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Us And Taliban To Open Direct Peace Talks In Qatar
A good thing - or not?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.should have done this ages ago, not sure it will help the ordinary Afghans seeing they are the ones who will have to live alongside them if a peace deal is brokered. Worse is no one knows what the Taliban want, if it's to bring their ways to all people in Afghanistan that is the worse possible scenario.
more complicated than that.
http:// en.wiki pedia.o rg/wiki /War_in _Afghan istan_% 282001% E2%80%9 3presen t%29
http://
I wonder how long it will be before President Karzai and his looted millions are on a flight to comfortable exile in the West and the Taliban are in the corridors of power in Kabul?
The ending of violence can only be a good thing but the Afghani people face the unhappy prospect of life under a theocracy.
The ending of violence can only be a good thing but the Afghani people face the unhappy prospect of life under a theocracy.
It's been nothing more than a grotesque job creation exercise coupled with a great moneyspinner.
Nothing has changed an nothing ever will.
America seems to treat life as a bad soap opera where they cut from one scene to another with no thought for continuity or the future.
All the choreographed flag folding and rifle spinning in the world won't make it any different.
Nothing has changed an nothing ever will.
America seems to treat life as a bad soap opera where they cut from one scene to another with no thought for continuity or the future.
All the choreographed flag folding and rifle spinning in the world won't make it any different.
An inevitable thing. It was never an issue that could be won with a military campaign. It would be nice if, once in a while, politicians took on board the lessons of history.
The cost has been enormous - in lost lives; afghan civilians, US and UK servicemen, insurgents- to say nothing of the resource cost to the taxpayer. The mission was ill-defined and suffered from mission creep - initially to combat al-quaeda training grounds, it rapidly expanded to the installation of a government. Another mission with an extremely poorly designed exit strategy.
You can never win a military victory against a determined insurrection. It is just a pity they did not recognise this sooner and start talks.
The cost has been enormous - in lost lives; afghan civilians, US and UK servicemen, insurgents- to say nothing of the resource cost to the taxpayer. The mission was ill-defined and suffered from mission creep - initially to combat al-quaeda training grounds, it rapidly expanded to the installation of a government. Another mission with an extremely poorly designed exit strategy.
You can never win a military victory against a determined insurrection. It is just a pity they did not recognise this sooner and start talks.
I like to dig this link out of the archive every now and then. From 1997:
http:// news.bb c.co.uk /1/hi/w orld/we st_asia /37021. stm
Just because they are talking doesn't mean anything useful will be achieved.
http://
Just because they are talking doesn't mean anything useful will be achieved.
There was a reason to go into Afghanistan in the first place which was to
a/ Attempt to aprehend those responsible for 9/11
b/ Stop Al Qaeda from using Afghanistan as a safe haven to operate from.
Now there's a fair argument that we should have persued other courses of action but after 9/11 the mood wasn't condusive to aional debate - people wanted blood
Somewhere along the line the fight changed and it all got bogged down into fighting a bunch of tribal warlords - big mistake!
We should have pulled out either when that became apparant or at least after the debarcle of the elections
If you don't have clear support from a large majority of the population then you're an occupying force - after those elections we're an occupying force!
As for these talks - what a joke!
We've already declared that we're all pulling out in 2 years time - what on Earth do the Taliban have to gain from talks.
There will be a brief and bloody civil war when we all pull out and they'll be running the place again.
Meanwhile Al Qaeda are firmly entrenched in Noth Africa, Yemen, Somalia and North Africa
a/ Attempt to aprehend those responsible for 9/11
b/ Stop Al Qaeda from using Afghanistan as a safe haven to operate from.
Now there's a fair argument that we should have persued other courses of action but after 9/11 the mood wasn't condusive to aional debate - people wanted blood
Somewhere along the line the fight changed and it all got bogged down into fighting a bunch of tribal warlords - big mistake!
We should have pulled out either when that became apparant or at least after the debarcle of the elections
If you don't have clear support from a large majority of the population then you're an occupying force - after those elections we're an occupying force!
As for these talks - what a joke!
We've already declared that we're all pulling out in 2 years time - what on Earth do the Taliban have to gain from talks.
There will be a brief and bloody civil war when we all pull out and they'll be running the place again.
Meanwhile Al Qaeda are firmly entrenched in Noth Africa, Yemen, Somalia and North Africa
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