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got tonkaed wrote:if you dont think american foreign policy did not at least in some part contribute to an increase in insurgents and terrorists, then you are not perhaps getting the entire mindset, or picture of people in the middle east.
got tonkaed wrote:i would say that as a whole, most of the people who are fighting the war on terror seem to have a very limited understanding of what exactly they are fighting against.
got tonkaed wrote:This wasnt necesarily my opinion alone, this was the opinion of people within our own clandestine service, who are the ones essentially who are providing the understandings we have of individuals in the middle east.
got tonkaed wrote:The mindset was out there, but we have certainly helped it grow because of our policies and the way they easily can be spun (and possibly rightly so).
got tonkaed wrote:Right after 9/11 the CIA had a pretty impressive amount of information which explained what would have to happen if we were going to fight a war in afghanistan. All kinds of information about the soviet failures and the geopolitcal nature of the country itself. Theres a good book on the first few years in the war on terror called imperial hubris, written by someone who was employed by the CIA and he talkes about many of the things which he considered errors in the inital process which have led to problems. Id recommend this book to anyone as far as political affilation goes, becuase he writes a fairly balanced account of some of the failures early on.
got tonkaed wrote:By labelling this a war against terror we have really blundered in alot of peoples opinions. Al-Qaidas terroism training group is much much smaller than the general insurgency training which has been the staple for many years since 9/11. The fact that we are going for something which is relatively small in import and in number compared to the bigger problem we are likely to be facing (assuming we continue our middle east foreign policy strategy over the next few days) suggests a severe problem in semantics and something we are likely to struggle in overcoming.
got tonkaed wrote:Id argue that many of the policy makers (perhaps understandably so) made a knee jerk reaction to the attacks on 9/11 and started a movement that really historically/culturally/and scematically struggles to have a large possiblity of success. You cant really fight a war against terrorism anymore than you could defeat the vietcong in the long run. Its too fluid of a concept and too invisible of an enemy. Likewise, we are not seen as liberators by in large (though certainly there are many who admire the western culture and would adopt our style of life given the oppertunity). To come in to their soverign nations under the premise that we are going to make their lives better, with a lack of general understanding of the country see iraq and afghanistan, we present a big oversight that our enemies can exploit.
got tonkaed wrote:I tend to go back and forht on whether or not we are being direclty mislead. Anyone who understands the nature of politics realizes that there are always going to be things which are truths, half truths and things which are necesarily deemed to be truthful which arent. I think the problem has been for a long time, that people have generally been disconnected to what is happening on the ground, and have failed to understand the basic history and cultural nature of a lot of our opposition. When you do this, it is not necesarily that you are trying to directly mislead people, you rather are trying to present information that helps your cause, and fits within your understanding (even if its incorrect).
got tonkaed wrote:the problem is, people in our intelligence agencies do have a lot of this information, but it is not being fully utlized or being used as best as possible at the present, which is the fault of the policy makers, not of the people finding the information.
I'll look for the book. Did you also consider other sources in order to form your opinions. Personally, I consider Afghanistan a success because it only took about 2 months to rout the Taliban regime out of power compared to the Soviets years of failure there. I guess it depends on what your definition of success is. From what I read from liberals, nothing other than the capture of Osama Bin Laden will be defined as a success. The fact that the evil Taliban regime was routed & that bin Laden & his upper echelon are forced to hide & produce a couple of random videos in order to recruit means nothing to them.
Well then how would you label it if it's not a war against terror? What would you call it when Hussein let Al-Queda & other terrorist groups train in his country? I can't really understand what you're talking about when you say "we're going 'after something' which is relatively small in import compared to 'the bigger problem' we are likely to be facing." What are you talking about? If the phrase war on terror isn't to your liking then what would you call it? We have to call it something because they hate us and want to kill us.
What knee-jerk reaction are you talking about in response to the 9/11 attacks? I just flat out disagree with you that the war against terrorism can't be won. Obviously, if you kill everyone who is a terrorist or force them to surrender you win. Al-Queda has even offered a temporary cease-fire which to me shows that they are weakening. What I think people here keep saying is that if you kill a terrorist, then other people who were neutral will suddenly want to become a terrorist or sympathize with the terrorists. Based on what I read, that is not true.
I agree partially with this, but I think that a majority of liberal-minded people cite news sources which only reflect bad news. We just killed a major Al Queda leader there in Iraq and the news I read today says we just captured a Shiite leader. Another guy here quoted 19,000 insurgents killed but I recently read it was more like 23,000 plus. Why is it bad to present information like that? Liberal people usually call that propaganda, but isn't it just as much propaganda to say that there were no terrorists in Iraq before 2003? It seems that people against the Iraq effort keep repeating that one even though it's not true. Also, Bin Laden himself said that Iraq is the center for what he views as this 3rd World War. That's hardly semantics. He's being very definitive in how he views it.
Hmmm, maybe. What is your suggestion for a method to make them fully utilize it better?
The reason I'm asking all these questions to you is because people here who are against the war are more than willing to criticize the effort, but do not offer constructive alternatives. They also artfully dodge how they would define success.
got tonkaed wrote:For me defining success in afghanistan would be when we continue to have success over the long term in having tribal regions stop their implicit support of the taliban. Indicators of success would be an increase in regions which did not support the taliban, which evidence seems to suggest isnt happening. Or id take a greater degree of stability between some of the tribes along with a greater sense of allegiance to kabul, which is very unlikely to happen. I would prefer that we stopped focusing on kabul as an end all be all, becuase success in afghanistan is measured in the tribes, not in the one city. Yes i would love for the indicators of success as far as womens rights and democracy to improve, but we have to realize that democratically elected groups, in much of that part of the world are not going to agree with our conception of womens rights as of yet. The taliban has more effective control of the country than kabul does. When that shifts, ill be willing to suggest we are heading down the road to success.
got tonkaed wrote:You suggest that the liberal crowd is looking for absolutes, id suggest the conservatives are advocating things which are not in fact successes as of yet, and have little hope of becoming so.
got tonkaed wrote:I guess id we will disagree on the nature of the danger of islamic terrorists toward our way of life. Bringing in our perspectives to the debate, id suggest that your worldview takes a necesary more conflictive view toward islam than mine does. I understand and respect your opinion that they will attack us at first oppertunity, where i feel tehy will only do so as a result of our continued support of antagonsitic policy. I do not expect you to agree with this, but this is something we probably will be at an impass about. To oversimply things, islam presents as much of a challenge to your way of life as you do to them, so i understand your apprehension toward them.
got tonkaed wrote:I dont know that im reciting typical war lines, as it seems that many things i have said you were not familiar with before, so if they are that retread of statements, you wouldnt continue to suggest you had not heard of these things. I dont think we necesarily have to get into a google debate regarding sources, they are all out there, and i try to spend as much time getting information from a variety of sources. Nothing im presenting as ideas are coming from evidence that is hidden from public view.
got tonkaed wrote:I think people who are against the war are beginning to view the good information as lacking in comparsion to the bad. Yes some are blindly listening to a small number of sources and getting what they want out of that. I think there is a greater degree of people who are hearing the good and bad news and deciding that the good does not outweigh the bad.
got tonkaed wrote:as far as defining victory or for my views on any foreign policy, id be happy to answer any specifics as best as i am able.
got tonkaed wrote:i suppose ill keep things relatively short since i think we know what we tend to agree on and what we disagree about.....
in regards to your question, of course i would like to see osama bin laden captured, it would probably boost our national security a great deal and probably disjoint the al-qaida effort. Its likely he would be made a martyr and a bit of a rallying point, but at the same time he provides inspiration for many and possibly would be a good point of hurting moral.
I personally dont need him killed if hes going to spend the rest of his life in jail. But if thats how it would have to be i suppose i wouldnt really have any qualms against it. To be fair im not a huge advocate of killing anyone, but its not something that im so passionate about to go against what would likely be an overwhemling majority of popular opinion.
DangerBoy wrote:got tonkaed wrote:i suppose ill keep things relatively short since i think we know what we tend to agree on and what we disagree about.....
in regards to your question, of course i would like to see osama bin laden captured, it would probably boost our national security a great deal and probably disjoint the al-qaida effort. Its likely he would be made a martyr and a bit of a rallying point, but at the same time he provides inspiration for many and possibly would be a good point of hurting moral.
I personally dont need him killed if hes going to spend the rest of his life in jail. But if thats how it would have to be i suppose i wouldnt really have any qualms against it. To be fair im not a huge advocate of killing anyone, but its not something that im so passionate about to go against what would likely be an overwhemling majority of popular opinion.
Thanks. I'm not passionate about killing either but I think it's necessary sometimes. We can't prevent people from making a martyr out of anyone. That's out of our control so I don't worry about it. I've heard some people make a martyr of Hitler but that doesn't change my attitude that defeating his fascist regime was necessary.
joecoolfrog wrote:Neither the USA nor anybody else will eradicate terrorism unless the conditions that first fostered that terrorism no longer exist. If a majority of far more educated and informed Americans think Iraq was a mistake then what do you think the average person living in the Middle East thinks ? It is also a palpable error to call everybody fighting the occupied forces in Iraq a terrorist,many of the insurgents are remnants of the old regime or various factions jossling for power,some not surprisingly are ordinary people who dont like their country occupied and some are taking revenge for the deaths of loved ones. Even the Bush administration has conceded that their was no huge Islamic terrorist powerbase in Iraq prior to the invasion, Saddam crushed all potential trouble makers and they were no exception. The invasion of Iraq has not only failed to help fight Islamic terrorism it has handed the fanatics a huge propoganda victory and helped to recruit many more to the cause, the attrocities in Madrid and London were a direct result of this.
joecoolfrog wrote:Neither the USA nor anybody else will eradicate terrorism unless the conditions that first fostered that terrorism no longer exist.
joecoolfrog wrote:If a majority of far more educated and informed Americans think Iraq was a mistake then what do you think the average person living in the Middle East thinks ?
joecoolfrog wrote:It is also a palpable error to call everybody fighting the occupying forces in Iraq a terrorist, many of the insurgents are remnants of the old regime or various factions jossling for power,some not surprisingly are ordinary people who dont like their country occupied and some are taking revenge for the deaths of loved ones.
joecoolfrog wrote:Even the Bush administration has conceded that their was no huge Islamic terrorist powerbase in Iraq prior to the invasion, Saddam crushed all potential trouble makers and they were no exception.
joecoolfrog wrote:The invasion of Iraq has not only failed to help fight Islamic terrorism it has handed the fanatics a huge propoganda victory and helped to recruit many more to the cause, the attrocities in Madrid and London were a direct result of this.
joecoolfrog wrote:The Irony is that we are now struggling in Afghanistan ( where the Islamists really were and are) because much of the available resources have been squandered in Iraq .
joecoolfrog wrote:This incidently has long been the view of the British military who are neither Liberal or,despite what some of yout trash media might pretend,a bunch of cowardly wimps.
got tonkaed wrote:one of the very negative results of the iraq invasion is you are going to downgrade from a relatively stable (if not always pro-us or pro human rights) leader to an unstable situation that creates the potential for greater long term problems. Probably one of the more sound and irrefutable aspects of the iraqi invasion that was incredibly overlooked at the time.
DangerBoy wrote:
What are these conditions that you are talking about? Are you saying it's the United States' fault because we support Israel? Heck, let's not have alliances or peaceful relations with any countries because somebody else will get angry about it.
DangerBoy wrote:Your question implies that people who support the Iraq effort are not as educated or informed as those who are against it. That's a position of not dealing with the facts but just saying my opinion is better than yours because it's a more informed opinion. For the record, I'm reading the report right now about Middle East opinions. Sunnis and ex-Baathists are the only groups with a majority opinion against us.
DangerBoy wrote:Are you reading the actual polls taken over in Iraq or left wing blogs & periodicals? They're not occupiers but liberators.
DangerBoy wrote:That's just straight up wrong. Al Zarqawi was there training terrorists before the US invaded. Even the Democrats admit this.
DangerBoy wrote:Sure it has. It has stopped over 23,000 plus terrorists by killing them.
DangerBoy wrote: Terrorists are going to use propaganda regardless. That's why they're terrorists. They are totally committed to killing those who don't agree with them. Do you really think they're going to stop murdering if the US & other govts say please stop?
DangerBoy wrote:The other irony is that we haven't been attacked since September 11th. How you can say that resources are being squandered when we keep killing terrorists is something I don't understand. The purpose of the military is to kill the enemy and protect us from further invasion. They are doing their job.
DangerBoy wrote:Which proves what I've started to believe in the last two years - Liberals can't make their points without calling names.
DangerBoy wrote:PerkinsRooster wrote:One of the reasons that America is the greatest country in the world is that it has cared about the rights of people around the world. You see, it does affect you in a practical way, it's just not an immediate effect and therefore not obvious to you.
You better not let Neutrino see this.
got tonkaed wrote:well if you consider the amount of danger that he posed, compared the amount of danger that likely will come as a result of the power vaccum in an area with such resources, yes i do consider saddams regime, although terrible to be more stable. If you do not see this, then you are not critically looking at the situation.
DangerBoy wrote:got tonkaed wrote:well if you consider the amount of danger that he posed, compared the amount of danger that likely will come as a result of the power vaccum in an area with such resources, yes i do consider saddams regime, although terrible to be more stable. If you do not see this, then you are not critically looking at the situation.
At least I got you on the record as saying that you believe Saddam Hussein's regime is more stable. Incredible. If this is what it takes to be a sophisticated and critical thinker, then I never want to be one of you.
DangerBoy wrote:got tonkaed wrote:well if you consider the amount of danger that he posed, compared the amount of danger that likely will come as a result of the power vaccum in an area with such resources, yes i do consider saddams regime, although terrible to be more stable. If you do not see this, then you are not critically looking at the situation.
At least I got you on the record as saying that you believe Saddam Hussein's regime is more stable. Incredible. If this is what it takes to be a sophisticated and critical thinker, then I never want to be one of you.
joecoolfrog wrote:DangerBoy wrote:got tonkaed wrote:well if you consider the amount of danger that he posed, compared the amount of danger that likely will come as a result of the power vaccum in an area with such resources, yes i do consider saddams regime, although terrible to be more stable. If you do not see this, then you are not critically looking at the situation.
At least I got you on the record as saying that you believe Saddam Hussein's regime is more stable. Incredible. If this is what it takes to be a sophisticated and critical thinker, then I never want to be one of you.
I dont think there is the slightest chance of that
If you are not prepared to listen to an opposing view and perhaps learn something then you will remain forever ignorant
Stopper wrote:joecoolfrog wrote:DangerBoy wrote:got tonkaed wrote:well if you consider the amount of danger that he posed, compared the amount of danger that likely will come as a result of the power vaccum in an area with such resources, yes i do consider saddams regime, although terrible to be more stable. If you do not see this, then you are not critically looking at the situation.
At least I got you on the record as saying that you believe Saddam Hussein's regime is more stable. Incredible. If this is what it takes to be a sophisticated and critical thinker, then I never want to be one of you.
I dont think there is the slightest chance of that
If you are not prepared to listen to an opposing view and perhaps learn something then you will remain forever ignorant
I'd be curious to know how DangerBoy would demonstrate that Iraq was less stable before the invasion. The mind boggles...
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