hands, it was all tracked so bad guys would not get on the inside, nobody would get ever get near a helicopter or nobody at a base that wasn't supposed to be there...a Big Brother Surveillance State like East Germany, like the British like the USSR like the modern Chinese, they did their best to track every Afghan good and bad, even the shape-shifting ones.

Now this Biometric Data may have fallen into Enemy Terrorist hands, if the Taliban Al-Qaeda ISIS Terrorists are too stupid to figure out how to fly drones, how to crack computers and use it, how to reverse engineer and examine all their collection of missiles and mobile cell phones and computers and tanks and helicopters the bits of computers and high tech weapons and Airforce then I guess it possible they will sell it, its possible it will be shipped out to Russia or China or India or Pakistan or Turkey or Iran some other place and possibly examined and reverse engineered there. U.S. Humvees, aircraft and US NATO helicopters, 162 Thousand pieces of communication equipment, UH-60 Black Hawks, M1117s, tank-like armoured vehicles which are designed to survive RPG blasts, Cayuse Warrior choppers as they seized Kandahar, scout attack helicopters, and Boeing drones the ScanEagle military drones....all kinds of high tech stuff can be seen on Youtube, Facebook, Twitter with made-in-the-USA on the side or shipping crates marked "Property of the USA Government". The Taliban have broken ISIS and Al-Qaeda out of the jails and the Taliban has now been gifted a computer spy biometric network and an Airforce.

The Taliban btw and other terrorists still operate Social media accounts
while the voice of President Trump remains banned from much of the mainstream interwebs.

Afghanistan: Will fingerprint data point Taliban to targets?
https://www.bbc.com/news/technology-58245121

https://www.republicworld.com/world-news/rest-of-the-world-news/taliba
n-captures-key-us-military-biometric-devices-from-base-camp-after-kabul-siege.html


https://www.theverge.com/2021/8/18/22630686/biometric-data-afghanistan
-taliban-hiide-civilians


https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-9902237/Terrified-Afghans-scr
amble-delete-digital-history-amid-fears-Taliban-seized-data.html



Afghanistan was once Buddhist, Greek and Hindu and had other pagan cultures before it fell to islam and became part of an islamist occupation of non-moslem lands
Most people in Afghanistan will now pray to the 1400 yr old terrorist pedophile warlord camel jacker called mohammed
they will also pray to that demonic babylon Moongod called al-Lah
a number of religions practiced in old Afghanistan were many, including Zoroastrianism, Surya worship, the Hindu Kush, was Rome and Chinese culture and pagan Greek and did not fall until the 19th century, for a while it was 'British'.
The largest Buddha statues in the world on the ancient silk road that connetced Egypt and China, Greece and the Far East, Rome plus the Middle East and Asia, Buddhas of Bamiyan. Buddhism was widespread in the region before the Islamic conquest of Afghanistan, these ancient statues survived until 2001, when they were destroyed by the Taliban RamadzanRagheads. In this and other key places in modern islamist Asscrackistan, archaeologists have located great anicent Afghanistan frescoes, stucco decorations, statuary, and rare objects from as far away as China, Phoenicia, and Rome, all buried into the dust and sands of islam, ancient objects which were crafted as early as the 2nd century, old Hindu India's Maurya Empire nomadic old Persian, explorers from Greece and Rome, Yuezhi trade by the Chinese, Alexander the Great of Macedonia, old Pre islamic Persia Iranian people the Sasanians and diggings and findings bear witness to the influence of these ancient civilizations upon Afghanistan.

Quote:

Originally posted by Jongsstraw:
Putin must be laughing his muscular buttocks off over this American calamity. Just a question now of how many thousands of people are the taliban gonna kill in the next few months. 10,000? 50,000? 100,000?

There hasn't been a US combat death there in 13 months. So why this chaotic clusterfuck of a withdrawl now, during the so-called fighting season? Dumbfuck Biden could not have made it any easier for these child rapists and genital mutilators to just waltz right on in.



Putin welcomes the Taliban: Russian President says the West should not impose 'outside values'
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-9912457/Putin-welcomes-Taliba
n-Russian-President-says-West-not-impose-outside-values.html



Bigger disaster Kabul airport or Superdome during Katrina?
https://www.tigerdroppings.com/rant/politics/bigger-disaster-kabul-air
port-or-superdome-during-katrina/97910474
/

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Saturday, August 21, 2021 7:57 AM

SECOND

The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at https://www.mediafire.com/folder/1uwh75oa407q8/Firefly


Can 100,000 people be evacuated from Afghanistan by the end of August?

During its first week, the Kabul evacuation averaged about 4,000 people a day, reaching a total of just over 20,000 by Friday.

There are still about 80,000 people left to go, and the Air Force has a goal of increasing its capacity to 9,000 people per day. If they meet that goal, the airlift will be finished in about nine days, or August 29. We'll soon see.

https://jabberwocking.com/can-we-evacuate-100000-people-by-the-end-of-
august
/

The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at https://www.mediafire.com/two

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Saturday, August 21, 2021 10:33 AM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


I guess the question is ... WHO should be evacuated?

Americans, definitely. Foreigners who want to leave, for sure.

Native translators? Security staff? Former government officials? Ethnic sub-groups like the Hazaras (Persian-speaking subgroup in central Afghan highlands) who've resisted the Taliban up until now? Native professionals and business people?

*****

So far, there have been no reports of mass reprisals, and (at this point) only two summary executions. One was reportedly ISIS-linked, the other was a former Afghan military member-turned-police Chief who was enabling drug production/smuggling. Supposedly.

The Chinese are extremely optimisticabout this "new, reformed" Taliban. The Russians, not so much. I've heard (hard to find the lin now in the welter of news) that in their estimation, about 1/3 of the Taliban are working with them, 1/3 are sitting on the sidelines waiting to see how things work out (which is OK with the Russians) but 1/3 are real hardline Haqqani who want to re-create the oldstyle Taliban, which the Russians are woried about.

-----------
Pity would be no more,
If we did not MAKE men poor - William Blake


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Saturday, August 21, 2021 10:47 AM

6IXSTRINGJACK


Quote:

Originally posted by SIGNYM:
I guess the question is ... WHO should be evacuated?

Americans, definitely. Foreigners who want to leave, for sure.



They're not welcome here.

--------------------------------------------------

Vaccinated People: "You need to get muh vaccination shots that don't work because I got muh vaccination shots that don't work and I'm afraid of people that didn't get muh vaccination shots that don't work because muh vaccination shots that don't work don't work."

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Saturday, August 21, 2021 9:00 PM

JAYNEZTOWN

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Saturday, August 21, 2021 9:08 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Quote:

Originally posted by 6IXSTRINGJACK:
Quote:

Originally posted by SIGNYM:
I guess the question is ... WHO should be evacuated?

Americans, definitely. Foreigners who want to leave, for sure.



They're not welcome here.

--------------------------------------------------

Vaccinated People: "You need to get muh vaccination shots that don't work because I got muh vaccination shots that don't work and I'm afraid of people that didn't get muh vaccination shots that don't work because muh vaccination shots that don't work don't work."

Oh, what I meant was Germans go back to Germany, and Brits go back to the UK, and Belgians go back to Belgium, for example.

Sorry for the lack of clarity.

-----------
Pity would be no more,
If we did not MAKE men poor - William Blake


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Sunday, August 22, 2021 10:15 PM

SECOND

The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at https://www.mediafire.com/folder/1uwh75oa407q8/Firefly


In 1999, when George W. Bush decided he was going to run for president in the 2000 election, his family hired Mickey Herskowitz to write the first draft of Bush's autobiography, A Charge To Keep.

Although Bush had gone AWOL for about a year during the Vietnam war and was thus apparently no fan of combat, he'd concluded (from watching his father's "little 3-day war" with Iraq) that being a "wartime president" was the most consistently surefire way to get reelected and have a two-term presidency.

"I'll tell you, he was thinking about invading Iraq in 1999," Herskowitz told reporter Russ Baker in 2004.

"One of the things [Bush] said to me," Herskowitz said, "is: 'One of the keys to being seen as a great leader is to be seen as a commander-in-chief. My father had all this political capital built up when he drove the Iraqis out of (Kuwait) and he wasted it.

"[Bush] said, 'If I have a chance to invade Iraq, if I had that much capital, I'm not going to waste it. I'm going to get everything passed I want to get passed and I'm going to have a successful presidency.'"

The attack on 9/11 gave Bush his first chance to "be seen as a commander-in-chief" when our guy Osama Bin Laden, who the Reagan/Bush administration had spent $3 billion building up in Afghanistan, engineered an attack on New York and DC.

The crime was planned in Germany and Florida and on 9/11 Bin Laden was, according to CBS News, not even in Afghanistan: "CBS Evening News has been told that the night before the Sept. 11 terrorists attack, Osama bin Laden was in Pakistan. He was getting medical treatment with the support of the very military that days later pledged its backing for the U.S. war on terror in Afghanistan." When the Obama administration finally caught and killed Bin Laden, he was again in Pakistan, the home base for the Taliban.

Attacking our ally Pakistan in 2001 would have been impossible for Bush, and, besides, nearby Afghanistan was an easier target, being at that time the second-poorest country in the world with an average annual per-capita income of $700 a year. Bin Laden had run terrorist training camps there, unrelated to 9/11, but they made a fine excuse for Bush's first chance to "be seen as a commander-in-chief" and get some leadership cred.

More at https://www.commondreams.org/views/2021/08/17/when-will-we-stop-lettin
g-our-presidents-lie-america-wars


The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at https://www.mediafire.com/two

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Monday, August 23, 2021 11:55 AM

6IXSTRINGJACK


Taliban threatens "consequences" if America doesn't pull out by August 31st deadline.

I'm 100% behind the pullout.

That being said, here's my counter threat to those sub-human sandworms...

I double fucking dog dare you to pull some shit.

See what happens to you when Trump's president again in 2025.

Tick Tock

--------------------------------------------------

Vaccinated People: "You need to get muh vaccination shots that don't work because I got muh vaccination shots that don't work and I'm afraid of people that didn't get muh vaccination shots that don't work because muh vaccination shots that don't work don't work."

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Monday, August 23, 2021 11:56 AM

6IXSTRINGJACK


Quote:

Originally posted by SIGNYM:
Quote:

Originally posted by 6IXSTRINGJACK:
Quote:

Originally posted by SIGNYM:
I guess the question is ... WHO should be evacuated?

Americans, definitely. Foreigners who want to leave, for sure.



They're not welcome here.

Oh, what I meant was Germans go back to Germany, and Brits go back to the UK, and Belgians go back to Belgium, for example.

Sorry for the lack of clarity.



No worries.

Thanks for clearing it up.

--------------------------------------------------

Vaccinated People: "You need to get muh vaccination shots that don't work because I got muh vaccination shots that don't work and I'm afraid of people that didn't get muh vaccination shots that don't work because muh vaccination shots that don't work don't work."

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Monday, August 23, 2021 9:58 PM

SECOND

The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at https://www.mediafire.com/folder/1uwh75oa407q8/Firefly


Mike Gwin @MGwin46

NEW: Between 3:00am and 3:00pm ET today, a total of approximately 10,900 people were evacuated from Kabul.

In total, the U.S.-led mission has facilitated the evacuation of 48,000 people since August 14.
4:57 PM · Aug 23, 2021·Twitter Web App
https://twitter.com/MGwin46/status/1429925858928627714

That is more than 6 times the number US got out of Saigon.

Operation Frequent Wind: 7,000 people
During the last days of the Vietnam War more than 7,000 people were evacuated by helicopter from various points in Saigon. The airlift resulted in a number of enduring images.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Frequent_Wind


The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at https://www.mediafire.com/two

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Tuesday, August 24, 2021 1:48 PM

JAYNEZTOWN




The mohammedan jihad islamist Taliban spokesman says Afghans will be blocked from entering Kabul airport from now on. The terorist Taliban says only certain special foreigners allowed to leave. The terroristic Taliban have acquired an 'overwhelming amount of potential weaponry,' global security expert says. Taliban terrorist Afghan group that rules the country now warns there will be 'consequences' if US and allies do not meet August 31 deadline
The CI-Gay drug lord director who knew about the pedophile Epstein and bacha bazi now arrives with bags of cash and secretly met Taliban leader in Kabul amid frantic evacuation efforts?

Collapse in Afghanistan
https://www.worldaffairsboard.com/forum/international-defense-geopolit
ics-discussion/central-and-south-asia/operation-enduring-freedom-and-af-pak/1575222-collapse-in-afghanistan/page12

' Biden is getting punked. With thousands of people trapped and potential hostages the Taliban feels able to make demands of the US.

Hijack? Ukrainian foreign ministry claimed the plane they sent for evacuation was "stolen" and used to transport unknown people to Iran. Then changed the report and they refuted their own statement.
https://www.india.com/news/world/ukrainian-evacuation-plane-hijack-liv
e-updates-ukraine-flight-hijacked-from-afghanistan-hijacked-and-diverted-to-iran-reports-amid-taliban-promises-kabul-takeover-4909327
/

Taliban warn of 'consequences'

US Surgeon General goes full Commie Sharia Law says there’s “not nearly enough” social media censorship


https://www.city-data.com/forum/politics-other-controversies/3297077-u
s-surgeon-general-says-there-s.html




So the taliban is making the rules now
https://www.usmessageboard.com/threads/so-the-taliban-is-making-the-ru
les-now.915476
/



,

Taliban says it won't allow Afghans to reach Kabul airport as UN warns of 'credible' reports of executions
https://www.businessinsider.com/taliban-says-it-wont-allow-afghans-to-
reach-kabul-airport-2021-8

,

U.S. evacuates 48,000 from Afghanistan as Taliban calls Aug. 31 withdrawal deadline ‘red line'
https://www.cnbc.com/2021/08/23/us-evacuates-37000-from-afghanistan-as
-taliban-calls-august-31-withdrawal-deadline-red-line.html


Canadian special forces operate outside walls of Kabul airport to rescue Afghan allies
https://www.ctvnews.ca/canada/canadian-special-forces-operate-outside-
walls-of-kabul-airport-to-rescue-afghan-allies-1.5557825


Taliban Expected To Hit Kabul Airbase Hard
https://rumble.com/vlmdz0-taliban-expected-to-hit-kabul-airbase-hard.h
tml


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Tuesday, August 24, 2021 4:14 PM

SECOND

The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at https://www.mediafire.com/folder/1uwh75oa407q8/Firefly


I served in Afghanistan as a US Marine, twice. Here’s the truth in two sentences

By Lucas Kunce, Special to The Star Updated August 23, 2021 03:43 PM

https://amp.kansascity.com/opinion/readers-opinion/guest-commentary/ar
ticle253641358.html


What we are seeing in Afghanistan right now shouldn’t shock you. It only seems that way because our institutions are steeped in systematic dishonesty. It doesn’t require a dissertation to explain what you’re seeing. Just two sentences.

One: For 20 years, politicians, elites and D.C. military leaders lied to us about Afghanistan.

Two: What happened last week was inevitable, and anyone saying differently is still lying to you.


I know because I was there. Twice. On special operations task forces. I learned Pashto as a U.S. Marine captain and spoke to everyone I could there: everyday people, elites, allies and yes, even the Taliban.

The truth is that the Afghan National Security Forces was a jobs program for Afghans, propped up by U.S. taxpayer dollars — a military jobs program populated by nonmilitary people or “paper” forces (that didn’t really exist) and a bevy of elites grabbing what they could when they could.

You probably didn’t know that. That’s the point.

And it wasn’t just in Afghanistan. They also lied about Iraq.

I led a team of Marines training Iraqi security forces to defend their country. When I arrived I received a “stoplight” chart on their supposed capabilities in dozens of missions and responsibilities. Green meant they were good. Yellow was needed improvement; red said they couldn’t do it at all.

I was delighted to see how far along they were on paper — until I actually began working with them. I attempted to adjust the charts to reflect reality and was quickly shut down. The ratings could not go down. That was the deal. It was the kind of lie that kept the war going.

So when people ask me if we made the right call getting out of Afghanistan in 2021, I answer truthfully: Absolutely not. The right call was getting out in 2002. 2003. Every year we didn’t get out was another year the Taliban used to refine their skills and tactics against us — the best fighting force in the world. After two decades, $2 trillion and nearly 2,500 American lives lost, 2021 was way too late to make the right call.

You’d think when it all came crumbling down around them, they’d accept the truth. Think again.

War-hungry hawks are suggesting our soldiers weren’t in harm’s way. Well, when I was there, two incredible Marines in my unit were killed.

Elitist hacks are even blaming the American people for what happened last week. The same American people that they spent years lying to about Afghanistan. Are you kidding me?

We deserve better. Instead of politicians spending $6.4 trillion to “nation build” in the Middle East, we should start nation building right here at home.

I can’t believe that would be a controversial proposal, but already in Washington, we see some of the same architects of these Middle Eastern disasters balking at the idea of investing a fraction of that amount to build up our own country.

The lies about Afghanistan matter not just because of the money spent or the lives lost, but because they are representative of a systematic dishonesty that is destroying our country from the inside out.

Remember when they told us the economy was back? Another lie.

Our state of Missouri was home to the worst economic recovery from the Great Recession in this part of the country. I see the boarded-up stores and the vacant lots — one of which used to be my family’s home. When our country’s elites were preaching about how they had solved the financial crisis and the housing market was booming, I watched the house I joined the Marine Corps out of sit on the market for two years. My dad finally got $43,000 for it. He owed $78,000.

The only way out is to level with the American people. I’ll start. With the two-sentence truth about what we are seeing in Afghanistan right now:

For 20 years, politicians, elites and D.C. military leaders lied to us about Afghanistan.

What happened last week was inevitable, and anyone saying differently is still lying to you.

Cole County native Lucas Kunce is a Marine veteran and antitrust advocate. He is a Democratic candidate for U.S. Senate.

The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at https://www.mediafire.com/two

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Tuesday, August 24, 2021 10:38 PM

SECOND

The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at https://www.mediafire.com/folder/1uwh75oa407q8/Firefly


Why the Afghan Army didn't fight:

The Pentagon's Shocking Cover-Up Of The Afghan National Military Hospital Scandal

While Afghan patients at the U.S. military's "crown jewel" medical facility in Kabul lived in horrific conditions, American and Afghan commanders pushed a relentless public relations campaign to make it look like a success. Warning: Extremely graphic photos of wounds.

https://www.buzzfeednews.com/article/mhastings/exclusive-the-pentagons
-shocking-cover-up-of-the


Horror at Kabul's military hospital

"If this government can't fulfill its responsibilities, someone else needs to take over. People have had enough of this situation."

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-39309469

The original Wall Street Journal article found that patients at Dawood Hospital routinely died from malnourishment and routine infections resulting from intentional neglect by hospital staff. In some instances, the staff refused to treat patients who were not from their own tribe or whose families could not pay gratuities in exchange for their care even though the staffs salaries are fully funded by the U.S. taxpayer. The congressional investigation later revealed that U.S. Army Lt. Gen. William Caldwell knew about the inhumane conditions of patients at the hospital but actively tried to prevent an investigation for personal political reasons.

https://issuu.com/khalilnouira9766/docs/combinepdf

The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at https://www.mediafire.com/two

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Tuesday, August 24, 2021 11:19 PM

6IXSTRINGJACK


Quote:

Originally posted by second:
I served in Afghanistan as a US Marine, twice. Here’s the truth in two sentences



Followed by 20 paragraphs that nobody here read.



--------------------------------------------------

Vaccinated People: "You need to get muh vaccination shots that don't work because I got muh vaccination shots that don't work and I'm afraid of people that didn't get muh vaccination shots that don't work because muh vaccination shots that don't work don't work."

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Wednesday, August 25, 2021 3:48 AM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


So hubby and I were noodling on the Taliban victory in Aghanistan, and what it means for other nations/movements besides the USA, Afghanistan, China, Russia, Pakistan and Iran.

I read two articles recently, one a speech by Hezbollah's Secretary General Nasrallah, a Lebanese Shia movement. You may not recall, but Hezbollah shocked Israel by successfully defending against (yet another) Israeli invasion into Lebanon (2006). Lebanon is in the midst of a current financial, political and economic implosion. Nasrallah used the Taliban's victory as an oppty to rally the troops in Lebanon. There was a similar article written by I forget who, but he is an anti-establishment, anti-political-correctness agitator who ALSO used the Taliban's victory as an oppty to encourage the secession movement in the USA.

OTOH, Taiwan, Ukraine, and other marginal client states of the USA would see this as aa warning.

More interestingly, the Brits did their level-best to agitate the USA to stay in Afghaninstan and are going to engage in some political theater at the G7 to get the EU to scold Biden for not "staying the course".

Different nations have different interests to do this. There is a huge opium trade from Afghanistan thru various pathways to Europe, and much money-laundering by London (and possible German) banks. And since this was so very, very lucrative, nobody wants to see the party end, especially since Uncle Sam is paying for it. Biden* is taking a shellacking from our erstwhile allies about this,.

Yanno, I was alwaya under the assumption that Biden* was a tool of the CIA/drugsmuggling/banking/MIC/security (deep) state. But hearing the howls of outrage from neocons, "liberal" interventionists, and foreign militaries, I'm beginning to wonder whether this is true.

SOMEbody had to make the decision to cut and run, and it wasn't all of those interested parties making beaucoup bucks in Afghanistan, but someone with an eye on reality and the USA's interests at heart. I still think Biden* is a useful dupe: whoever is writing his script is going to throw him under the bus when they need to. And, unlike Trump, he is far far easier to get rid of; on health reasons if nothing else. It's elder abuse, right ut in the open.

But there is, I think, a previously unknown coalition pulling Biden's strings. I wonder who that is.


-----------
Pity would be no more,
If we did not MAKE men poor - William Blake


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Wednesday, August 25, 2021 5:05 AM

1KIKI

Goodbye, kind world (George Monbiot) - In common with all those generations which have contemplated catastrophe, we appear to be incapable of understanding what confronts us.



My speculation is that the withdrawal was contrary to the MIC/ spook agency arms of the Deep State. There was some criticism of Biden*, that he failed to coordinate with the military, which was how it all turned into such a cluster. But it occurred to me that Trump DID coordinate with the military when it came to getting out of Syria, and look what they did to him. Trump's statement 'it's all about the oil' was, I believe, some butt-covering maneuver-after-the-fact of the military's/ covert ops' failure to actually withdraw from Syria.


Anyway, I'm curious to see how this all plays out. As I think could apply from the past, Katrina and Fukushima were big, highly visible events. And it would have been really obvious if the media failed to give them their due. (What was striking to me however, was how thoroughly coverage was turned off after a few weeks, even though the crises were still on going.) So is the fall of Pakistan, even though it was, I believe, in the cards from day 1. So the media pretty much HAS to cover it. And it HAS to acknowledge what a mess things are. That's a given. What I think will be instructive is if/ when the media cuts Afghanistan coverage off.

If the media keeps harping on the w/drawal the way it endlessly harped(s) about RUSSIA!!! RUSSIA!!! RUSSIA!!! then I'll think the Deep State is in control on that issue.

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Wednesday, August 25, 2021 6:46 AM

SECOND

The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at https://www.mediafire.com/folder/1uwh75oa407q8/Firefly


Not so wise Eisenhower was ready to drop A-bombs on the Middle East just because he had bombs

While President Biden defended his decision to withdraw from Afghanistan by noting that “nation building” was never on the U.S. agenda for the region, the genesis of U.S. military invasions in the Middle East demonstrates that empire building was part of U.S. campaigns from the very beginning.

These campaigns did not begin with Afghanistan, Iraq or Kuwait. Instead, the era launched on July 14, 1958, when 2,000 U.S. Marines landed in coastal Lebanon. Authorized by President Dwight D. Eisenhower, Operation Blue Bat brought 14,000 U.S. forces to Lebanon to support pro-Western President Camille Chamoun amid civil unrest that imperiled his reelection (a reelection unconstitutional under Lebanese law). While the CIA had long interfered in regional politics and the United States held several air bases in the Middle East, the invasion marked the first time that U.S. forces were openly deployed for combat there. As historian Bruce Riedel suggests, this mission set out a pattern for interventionism that the United States would repeat again and again in the decades to come.

In 1957, Eisenhower had laid out a new Cold War doctrine, which aimed to keep communism out of the strategically crucial Middle East. The president noted that if the region’s oil supply fell into Soviet hands, this would “strangulate” the economies of Europe and Asia. Moreover, the “national integrity of other free nations” was “directly related to our own security.” These imperatives justified U.S. intervention should nations in the Middle East request American assistance. The president also secured $200 million per fiscal year for discretionary use in the region.

Eisenhower sent James Richards, special envoy to the Middle East, to sell his doctrine around the region, but Richards had little success. By October 1957, the London Times noted that Lebanon was now “the only Arab country to support” the Eisenhower Doctrine — and even that was a stretch. Only Chamoun’s unpopular pro-American government was on board, with Pan-Arabists and Muslim groups backed by Egyptian President Gamal Abdel Nasser vehemently opposed.

Eisenhower instructed the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Nathan Twining, to be prepared to employ “whatever means necessary” to ensure a favorable outcome to the crisis — and according to Riedel, that included preparing nuclear weapons for deployment.

The United States’ adversaries read the situation correctly: Chinese newspaper PLA cautioned that “the U.S. openly threatened to carry out atomic warfare in Lebanon,” while Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev declined a call for aid from anti-government factions because the Soviet Union was “not ready for World War III.”

More at https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/world/opinions-afghanistan-s-collapse-e
xposes-the-truth-about-u-s-military-invasions-in-the-region/ar-AANJ55P


The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at https://www.mediafire.com/two

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Wednesday, August 25, 2021 1:11 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Quote:

Originally posted by 1KIKI:

My speculation is that the withdrawal was contrary to the MIC/ spook agency arms of the Deep State. There was some criticism of Biden*, that he failed to coordinate with the military, which was how it all turned into such a cluster. But it occurred to me that Trump DID coordinate with the military when it came to getting out of Syria, and look what they did to him. Trump's statement 'it's all about the oil' was, I believe, some butt-covering maneuver-after-the-fact of the military's/ covert ops' failure to actually withdraw from Syria.


Anyway, I'm curious to see how this all plays out. As I think could apply from the past, Katrina and Fukushima were big, highly visible events. And it would have been really obvious if the media failed to give them their due. (What was striking to me however, was how thoroughly coverage was turned off after a few weeks, even though the crises were still on going.) So is the fall of Pakistan, even though it was, I believe, in the cards from day 1. So the media pretty much HAS to cover it. And it HAS to acknowledge what a mess things are. That's a given. What I think will be instructive is if/ when the media cuts Afghanistan coverage off.

If the media keeps harping on the w/drawal the way it endlessly harped(s) about RUSSIA!!! RUSSIA!!! RUSSIA!!! then I'll think the Deep State is in control on that issue.

That's an interesting thought, that the media is under the control of one part of the deep state but not another part.

FWIW I've still been trying to make sense of the panicked abadonment of Bagram, and I can only tie it to the CIA's drug trade: the Taliban were closing in, the CIA had bales of opium and/or purification equipment at Bagram and needed to scramble out ASAP. They needed the military for a big airlift and the military said "nuh-uh, not without our troops. we're not going to leave them holding your bag" so everyone jammed onboard post-haste and it was a rout. No time to get a consensus from "allies and partners" who were prolly informed while planes were in air.

Keep in mind that Afghaninstan was producing somewhere in the realm of 80-95% of world opium: not an insignificant amount!

So if anyone is pissed about anything, it's the sudden collapse of their revenue stream without forewarning from the spooks, who are supposed to keep them informed of such upcoming events.



-----------
Pity would be no more,
If we did not MAKE men poor - William Blake


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Wednesday, August 25, 2021 1:40 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Oh, and further speculating tha the CIA may have already had a chance to find alternate funding ... in that four trillion dollar spending plan, it would be so easy to siphon money off to black ops. But other nations with their own spook agencies (looking at YOU, MI6!) and illicit money-laundering activities (for which British banks are so famous)

What I find interesting is that if you attempt to "follow the money" - as I did- associated with Afghaninstan's prodigious opium production, you get *crickets*. Drug money from MEXICO? Yep! HSBC got nailed with it! Asset stripping from former Soviet states? Yep! Danske Bank got nailed with that, too! Cayman Islands, Deutschbank, the Channel banks ... even UBS and Wachovia have been implicated in dodgy business from everywhere around the world EXCEPT Afghanistan.

Curious. All that money just ... disappears.



-----------
Pity would be no more,
If we did not MAKE men poor - William Blake


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Wednesday, August 25, 2021 1:52 PM

SECOND

The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at https://www.mediafire.com/folder/1uwh75oa407q8/Firefly


Ivo Daalder© @lvoHDaalder tweeted:

There's a big fallacy behind the criticism of Biden's decision to withdraw from Afghanistan—which is that the alternative to withdrawal was the status quo (as McConnell and other critics maintain). That's simply wrong.

Before Biden’s “reckless decision to leave,” McConnell said, “we only had 2,500 troops there. We hadn’t lost a single American person, military personnel in a year. The Taliban, the barbarians, were not in charge of the country. We were keeping the lid on. And al-Qaida was not there.”

The situation McConnell describes, of a stable Afghanistan maintained by 2,500 troops and no US casualties in a year, was about to change as a result of the February 2020 agreement between Trump and the Taliban.

Under that agreement, the Taliban agreed not to attack US forces so long as those troops (and all civilian contractors) left by May 1. In the intervening months, the Taliban had strengthened its position (in part because Trump had forced the Afghans to release 5,000 Taliban.

So when Biden came to office, the Taliban was at its strongest since its defeat in 2001 and US and NATO forces were slated to leave Afghanistan in 3 months. The Taliban had been degrading Afghan forces and preparing a major offensive after foreign troops had been withdrawn.

If Biden had reneged on the Trump deal, the Taliban would've resumed attacking US forces from a position of strength. To continue to support the Afghan government and security forces, the US would therefore have had to increase its military presence significantly.

So the choice facing Biden wasn't between withdrawal or an ideal status quo of keeping a few thousand troops who had suffered no casualties, as the critics maintain. It was between withdrawal or a major surge of troops to fight a strengthened Taliban.

Given that Biden had opposed the Obama surge in 2009 because he didn't think sending more troops would bring stability, let alone transform Afghanistan into a viable democracies, no one should have been surprised that he opted for withdrawal.

While Biden owns the consequence of his decision, which are now playing out, his critics should own up to the fact that the real alternative would have been a major escalation of a war that most Americans had long come to oppose.

To govern is to choose, as they say. Let's not pretend that the choice Biden and the government faced in Afghanistan was an easy one.

5:28 PM · Aug 24, 2021·Twitter Web App
https://twitter.com/IvoHDaalder/status/1430296057083318273

The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at https://www.mediafire.com/two

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