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Peaceniks Try Direct Mail on Vandoos Destined for AFG

Whats great is that V2007 can argue that the whole situation is caused by the US. They propped up the Mujaheddin during the civil war. That's not quite right. It wasn't a civil war, it was the SOVIET invasion of Afghanistan. Perhaps you conveniently forgot that? The only reason anyone went there in the 70s and 80s was because the USSR invaded Afghanistan. So, if we follow this argument...the Soviets could be blamed for the whole war, the rise of the Taliban etc. Oh but wait! What does the second S in USSR stand for? Socialist? I think it goes United Soviet Socialist Republics...Its definitely ALL western imperialist neo-colonial capitalists causing every bad thing in the world.

See how words and facts can be warped to form crappy arguments? Ill go one farther to prove the point:
The USSR was founded by Lenin...Lenin was a man, born from a lady...His mother, who was descended from her mother, etc...Therefore, the person most responsible for the war in Afghanistan is: LENIN'S GREAT GRANDMOTHER!!!

Anyone can make phony arguments out of thin air.
 
The crux of V2007's philosophy seems to be that the world would be a
better place if the US weren't such "imperialists".

If the western powers would only do something different,
then things would be different!  And if we stopped using labels
like "bad guy" there be no bad guys. - seems sensible to me.
Yup, I'm finally starting to understand "peaceniks".

Withdrawl of troops from Afghanistan and would be cruel way to start reinventing the world.

Simple analogy:

V2007 - If there was a gun battle going on in the drug house at the end your
block, would you phone the police?  I would!
That's the nation state in action. Most of the world thinks of nation state as a good thing.
It maintains things like law and order, hospitals, schools, banking, industry.
You and I depend on this.  (and it's institutions)

So do the people of Afghanistan - but some people want to withdraw the police.
Withdraw law and order,  thus removing hospitals, schools ,banking ,industry.

Al Qaeda want to remove the police.
The Taliban want to remove the police.
Drug dealers want to remove the police.
Peace activists want to remove the police.

Hmmmm.

Yes, V2007 - it's really that simple.













 
This is getting comical! I have posted several times refuting key parts of your arguments but you simply refuse to acknowledge my arguments. I suspect that that has something to do with the fact that I speak from experience, having been an advisor to Karzai's government and tend to back my arguments up with facts and evidence. See my responses in italics to your arguments below:

Valcartier 2007 said:
The alternatives (interrelated and non-exhaustive) are:

- Stop allying with warlords, who are also fundamentalist and anti-women (a key demand of RAWA, an Afghan women’s group whose views members of this forum have so far refused to engage, despite previous citations in our posts).

This is a black and white generalization. Since 2002, the UN Assistance Mission to Afghanistan has gone to great lengths to eliminate warlord influence from Afghanistan. The Disarmament, Demobilization and Reintegration program and the current Disarmament of Illegally Armed Groups program are both targeted at removing the teeth from warlords. Furthermore, the more notorious warlords have been marginalized politically with almost none still serving in high levels in government. In fact the "warlords" (a highly generalized and subjective description) you speak of are a broad group including some who fought nobly in defence of their people (the Massouds of the world) to some who were down right evil people (the Dostums). What is more, Karzai's cabinet is made up of a broad spectrum of Afghans from all ethnic groups and with a large representation of women. Most are educated and even enlightened leaders who want peace and prosperity for their people (I know this because I have met several of them, have you?) Just so you know, RAWA doesn't know everything and shouldn't be your only source!

- Stop propping up a US-imposed puppet (Hamid Karzai). Canadian civilian and military officials currently serve as his advisor.

You realize he was elected by the Afghan people right? You realize that before he was elected he was chosen by a Jirga of elders from across Afghanistan right? You realize that both of these events were UN supported and were deemed legitimate by several monitoring bodies? What are you suggesting, that the US rigged both the Jirga and the election right under the noses of the UN, EU and several other monitors!?

So what if Canadians serve as his advisor. You do realize that he can and does reject our advice, right? You do realize that we are there advising him because he views Canada as a friend of Afghanistan and a country that can be trusted to give impartial, disinterested advice, right? Do you even know what kind of advice we're giving him? I'll give you a hint: it's not political advice and we don't tell him how to run his country.


- Spend money to pay genuine reparations to Afghan civilians – who have been killed in the thousands – by Western armed forces (predominantly killed by US forces, but also by Canadian Forces). Provide not token and condescending funds, but substantial funds to repair the damage that Western policy has caused in Afghanistan for decades.

You do realize that we do this, right? You know that one of the principles behind our involvement in Afghanistan is the realization that our abandonment of Afghanistan in 1989 got us into this mess in the first place, don't you? I'm sure then that you also know that Afghanistan is the single largest recipient of Canadian aid money then too. Can we do more? Absolutely. However, don't even begin to suggest that this is a worthwhile proposal as anyone who knows anything about Canada's involvement would know this is already happening.

- Provide substantial funds to grassroots Afghan groups, and their allies, who determine their own needs, and not have those needs decided for them by NATO officers or Western bureaucrats. Stop making “aid” contingent on collaboration with NATO/US-led counterinsurgency. Stop pretending that PRT efforts are a substitute for genuine development as led and determined by Afghans themselves.

This is such an ignorantly rhetorical and polemical statement as to almost defy understanding. The first sentence is essentially a fundraising drive for your sole source of information on Afghanistan: RAWA. To suggest that aid should not be linked to the higher COIN strategy demonstrates two things. Firstly, it shows that you should read more books on COIN as economic development has always been an important tool of defeating an insurgency. Secondly, you really need to get your facts straight and stop making sweeping, generalized statements. The vast majority of Canada's aid does not go through the PRT but rather goes through CIDA to such projects as the National Area Based Development Program, the DIAG program, women's literacy and microcredit/micro finance initiatives. Finally, as someone who was present when both the Afghanistan Compact and the Interim Afghanistan National Development Strategy were developed, I can tell you that the Afghans are very much leading the development planning. Of course the donors have a say as its their money but the way it works is that donors essentially buy into programs initiated by the Afghan government rather than dictating programs to Afghanistan. It wasn't always that way but things are improving every month. You can't take what happened in 2003 and use that as an example of why things don't work today because things have changed dramatically.

- De-link genuine development and reconstruction from NATO-led counterinsurgency. To not do so destroys the credibility of the sometimes good-faith efforts of development workers.

Yet another generalized and vague statement. Independent NGOs are under no obligation to work with ISAF and often choose not to. To suggest that the COIN campaign and development are somehow seperate activities that can be de-linked displays a incredible misunderstanding of what is happening in Afghanistan and how COIN campaigns are prosecuted.

- Allow freedom of movement for Afghan refugees to settle where they want to (instead, they languish in other poor countries like Pakistan and Iran, or resettled in Afghanistan with very few economic prospects). Western countries – Germany, Australia, Great Britain, Canada, and the United States – should offer full asylum to Afghan refugees (this is exactly what the family of Nasrat Ali Hassan -- the taxi driver killed by a CF soldier, demanded).

This is hypocritical and paternalistic in addition to being plain wrong. The vast majority of Afghan refugees in Pakistan and Iran have returned and there is an entire Ministry in the Afghan government that is responsible for resettling and assisting those people. However, what is interesting here is that your proposal is at odds with much of what you say in other posts. You suggest that we should let the Afghans sort things out and fend for themselves but then in the same post you suggest that the only hope for Afghan refugees is emigration to the sanctuary of the West. Please tell me this proposal is a test to make sure we're paying attention.

- Listen to the voices of progressive Afghans themselves (not puppets who worked as consultants for Western corporations), who refuse to choose between one set of fundamentalists (the Taliban and their allies) or other fundamentalists (Bush, Karzai and their chosen warlords).

Again, a blanket statement that is condescending and insulting to the thousands of moderate Afghans who are striving for a better life. To make a generalized accusation that all consultants are puppets and all who work for the current Afghan government are fundamentalists is ignorant in the extreme. This statement more than any other shows your true colours and demonstrates for everyone to see that you are not interested in the reality of Afghanistan or the plight of her people. You have an agenda to push and that agenda is to get people you approve of into power in Afghanistan, nothing more. By suggesting that no one is listening to progressives is once again to show your lack of knowledge about how the Afghan government works and what is going on over there. I have attended meeting where the full spectrum of Afghan politics has been in attendence - from former warlords, to feministists, to former communists, to western educated refugees and all were given the opportunity to speak. And this was not just one meeting, I have been to dozens like that.

- Recognize that the entire insurgency against foreign troops can’t uniformly be dismissed as “Taliban”. A large part of the insurgency is an indigenous resistance to foreign invasion, particularly by the Pashtuns of the south. You can never defeat an indigenous Pashtun insurgency (to even think you can shows an astounding ignorance of the history and culture of Central and South Asia, repeating the mistakes of the Raj). The foreign presence provides a pretext for Taliban recruitment amongst the Pashtun.

The irony here is that the only person who seems to think we call the entire insurgency "Taliban" is you! Those of us who have been there or who are going know far better than you do that there are many factions with many interests. If you want to give us a history lesson about defeating the Pashtuns, maybe you should give us the whole lesson. The Brits had very little trouble defeating them in the Second and Third Afghan wars with relatively small forces. There is no such thing as an undefeatable tribe and Pashtuns are not all united against the coalition. In fact large Pashtun tribes or sub-tribes are either neutral or supportive of the Karzai government (Karzai himself being a Pashtun).

- Recognize that Canada is ultimately losing the war (which O’Connor refuses to even call a “war”). 2500 troops in a vast area like southern Afghanistan is symbolic, not a real attempt to fight a counter-insurgency. Civilian deaths are rising, and the rules of engagement alienate Afghan civilians. As insurgents are killed, more are created (as General Leslie has acknowledged), so you can never win (which General Leslie illogically will never acknowledge).

We are? Because after Op MEDUSA and BAAZ TSUKA, we seemed to be winning. So let me see if I get this straight. You - a civilian who has never been to Afghanistan nor fought in any kind of war, are telling us - a group of people who take home paycheques based on their proficiency at all things military, that we're losing the war!? So by reading newspapers and endlessly quoting LGen Leslie out of context, you figure you're qualified to make this assessment?

(For the sake of argument: Imagine if a foreign force, no matter the pretext for their presence, killed a 10 year-old boy, an old man, a taxi driver and other civilians in southern Alberta, or the Okanagan, or Eastern Ontario or the Saguenay. Would the people in those areas have any sympathy whatsoever for the “mission” of that foreign force? Why would we assume any less a reaction by Afghans?)

- Recognize that any genuine reconstruction or development effort must be led and determined by Afghan civilians. You don’t win “hearts and minds” out of a tank or APC, in fatigues, with a rifle, not even speaking the local language, while shooting at civilians and insisting that anyone that attacks you is “Taliban” and deserves to be killed.

Again, a blanket statement that is insulting to soldiers. I've already addressed the "led by Afghans" canard you keep rolling out but I doubt you'll refute that as you have only RAWA as a reference. I speak a bit of Dari and am learning Pashto. I was in a situation where I was being shot at and I did not return fire for fear of hitting civilians in the crowd. Many Canadian soldiers have been in similar situations and to make generalizations to the effect that we are trigger happy killers who roam the countryside in tanks and APCs looking for a fight will get you in serious trouble. Its good to see you finally showing your true soldier-hating, biased colours though!


Another related question is: Would the Taliban “take over” if Canada left?

Certainly not if support by funds and arms from Pakistan and allies in Saudi Arabia was removed. With the withdrawal of NATO troops, one of the main sources of grievance exploited by the Taliban would be eliminated. As argued by Sonali Kolhatkar (co-author of Bleeding Afghanistan), the Taliban today is stronger than in 2001, not geographically, but in popularity amongst a Pashtun base. NATO troops, and their actions, correlates directly with Taliban popularity. Get rid of those troops, and you remove a huge basis for Taliban popularity. That doesn’t mean the Taliban disappears, but it creates a political situation that deprives the Taliban of their oxygen.

Moreover, it’s a bit a stretch to think that 2500 troops in a vast area of southern Afghanistan, or even upwards of 35,000 NATO troops in the entire country, has “control” of a large, diverse and rugged nation like Afghanistan. Even mainstream military analysts (like RAND) acknowledge that.

What a pipe dream. "Of course it would work if the Taliban weren't there" is the gist of your argument. What pie-in-the-sky daydreaming! I would also like you to prove that the Taliban are more popular now with the Pashtuns than prior to 2001 because as I mentioned before, large groups of Pashtuns are very much pro-Karzai and pro-ISAF (just ask guys who've been there and know first hand).

Another question asked by several folks on this forum: Would a civil war result?

There is currently a civil war, with multiple fronts (including the gender front, with not just the Taliban but warlords defended by NATO attacking the rights and dignity of women). NATO has chosen a side in this civil war (and Western powers, particularly the US, perpetuated the civil war, with money and arms, throughout the 1980s). Canada’s presence does not help this situation.

This is a non answer. Civil war already exists so it's OK if it exists in the future!?


This post constitutes a general answer to the question: what is the alternative? We have not addressed the neo-colonial underpinnings of NATO involvement in Afghanistan, or even delved into the details of the recent history of Western involvement in Afghanistan (which would expose greed, corruption, hypocrisy and self-interest, not some higher calling to “help” Afghans). These are important points, crucial, but usually dismissed on this forum (refer to the responses to: http://forums.army.ca/forums/threads/63128/post-578352.html#msg578352 )

The alternatives proposed above mean a radical shift, not just in policy, but in worldview, by government and army officials.

While struggling to make that shift happen (that’s what international social movements are all about), on-the-ground soldiers can refuse to participate in the mission. They can refuse to participate in a mission that: 1) is a cover for US-led counterinsurgency and long-term US presence in the Middle East and Central Asia; 2) kills civilians, and undertakes rules of engagement that allows for shooting at civilians; 3) hands over prisoners to forces – whether Afghan or US – that do not respect Geneva Convention protections); 4) cannot succeed even on its own terms, and perpetuates conflict and misery.

Putting into practice these alternatives (not in isolation, but with other radical shifts in worldwide geopolitics – regionally and globally), can begin to create space for Afghans to self-determine their future and their development, on their terms.


Again, hope this doesn't get heavy-handedly locked down, before we can make more responses to previous questions on the original thread: http://forums.army.ca/forums/threads/63128/post-578352.html#msg578352

---
VALCARTIER 2007
www.valcartier2007.ca

Well, at least your views are now out in the open and its clear for all to see that you are not interested in reality or even workable solutions. You make generalizations, often based on information that is years out of date and always tinged with rhetoric. You refuse to acknowledge facts and data presented by other posters and quite frankly your "proposals" here are naive half-measures that ignore many of the realities of Afghan life. The icing on the cake is that your hatred of soldiers and misunderstanding of who we are and what we do is starting to show through your veneer of civility.

In my opinion, you are just like NIMN only more polite. He was exposed as a parrot spouting rhetoric and slogans and it seems you have trouble moving past that point yourself. You remind me of people who post great ideas about how the Army should be organized but who, when asked to provide details, never deliver.

MG
 
V2007:
You seem to like to use labels, and big words to veil what you really mean, with all your talk of neocolonialism, warlords, non-imperialist, blah blah, how about you quit trying to muddy the water, and just say who or what you mean EXACTLY instead of these ambiguous half-truths/whole lies.  Do you know these persons, groups etc PERSONALLY, do you have any evidence to the accusations you make towards them?

Also you never really answered any of Olga's questions, you side stepped them by spewing the SAME EXACT things you said originally you did not defeat or even make an attempt to defeat her arguments.

You said this "Stop propping up a US-imposed puppet (Hamid Karzai). Canadian civilian and military officials currently serve as his advisor" and like many others will point out to you, if it hasn't already been, HE WAS ELECTED BY THE AFGHAN PEOPLE, the US didn't grab him and say you're the head honcho now and you will do as we say.

The problem with your answer to "what happens if we take the troops out of A-stan"  is severely lacking, fact: the Taliban were running things in A-stan with an iron fist, before we (UN sanctioned troops) moved in there, under their regime, women and minority groups were oppressed, beaten, tortured and killed, with this power base and no one challenging them at the time they were able to amass weapons, ordinance, and come up with plans of attack.  If we take the troops out, considering how raw, and undermanned the Afghanistan National Police and the army are they would never be able to fight back the Taliban when they would come back for the power.

Therefore making it impossible for fair treatment of women, minorities, and to rebuild.  You say we must make reparations, and let them rebuild their country, the only way they can do that is if someone helps them stave off the Taliban until they can be able to stand on their own 2 feet, at the same time, look at all the millions of dollars we are spending in REBUILDING, schools, clinics, houses, and paving MANY KMs of roads. I think the many people to have gone overseas can tell you that more afghanis are for what we are trying to do there then those who are against.

I agree with others assessment about you, that you are only out to get the US, and bash them, because of the many points however unvalidated they are that you have made, seem to indicate you are very anti-american, and make no sense in offering that we go to Sudan instead when we in fact would be INVADING that country.

FACT: UN approved what we are doing there.
FACT: The Afghans asked to come and help and continue to want it. (I'm not saying every person from that country wrote us letters asking us to help lol)
FACT: our aim isn't to just send a bunch of guys there and blast every person we see, unfortunately civilian casualties do happen, but then would you tell police officers to stop policing because an innocent bystander was injured in apprehending a suspect?  hell I would go so far as to say should you people stop protesting because people haven been hurt by protesters in the past.


Canada isn't losing the war, we would lose the war if we listened to you, we're doing exactly what we aimed to do, help rebuild, educate the people, aid in reconstructing the government, helping in standing up the Afghan army and police. If you say we're losing the war because we're not sending more troops in then that in and of itself goes against your argument also, but to say that you are also implying, that the soldiers there now are useless and not accomplishing anything, and that the ones who died did so for no reason. WELL I REFUSE to believe that, and I think I can safely say that many others will agree with me on that, and that we ARE making a difference.  You say the Rules of engagement are alienating the afghan civilians, do YOU even know what our ROE are?  If I may add also, that of course WAR alienates civilians, THEY DON'T like it, and neither do we, but we do what must be done.

P.S Doing nothing (like you suggest) DOES = giving up, plain and simple.
 
Valcartier,

Here is a post of mine from last year, I suppose she's just an 'imperialistic plant' hiding out in my Dentist's office?

A Thank You From An Unexpected Place
« on: November 08, 2006, 17:10:17

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
I'm just going to post this quick as I worked a night shift, followed by the moving company this morning delivering my furniture and a dentist appointment at 1300 to fill/ refill 7 cavities.

The dentist said he would give me a few minutes to rest my jaw as he had been going at it for about half an hour straight. He left the office and the dental asst. with the most amazing eyes and olive skin sat the chair up.
Naturally being Bruce I had to engage her in conversation and found out she had just finished her schooling and was just two weeks into her 150 hours of job placement. Well not only was she cute but a sweet accent that I thought sounded French so I asked her about it. Well it turns out she is from Afghanistan, and of course I show her my army.ca T-shirt hidden under my bib and her already luminous face lightened up even brighter and she said how glad she was that we were over there trying to make her homeland safer.

We chatted for about 10 minutes and she made no bones about it being safer there now than before when the Taliban was there. In fact, her Mother and Brother just returned not long ago from hiding in Pakistan and moved into Kabul and the brother was investing in building a new shopping centre.

Since I've never had or will have, the opportunity to " go over" this was my first meeting with someone
from there and it was a very nice experience. If this young lady is an example of the gratitude then no wonder many wish to go back and keep helping...........
 
Wow. Looks like Val2007 achieved his aim.  34 pages later and 14000 views.  That's better than 3000 letters being sent to the Vandoos, considering people come here for info on joining the CF or just plain info on the CF.  They have their point of view we have ours, nothing new is being presented here.  I believe a search will give Val2007 all the info they need on our point of view if they want to understand it.  This thread, although interesting has run its course and is now going in circles.  I predict that if this goes on, the the next 34 pages will be much of the same.  

Stop beating the horse... :crybaby:...he's dead already.
 
Some of Val2007's "alternatives" could benefit from the bright light of fact and realism:

- Stop allying with warlords, who are also fundamentalist and anti-women (a key demand of RAWA, an Afghan women’s group whose views members of this forum have so far refused to engage, despite previous citations in our posts).

- Stop propping up a US-imposed puppet (Hamid Karzai). Canadian civilian and military officials currently serve as his advisor.

Who, other than the Northern Alliance warlords, could the allied nations have made common cause with to depose the Taliban dictatorship?  No other indigenous group had the capacity.  Unless you're trying to suggest a unilateral invasion, which would have been far more open to criticism of neo-colonialism than the actual course of action taken at the time.

Once the Taliban had been displaced, an interim gov't was set up, and then elections were held.  Karzai won those elections and formed a government - so unless you have compelling evidence that the Afghan elections were fraudulent, I'd suggest that calling Karzai a puppet of the U.S. is a stretch, to put it politely.

Just because you don't like him, doesn't mean the Afghans shouldn't be able to choose him.

And by the way, many of the warlords don't seem particularly impressed by him either.  But it's instructive to note that instead of having him assassinated or staging a coup, as they would have in the past, these same fellows have instead formed a rival political party - the <a href="http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/ArticleNews/freeheadlines/LAC/20070625/AFGHAN25/international/International">United National Front</a> - to wrest control from him in a peaceful and legitimate way.

- Spend money to pay genuine reparations to Afghan civilians – who have been killed in the thousands – by Western armed forces (predominantly killed by US forces, but also by Canadian Forces). Provide not token and condescending funds, but substantial funds to repair the damage that Western policy has caused in Afghanistan for decades.

A weak point, but not one where we're going to come to any sort of agreement, I'm afraid.  You're obviously not satisfied with the payments made, and I am.  I point you to the case of <a href="http://toyoufromfailinghands.blogspot.com/2006/12/whatever-happened-to-niaz-mohammed.html">Niaz Mohammed Hussaini</a> as evidence that Canada thinks long and hard about how best to deal with each individual set of circumstances.

- Provide substantial funds to grassroots Afghan groups, and their allies, who determine their own needs, and not have those needs decided for them by NATO officers or Western bureaucrats. Stop making “aid” contingent on collaboration with NATO/US-led counterinsurgency. Stop pretending that PRT efforts are a substitute for genuine development as led and determined by Afghans themselves.

On this point you are quite simply out to lunch: read up on the <a href="http://www.nspafghanistan.org/content/index_eng.html">National Solidarity Program</a> and <a href="http://www.acdi-cida.gc.ca/CIDAWEB/acdicida.nsf/En/JUD-1251644-SQ4">MISFA</a>.

- De-link genuine development and reconstruction from NATO-led counterinsurgency. To not do so destroys the credibility of the sometimes good-faith efforts of development workers.

I don't expect you to be convinced, but I've already debunked that line of argument <a href="http://toyoufromfailinghands.blogspot.com/2006/12/first-aid.html">over at The Torch</a>.  The NGO's cannot provide more than temporary relief of the symptoms of Afghanistan's malaise without the active intervention of western military forces to address the sickness itself.

- Allow freedom of movement for Afghan refugees to settle where they want to (instead, they languish in other poor countries like Pakistan and Iran, or resettled in Afghanistan with very few economic prospects). Western countries – Germany, Australia, Great Britain, Canada, and the United States – should offer full asylum to Afghan refugees (this is exactly what the family of Nasrat Ali Hassan -- the taxi driver killed by a CF soldier, demanded).

Interesting point from an immigration-policy standpoint, but not particularly germane to the rebuilding of Afghanistan as I see it.  Maybe I'm simply missing how pulling people out of the country affects its development in a positive way.

- Listen to the voices of progressive Afghans themselves (not puppets who worked as consultants for Western corporations), who refuse to choose between one set of fundamentalists (the Taliban and their allies) or other fundamentalists (Bush, Karzai and their chosen warlords).

So it's not that we're not listening to Afghans, it's that we're not listening to your approved list of Afghans.  I hope you're honest enough to see the hypocrisy of that sentiment.  You say we're picking sides, and not picking the right side.  I say we're not picking sides, because we're listening to the democratically elected Afghan government.  To side against an elected government in order to support one particular elite sounds like a recipe for disaster to me.

- Recognize that the entire insurgency against foreign troops can’t uniformly be dismissed as “Taliban”. A large part of the insurgency is an indigenous resistance to foreign invasion, particularly by the Pashtuns of the south. You can never defeat an indigenous Pashtun insurgency (to even think you can shows an astounding ignorance of the history and culture of Central and South Asia, repeating the mistakes of the Raj). The foreign presence provides a pretext for Taliban recruitment amongst the Pashtun.

It has been widely recognized by the CF that there are a multiplicity of factions within the insurgency, but the moniker "Taliban" is used as a convenience, since most Canadians would tune out if the CF started lecturing them about <a href="http://www.snappingturtle.net/flit/archives/2006_10_30.html#005976">the differences between the Hekmatyar faction and the Haqqani faction</a>.  I find the remainder of your point confusing.  You seem to be arguing that "Taliban" and "indigenous resistance" aren't overlapping, when the "Taliban" has always enjoyed its highest level of support in the Pashtun south.

Interestingly, support for the Taliban even in the south of the country runs no more than 50%, according to the most <a href="http://toyoufromfailinghands.blogspot.com/2006/12/i-havent-much-time-for-pollsters.html">comprehensive opinion poll</a> conducted in Afghanistan in recent years.  And it runs close to 10% nationally - a dismal figure by any reasonable standard.  The Taliban have nothing to offer the people of Afghanistan other than misery, which is why they are opposed by ordinary Afghans on the whole.  For us to abandon the country to that pack of evil thugs would be a betrayal of the highest order.

- Recognize that Canada is ultimately losing the war (which O’Connor refuses to even call a “war”). 2500 troops in a vast area like southern Afghanistan is symbolic, not a real attempt to fight a counter-insurgency. Civilian deaths are rising, and the rules of engagement alienate Afghan civilians. As insurgents are killed, more are created (as General Leslie has acknowledged), so you can never win (which General Leslie illogically will never acknowledge).

Why would we recognize something that isn't true?  The situation in Kandahar province is significantly improved over when Canada first moved south in force a few years back, on any number of levels.  You note that civilian deaths are rising, but is the rate of civilians killed by NATO forces rising?  Is it yet anywhere near the numbers killed by the insurgents?  No and no.  You also fail to note other indicators of progress, like the dramatic drop in the infant mortality rate or the vast improvement in the economic situation of the average Afghan since the Taliban were overthrown in 2001.  I say that food in their mouths, schools for their children, and close to 40,000 less dead infants and toddlers means something to them, and in the balance, means more to them than the regrettable deaths from coalition actions.

- Recognize that any genuine reconstruction or development effort must be led and determined by Afghan civilians. You don’t win “hearts and minds” out of a tank or APC, in fatigues, with a rifle, not even speaking the local language, while shooting at civilians and insisting that anyone that attacks you is “Taliban” and deserves to be killed.

You're now recycling previous points, Val2007.  Much of the reconstruction and development is in fact being led by Afghan civilians, through the NSP in conjunction with local elected councils.  And you're wrong about not being able to win hearts and minds with force.  When the local population lives in fear of the thugs who prey upon them, Canadian soldiers with the ability to protect them from those thugs through the legitimate and proportional application of deadly force is indeed <a href="http://toyoufromfailinghands.blogspot.com/2007/02/two-in-heart-one-in-mind.html">a hearts and minds victory</a>.

If that's all you have to offer Afghans who are depending upon our help to survive and build a better life for themselves and their children, I'd say it's pitifully thin gruel.
 
v2007, I suggest you cut down on the rhetoric and use logic more often.

Save your rhetoric for your group meetings, because we're frankly not amused by them, and it only makes you look dumber.

Not to mention you fail to address key points made by the members and keep repeating same rhetoric.

Is this the best you can do?
 
I've spent a great amount of time reading everything written on this thread. Like many other people here, I've never been in Afghanistan, and never will be. I'm beyond the age where the military wants me back! For the most part, I have nothing useful to add, but I applaud every rebuttle made here!

V2007-You rely on a poll for your number of Quebecers opposed to the war. I'd be interest in knowing which polling firm conducted this poll. I used to work for one.

I've said it before, somewhere on this site, and I'll say it again: the poll questions can be skewed to reflect whatever answer you want to get. The demographic can be chosen to get the answer you want. Certain responses can be eliminated to get the answer you want. Polling companies are snake-oil salesmen - and there is at least one in Canada worse than most. I won't tell you the name - but tell me which company's polls you're going by.

:cdn:
Hawk
 
It would seem that, despite whatever counter arguments we put forth, our presence in Afghanistan is simply part of a broad, imperialist, Zionist influenced, capitalist American conspiracy to dominate the region.

It would seem that, despite EVIDENCE to the contrary, the Taliban aren't all that bad.

It would seem that, despite EVIDENCE to the contrary, we are fighting a national insurgency against a nationally based and broadly popular uprising against foreign invaders.

It would seem that, despite all the EVIDENCE, we are not welcome in Afghanistan by those who truly wield the power.  Also, it would appear that we are naive to believe that the true leader in Afghanistan is the legitimate, elected and internationally recognized President of the Government of Afghanistan.

I, and all my comrades, just don't "get it".

We are dupes.

We are pawns.

We should leave.  Now.  And never go back, no matter what happens when the Taliban return to exact retribution on enlighten and reintegrate all who have "aided the aggressor". Clearly, they were misled by the unbelievers.

We should allow NGOs to work freely and unhindered in Afghanistan.  The Taliban will protect them from the murderous drug lords and warlords and, more importantly, the influences of the US dominated international community.  In fact, the Taliban will welcome any and all international aid with open arms and work to improve the lives of all Afghans, regardless of ethnic origin, gender, political or religious beliefs.  Just look at thier history.  We can trust them!

Valcartier2007, you have me sold.    I'm going to pack for Darfur.

(Edited to be less suspect of the Taliban's methods and motives)
 
You know what? I don't think that people even CAN argue the morals of the mission without taking another situation in a different country that is possibly worse, and saying we are bad people for not going there instead of Afghanistan, like VC2007 and other protesters do. The more I think of the simple points of what we are trying to do there, the more I can not argue against the war.

You CAN definitely argue the way the operation in Afghanistan is being carried out, even you guys definitely criticize some aspects of NATO's way of handling things.

Obviously I'm making a bit of a jump here with my first statement, but the simple morals of the operation are pretty hard to poke a hole through.

 
ClaytonD said:
Obviously I'm making a bit of a jump here with my first statement, but the simple morals of the operation are pretty hard to poke a hole through.
Hence why V2007 and his irk want to bring the evil Yank world domination conspiracy thing, to present Taliban as the 'lesser evil', because we all know that Yankee imperialists want to subjugate the world. lol
 
No Western country is going to Darfur for quite a while yet, if ever--see this update at another topic:
http://forums.army.ca/forums/threads/25883/post-583019.html#msg583019

Mark
Ottawa

 
HighlandFusilier said:
v2007, I suggest you cut down on the rhetoric and use logic more often.

Not to mention you fail to address key points made by the members and keep repeating same rhetoric.

Is this the best you can do?

I got nothing against anyone against this war, we all have opinions, but when there is spin and hidden agenda, thats where I stop, - cold!

Val is an audience seeker/attention getter trying to get us to 'bite' for a reaction to inflate his own head. We've seen it all before.

Like I said earlier, he did not even take the time to repsond to an honest and open basic PM, and that tells me enough. Just another trolling INet turd which needs to be flushed.

He's ran his course, and waisted our time, so enough is enough!


Wes
 
Valcartier 2007 said:
- See our recent response on this thread. But one quick (if glib) response: trust progressive Afghans (like the women at RAWA) to decide what should be done. Of course, Afghans should do it, and we should facilitate that, not impose our vision. Importantly, in fighting for genuine alternatives, we should reject the pretence, paternalism and colonialism inherent in questions like "What is your plan for the future of Afghanistan". Of course, it's Afghans that should determine their own future, and not have one imposed from abroad, whether by NATO, or Saudi Arabia.

- Allow freedom of movement for Afghan refugees to settle where they want to (instead, they languish in other poor countries like Pakistan and Iran, or resettled in Afghanistan with very few economic prospects). Western countries – Germany, Australia, Great Britain, Canada, and the United States – should offer full asylum to Afghan refugees (this is exactly what the family of Nasrat Ali Hassan -- the taxi driver killed by a CF soldier, demanded).

- "Trust progressive Afghans" seems to be 'Trust people who Valcartier2007 likes'. You will just be replacing one government with a puppet one of your own choosing. Which sounds exactly like what you are accusing others of doing.

- Opening the floodgates to refugees would be disasterous. The most able and educated would get out, leaving the poorest of the poor behind. You would be making a weak country even weaker. Worse than that, most of those who leave will be those who oppose the taliban, further weakening resistence to these tyrants.

Your heart seems to be in the right place, but your ideas are far from practical.
 
Reccesoldier said:
Ok, we're all beating around the bush, a first I believe for the denizens of this site, so I'll be the first to come out and say it.

Valcartier2007 is a hit and run troll.

“Hit and run troll”??!!

Just to put things in perspective (and to give a bit of a summary of the debate so far):

We began on this thread (and on army.ca) with two posts:
http://forums.army.ca/forums/threads/63128/post-578352.html#msg578352
and
http://forums.army.ca/forums/threads/63128/post-578377.html#msg578377

In reply:

we were told to “leave and don’t come back” (http://forums.army.ca/forums/threads/63128/post-578379.html#msg578379);

we were warned that we might be banned for spamming (http://forums.army.ca/forums/threads/63128/post-578402.html#msg578402);

we were described “as a tool for the Taliban” (http://forums.army.ca/forums/threads/63128/post-578431.html#msg578431);

our arguments were described as “full of logical falsies & inaccuracies” (http://forums.army.ca/forums/threads/63128/post-578461.html#msg578461);

we were described as: “one of those useful idiots that have been and are so useful to our enemies” (http://forums.army.ca/forums/threads/63128/post-578515.html#msg578515);

we’ve even been compared to child molesters (http://forums.army.ca/forums/threads/63128/post-580636.html#msg580636);

we were also asked our political affiliation (http://forums.army.ca/forums/threads/63128/post-578975.html#msg578975) and we replied (http://forums.army.ca/forums/threads/63128/post-578992.html#msg578992) without asking any of you for yours.


To be fair, a few of you argued for continued debate and discussion (http://forums.army.ca/forums/threads/63128/post-578584.html#msg578584).

And we took ZellDietrich’s advice to “argue substance rather than form” (http://forums.army.ca/forums/threads/63128/post-578962.html#msg578962).


Here’s a non-comprehensive list of the various replies we have provided to your arguments about the Afghan mission, which along with our original letter (www.valcartier2007.ca) provides clear evidence that we have arguments and facts to back up our assertions:

Response to RecceProfessor:
http://forums.army.ca/forums/threads/63128/post-578948.html#msg578948

Response to MCG
http://forums.army.ca/forums/threads/63128/post-578953.html#msg578953

Response to St.Michael’s Medical Team
http://forums.army.ca/forums/threads/63128/post-578953.html#msg578953

Response to Olga Chekova
http://forums.army.ca/forums/threads/63128/post-578958.html#msg578958

Response to Milnewstbay
http://forums.army.ca/forums/threads/63128/post-578967.html#msg578967

Precisions:
http://forums.army.ca/forums/threads/63128/post-578972.html#msg578972

More on General Leslie’s Logic:
http://forums.army.ca/forums/threads/63128/post-579737.html#msg579737

More about NATO and the US:
http://forums.army.ca/forums/threads/63128/post-579738.html#msg579738

On alternatives:
http://forums.army.ca/forums/threads/63128/post-579743.html#msg579743

Reply to GreyMatter
http://forums.army.ca/forums/threads/63128/post-580635.html#msg580635

Reply to Milnewstbay
http://forums.army.ca/forums/threads/63128/post-580641.html#msg580641

[And, after the thread was locked down, and then opened up again:]

On alternatives:
http://forums.army.ca/forums/threads/63128/post-582874.html#msg582874

Reply to MCG
http://forums.army.ca/forums/threads/63128/post-582883.html#msg582883

Reply to GreyMatter
http://forums.army.ca/forums/threads/63128/post-582899.html#msg582899

Reply to Olga Chekova
http://forums.army.ca/forums/threads/63128/post-582901.html#msg582901

And certainly, more to come ...

---
Valcartier 2007
www.valcartier2007.ca
 
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