Cronus wrote:You're saying the Taliban are the people of Afghanistan? No. They are a group mostly made up of men froma couple of ethnic groups, and being bolstered by recruits from Pakistan. They never had control of many provinces in the north of the country and have never found real support there. In 2001 the two factions making up the Northern Alliance controlled or partially controlled up to 13 provinces and around 30% of the population.
The majority of the Taliban is made up of people indigenous to Afghanistan. Many fled from the Soviet invasion and ended up in the huge number of squalid refugee camps on the Pakistan border where starved and brutalised they fell into the arms of various ideological entities who have used them as tools ever since.
Some are Taliban by virtue, others by design. Most have no wider political aspirations than self-determination. Let me quote Jason Burke, arguably the most informed Western journalist on the subject of Afghanistan:
” [The Taliban are] a local movement with limited knowledge of the outside world, Islamic or otherwise, and profoundly parochial ambitions”So, yes. Whilst they do not represent the entire population they are still – for the most part – the people of Afghanistan. How else do you describe people born and/or raised in Afghanistan? Ideological outlook doesn't obliterate one's nationality. No one suggests British born Catholics are Catholics and not British.
Quote:The people of Afghanistan are not attacking NATO forces. A militant religious and political group is.
Give over. You make it sound like it is some kind of monolithic Foreign Legion theocracy run on a top-down basis like a corporation. Let’s look at the facts – not state-invented propaganda. The Taliban is an amorphous and disparate group of ethnic identities, vacillating loyalties and political ambitions which often results in ironic and bizarre outcomes. This makes it possible to strike a deal with one group whilst warring with another. Both General McChrystol and Petreaus have admitted such on numerous occasions in the past.
There's a very good argument to say the term "Taliban" is a hopelessly indefinite conceptual creation and arguments that state there is a pressing need to take the battle to such are at best meaningless and at worst disingenuous.
Quote:He can use all necessary force to against those responsible and those that harbour them to prevent future acts of terrorism against the US. The Taliban harboured Al Qaeda, and could do again. Al Qaeda members (Mullah Omar included) are still in the area - either in the border regions or in Pakistan - and are simply waiting for an opening to return.
Again, this is nonsensical. Whilst it is true to say the Taliban offered sanctuary to Al Qaeda when the fled Somalia they were hardly busom buddies. Once more I'll quote Jason Burke:
“ After the arrival of Bin Laden in Afghanistan the Taliban became extremely uneasy. Despite being grateful for the assistance Bin Laden lent during the Soviet occupation they felt – particularly in the wake of the bombing of the USS Cole, he was bringing too much heat down on them from the international community (preventing them being recognised as the legitimate government of Afghanistan within the UN). Mullah Omar had little time for OBL's internationalist Jihad movement and instructed him to stay out of Afghanistan's affairs.
The relationship between the Taliban and bin Laden dissolved to the point where they agreed to hand him, Ayman-al-Zawahiri, Mohammed Atef and the rest of Al-Qaeda over to America via Saudi Arabia (verified).
The deal fell apart when Clinton decided to distract attention away from his extra-marital affairs by launching cruise missiles into Afghanistan & Pakistan. Following these strikes the Taliban walked away from the table. They refused to hand AQ over because they would have lost face with their Pakistani paymasters."The 9/11 bombers are dead. Osama Bin Laden is dead. Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, the alleged mastermind behind the bombings is in custody. Al Qaeda has been decimated in Afghanistan and the Taliban are more interested in self-determination than any expansive terrorist policy. There is simply no justification for the trillion dollar expenditure wrapped around the US (and UK) taxpayer’s necks.
Quote:Regardless. What the authorisation says or doesn't say is irrelevant in the face of what is actually happening on the ground.
Actually, legal justification for imperial international adventures is incredibly relevant. People have been sent to the gallows for lacking such.
Quote:Degrees of success can be argued but the fact of the matter is NATO and the Taliban are the groups engaged in firefights on a daily basis, and NATO operations have been aimed at the Taliban for a long time now.”[/i]
Given the sobering casualty rates quoted by various independent organisations for Afghanistan I’d say the US and its NATO allies are primarily in the business of killing civilians. I mean, on the one hand we are asked to believe modern “smart” munitions have never been so accurate. Yet the civilian casualty rates are astronomical.
Quote:I don't believe I argued NATO were being particularly successful. We all know IEDs are crippling NATO movements and Taliban influence and threat of retribution outweighs any promises NATO can deliver where the average Afghan civilian is concerned.
According to Daniel Davis (whose report you should read) we are in the same boat as the Russians. But this was ALWAYS going to be the outcome. I mean, we had plenty of accurate data from the eighties on the success rate (or lack thereof) of a modern, hi-tech military juggernaught. The war was unwinnable from the start. The surprising thing is people actually believe those in power who initiated this plan thought it was in the first place.