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Posts Tagged ‘Afghan War’

Geraldo Rivera speaks common sense on Afghanistan

by Phantom Ace ( 1 Comment › )
Filed under Afghanistan, Dhimmitude, Headlines, Islamists, Taliban at March 16th, 2012 - 6:47 pm

Geraldo Rivera is a controversial character. When he’s right, he’s right. On Fox and Friends he speaks the truth on the futility of staying in Afghanistan.

Can’t disagree with Gerlado on this. Nation building is a failed policy. The sooner our elites understand that, the less Americans will be killed.

60% of Americans feel Afghanistan was not worth it

by Phantom Ace ( 4 Comments › )
Filed under Afghanistan, Headlines, Islamic Supremacism, Islamic Terrorism, Sharia (Islamic Law), Taliban at March 12th, 2012 - 10:01 am

The nation building mission in Afghanistan has become toxic with Americans. 60% of the Americans feel the war was not worth it. 54% want an immediate withdrawal.

Sixty percent of Americans say the war in Afghanistan has not been not worth fighting and just 30 percent believe the Afghan public supports the U.S. mission there — marking the sour state of attitudes on the war even before the shooting rampage allegedly by a U.S. soldier this weekend.

Indeed a majority in a new ABC News/Washington Post poll, 54 percent, say the United States should withdraw its forces from Afghanistan without completing its current effort to train Afghan forces to become self-sufficient.

Americans are sick of dying for Islamic democracy.

US Soldier snaps and kills 16 Afghans

by Phantom Ace ( 17 Comments › )
Filed under Afghanistan, Headlines, Islam at March 11th, 2012 - 12:59 pm

A US soldier snapped and shot up 16 Afghans. Clearly being in a hostile environment and having had  your friends killed by your supposed allies can make one have a mental breakdown. This appears to be the case with this soldier.

KABUL — An American soldier wandered outside his base in a remote southern Afghan village shortly before dawn Sunday and opened fire on civilians inside homes, killing at least 16, Afghan and U.S. officials said.

The attack marked perhaps the grisliest act by a U.S. soldier in the decade-long Afghan war and seemed all but certain to stoke anti-American anger in a crucial battleground as foreign troops start to thin out in the south. Afghan officials said women and children were among those killed in Panjwai district of Kandahar province, the birthplace of the Taliban movement.

The soldier’s impulsive act will now land him in jail and ruin his career.

David Warren admits he was wrong about the concept of Democracy Spreading

by Phantom Ace ( 50 Comments › )
Filed under Conservatism, September 11, Special Report, Terrorism, The Political Right at March 1st, 2012 - 8:30 am

In the aftermath of 9/11 most the West’s elites and opinion makers believed Democracy could be exported to the islamic world. People like me, who spoke out against this concept, were called communists, Al-Qaeda supporters and even traitors. When I would express my method of retaliation, which was nation destruction, I would get called a Nazi. Critics of Bush’s “freedom” agenda were silenced and mocked in the Conservative blogosphere. Unfortunately, we have been vindicated but at the loss of 5,ooo American lives and 40,000 wounded in the Afghan and Iraq wars. Newt Gingrich and Rush Limbaugh have turned on the war realizing its uselessness..

Ottowa Citizen columnist, David Warren, admits he was wrong on the concept of exporting Democracy. He had been a supporter of the freedom agenda, but admits it was wrong.

When one cannot trust one’s own allies not to murder one, one is in a fix. It is not an unusual fix, as the history of this planet goes, and particularly the history of Afghanistan. But the circumstances in which two American officers at the Interior Ministry in Kabul lost their lives on Saturday were discouraging. The assailant seems to have been an Afghan police intelligence officer. That says something. That he was able to escape after the shootings says more.

The incident was one of many which followed news of the Koran burnings at the Bagram airfield. That event, from what I can gather, was reported in detail within Afghanistan. I am not being droll here: I mean the fact that the tomes were tossed in the “burn pit” by mistake, having already been defaced by Taliban prisoners who were using them to pass messages, was widely circulated. To the western mind, this should make a difference in the perceived profanation: intention always counts.

But to the mind of many Afghan people, quite capable of stoning a woman to death for adultery after she has been raped, it made no difference. Nor, dare I add, could President Barack Obama’s public apology over the affair make any difference: for it was the kind of profanation for which apologies are not accepted. Obama, consciously doing “the right thing” to defuse tensions, is consistently out of his depth in dealing with these matters; for despite his own Islamic background in Kenya, and Indonesia, he is a product of Ivy League America. George W. Bush would have done the same.

[…]

As it is the 29th of February, let me perform an uncustomary retraction. Looking back over the history of the last 10 years, through which I have been writing these columns, I’m now persuaded of a major misjudgment. While I supported the invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq — still do, and “would do it again” without qualms — I see ever more clearly that the “Bush doctrine” of exporting “democracy” was an unnecessary mistake.

Our interests in these countries were military; we had dangerous enemies to destroy. That was achieved with dispatch by U.S. and allied forces: with remarkably few casualties all round. We had a continued interest in preventing the return of the Taliban to power in Afghanistan, and in the destruction of Islamist cells in Iraq. All fine and good: these were necessary adventures, for the defence of legitimate western interests.

I feel no happiness that the Right is now agreeing with what I have been saying after 9/11. Too many Americans have died and the bad feelings caused by debating these wars has harmed many online friendships in the Conservative blogosphere. We should not cry over spilled milk. Instead the Right should vow to never again engage in nation building or exporting democracy. What we should do in retaliation against islamic terror is nation destruction.