mpjh wrote:better read the whole post
You edited that in after I started posting, hold your horses
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mpjh wrote:better read the whole post
The Taliban are one of the mujahideen ("holy warriors" or "freedom fighters") groups that formed during the war against the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan (1979-89). After the withdrawal of Soviet forces, the Soviet-backed government lost ground to the mujahideen. In 1992, Kabul was captured and an alliance of mujahideen set up a new government with Burhanuddin Rabbani as interim president. However, the various factions were unable to cooperate and fell to fighting each other. Afghanistan was reduced to a collection of territories held by competing warlords.
Groups of taliban ("religious students") were loosely organized on a regional basis during the occupation and civil war. Although they represented a potentially huge force, they didn't emerge as a united entity until the taliban of Kandahar made their move in 1994. In late 1994, a group of well-trained taliban were chosen by Pakistan to protect a convoy trying to open a trade route from Pakistan to Central Asia. They proved an able force, fighting off rival mujahideen and warlords. The taliban then went on to take the city of Kandahar, beginning a surprising advance that ended with their capture of Kabul in September 1996.
mpjh wrote:February 2001U.N. drug control officers said the Taliban religious militia has nearly wiped out opium production in Afghanistan -- once the world's largest producer -- since banning poppy cultivation last summer.
A 12-member team from the U.N. Drug Control Program spent two weeks searching most of the nation's largest opium-producing areas and found so few poppies that they do not expect any opium to come out of Afghanistan this year.
"We are not just guessing. We have seen the proof in the fields," said Bernard Frahi, regional director for the U.N. program in Afghanistan and Pakistan. He laid out photographs of vast tracts of land cultivated with wheat alongside pictures of the same fields taken a year earlier -- a sea of blood-red poppies.
mpjh wrote:The Taliban are one of the mujahideen ("holy warriors" or "freedom fighters") groups that formed during the war against the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan (1979-89). After the withdrawal of Soviet forces, the Soviet-backed government lost ground to the mujahideen. In 1992, Kabul was captured and an alliance of mujahideen set up a new government with Burhanuddin Rabbani as interim president. However, the various factions were unable to cooperate and fell to fighting each other. Afghanistan was reduced to a collection of territories held by competing warlords.
Groups of taliban ("religious students") were loosely organized on a regional basis during the occupation and civil war. Although they represented a potentially huge force, they didn't emerge as a united entity until the taliban of Kandahar made their move in 1994. In late 1994, a group of well-trained taliban were chosen by Pakistan to protect a convoy trying to open a trade route from Pakistan to Central Asia. They proved an able force, fighting off rival mujahideen and warlords. The taliban then went on to take the city of Kandahar, beginning a surprising advance that ended with their capture of Kabul in September 1996.
from research by
by Laura Hayes, Borgna Brunner, and Beth Rowen
OnlyAmbrose wrote:mpjh wrote:The Taliban are one of the mujahideen ("holy warriors" or "freedom fighters") groups that formed during the war against the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan (1979-89). After the withdrawal of Soviet forces, the Soviet-backed government lost ground to the mujahideen. In 1992, Kabul was captured and an alliance of mujahideen set up a new government with Burhanuddin Rabbani as interim president. However, the various factions were unable to cooperate and fell to fighting each other. Afghanistan was reduced to a collection of territories held by competing warlords.
Groups of taliban ("religious students") were loosely organized on a regional basis during the occupation and civil war. Although they represented a potentially huge force, they didn't emerge as a united entity until the taliban of Kandahar made their move in 1994. In late 1994, a group of well-trained taliban were chosen by Pakistan to protect a convoy trying to open a trade route from Pakistan to Central Asia. They proved an able force, fighting off rival mujahideen and warlords. The taliban then went on to take the city of Kandahar, beginning a surprising advance that ended with their capture of Kabul in September 1996.
from research by
by Laura Hayes, Borgna Brunner, and Beth Rowen
I don't see anything here which contradicts what I said. The "Taliban" (with a capital T, meaning the united organization we see today) did not engage in any sort of aggressive action until the Soviet withdrawal, when they acted against the Afghan warlords.
mpjh wrote:Ok, I gave you the drug enforcement source. What is yours -- wishful thinking?
LONDON, Nov 27 (Reuters) - The Taliban has earned up to $470 million from the Afghan opium trade this year alone, the United Nations said on Thursday, money that is being used to finance the insurgency against U.S. and Afghan forces.
As well as the income earned from directly taxing farmers' output and from levies on opium processing and on trafficking the drug, there is evidence the Taliban is hoarding opium stocks to prop up prices, the U.N. said in a report.
Mr_Adams wrote:You, sir, are an idiot.
Timminz wrote:By that logic, you eat babies.
TheProwler wrote:Snorri1234 wrote:TheProwler wrote:As an American, you should know that by focusing on the negative, you are reinforcing the negative opinions others have of your country. I know you have your rights and all that. You are lucky enough to be an American where you do have those rights. But if you don't like it there, and I am saying this seriously and calmly and respectfully, why don't you just leave?
Yeah MeDeFe! Why don't you just leave the US!?
He's German!?!?!?!?!?!
Hahaha! And he's criticizing the USA?
Germany's done nothing since....since....
Nevermind.
saxitoxin wrote:Your position is more complex than the federal tax code. As soon as I think I understand it, I find another index of cross-references, exceptions and amendments I have to apply.
Timminz wrote:Yo mama is so classless, she could be a Marxist utopia.
U.S. military documents, obtained by ABC News, list the brother of Afghanistan president Karzai as a "problem maker" in the pay of drug lords.
Wali Karzai is described in the documents as "receives money from drug lords as bribe to facilitate their work and movement."
The documents, marked secret, appear to be part of a "U.S. military targeting assessment" produced in January 2005. The documents were downloaded from a computer flash disc sold at an Afghanistan street bazaar for $200.
Nine other prominent Afghanis are also listed as "problem makers" for a variety of reasons, including connections to opium drug lords.
mpjh wrote:Yeah, sure. that is from after their overthrow and is propaganda used to discredit them. Notice, however how they now control the country outside of Kabul -- seems the propagada is not working. I am sure than when they return, they will outlaw drugs as they did before and shut down the fields. It is amazing how the current family that controls heroine exports, the Karzai family, tries to discredit it enemy with a smear that they deal in drugs.
from the BlotterU.S. military documents, obtained by ABC News, list the brother of Afghanistan president Karzai as a "problem maker" in the pay of drug lords.
Wali Karzai is described in the documents as "receives money from drug lords as bribe to facilitate their work and movement."
The documents, marked secret, appear to be part of a "U.S. military targeting assessment" produced in January 2005. The documents were downloaded from a computer flash disc sold at an Afghanistan street bazaar for $200.
Nine other prominent Afghanis are also listed as "problem makers" for a variety of reasons, including connections to opium drug lords.
mpjh wrote:jbrettlip wrote:Please ignore the mass graves in Iraq. Those were obviously not Saddam's troops doing. And destroying statues of Buddha, and stoning to death women who want to attend school sound like Afghanistan was on the BRINK of civilization. Screw the US for intervening in that utopian society.
Have you ever visited Wounded Knee or the mass graves of freed blacks in Roseville, Florida, or studied about the Trail of Tears, or the use of small pox contaminated blankets to kill of Native Americans, or read about the lynching capital of the world in Caro, Illinois, or visited a KKK office in today's Louisiana. These are just a few of the things we Americans love. We should clean up our own house before telling the rest of the world how to live.

mpjh wrote:You have no date on your quote.

got tonkaed wrote:fwiw the source is recent.
Taliban earns up to $470 mln from opium trade - U.N. 27 Nov 2008 13:50:32 GMT
jbrettlip wrote: That is the beauty of time, every one eventually will die.
OnlyAmbrose wrote:got tonkaed wrote:fwiw the source is recent.
Taliban earns up to $470 mln from opium trade - U.N. 27 Nov 2008 13:50:32 GMT
Yeah. I figured that the link would be enough to figure that out, but apparently not
Snorri1234 wrote:jbrettlip wrote: That is the beauty of time, every one eventually will die.
Why bother helping them then?

jbrettlip wrote:Snorri1234 wrote:jbrettlip wrote: That is the beauty of time, every one eventually will die.
Why bother helping them then?
To make the world a better place, while we ARE here.
mpjh wrote:OnlyAmbrose wrote:got tonkaed wrote:fwiw the source is recent.
Taliban earns up to $470 mln from opium trade - U.N. 27 Nov 2008 13:50:32 GMT
Yeah. I figured that the link would be enough to figure that out, but apparently not
Duh, That proves my point. When the Taliban were in power they eliminated poppy production. When they are fighting to get back they use the poppy production created by the Karzai family against them. Pretty smart, if you ask me.
Snorri wrote:But the taliban were part of the Afghan warlords who received backing and funds. They weren't some peacefull group of fanatics who sat around doing nothing untill 1994.
mpjh wrote:Interesting, the Taliban could eliminate poppy growing when they wanted to end it. We take over and cannot stop it, in fact the exportation of heroine is now Afghanistan's chief cash crop.
Hmmmm. We are idiots.