The fall of Kabul (...
 

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[Closed] The fall of Kabul (probably today)

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If they do they’ll be bogged down like everyone else who has ever tried to have a go.

Alexander the Great and Ghengis Khan both successfully invaded, subdued and held the area which is now Afghanistan


 
Posted : 15/08/2021 12:34 pm
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How did they overcome the IED's being used by the Taliban at the time?


 
Posted : 15/08/2021 12:42 pm
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I have to lay this current shit-show at Biden’s feet. He’s unilaterally decided on a rapid withdrawal, and the consequences are the worst possible…

No, it was set up by the Trump administration. Biden just continued with a plan that was already in motion. I think it's very fair to criticize Biden for not adjusting plans when things started going off the rails, but the Bush administration set up this debacle, Obama just tried to muddle through, Trump made things worst, and now Biden just wants to wash his hands of the catastrophe he inherited.


 
Posted : 15/08/2021 12:44 pm
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https://twitter.com/LizSly/status/1426801235966021634?s=20
vs President Biden from the Whitehouse on 8th July 2021:

The Taliban is not the south — the North Vietnamese army. They’re not — they’re not remotely comparable in terms of capability. There’s going to be no circumstance where you see people being lifted off the roof of a embassy in the — of the United States from Afghanistan.

These are the kinds of things that can haunt a Presidency.


 
Posted : 15/08/2021 12:44 pm
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Bidens fault is he believed all the folk that told him the afghan army and government would be strong enough


 
Posted : 15/08/2021 12:52 pm
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I feel incredibly sad for friends of mine who were in the army and fought in Helmand. As one summed it up, poor cants being sent by rich cants to kill other poor cants for the benefit of rich cants.


 
Posted : 15/08/2021 12:58 pm
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Bidens fault is he believed all the folk that told him the afghan army and government would be strong enough

Yep, on paper, they should have been. Problem is, when it started becoming obvious that they weren't, what should he have done?

Option 1 would have been to resurge U.S. troops to beat the Taliban back again. That would have required tens of thousands of troops and billions of dollars. Having re-secured the country, they could never leave because the Afghan army will probably not be up to the job within our lifetimes.

Option 2 was to withdraw on the schedule that the Trump administration set.

Yes, they could have had a temporary surge for a few months to make the withdrawal a bit less chaotic, but the end result would have been the same. It's either an indefinite commitment of tens of thousands of troops or hand it back to the Taliban. There is pretty much zero political support for option 1 so option 2 is the only viable policy.


 
Posted : 15/08/2021 1:08 pm
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Think about what the Afghan army is. A few privileged King's College etc. educated generals heading up unemployed Afghans on a salery they wouldn't get elsewhere. I can't see the level of allegiance being very high. The pragmatic thing to do in the current situation is try and stay alive, and not do anything that might bring grief to your friends and family. Surrender and hope for for the best seems a better option than fighting to the death. There never will be an Afghan army that's capable of dealing with the Taliban unless it's made up of people equally fanatical.


 
Posted : 15/08/2021 1:25 pm
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Think about what the Afghan army is. A few privileged King’s College etc. educated generals heading up unemployed Afghans on a salery they wouldn’t get elsewhere.

I think it's actually far worse than that. It was a pipeline to siphon off aid money. Billions of dollars was supplied to set up an army. Contracts were awarded to build stuff and money for salaries was provided. Anyone in any position to hire contractors or soldiers just diverted money to their friends. On paper, the Afghan army had 300,000 troops. A lot of them just turned up to collect their salary and paid kickbacks to whatever official was in charge of recruitment. A whole bunch more didn't actually exist, they were just fake identities with bank accounts used to siphon off money. The entire system is like that, everyone's on the take and nobody is going to risk their life fighting for it because they know nobody will be there to back them up.


 
Posted : 15/08/2021 2:19 pm
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Alexander the Great and Ghengis Khan both successfully invaded, subdued and held the area which is now Afghanistan

It's true, we should have ditched 'hearts and minds' and 'nation-building' and used the Mongol tactic of killing all adult males in Helmand and putting their women into slavery. Far more effective.


 
Posted : 15/08/2021 3:10 pm
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Alexander the Great and Ghengis Khan both successfully invaded, subdued and held the area which is now Afghanistan

You really need to check the history back to more than 3,000 years ago. (you can check from the time Roman empire established until the moment Roman empire collapsed)

Alexander the Great, Ghegis Khan and China (even before Alexander & Ghegis) only managed to subdue that region temporarily for a period of time due to the impossible landscape that made it hard for all conquerors to maintain stability there.

It is a strategic location that all superpowers want but nobody is giving in and whoever wants to control that region, the opposing force would intervene to cause chaos.

The region is an important part of Silk Road and as China is reviving that with Belt and Road initiative it is in the interest that Western powers is out of that region. Originally the corridor is the southern path of the Silk Road (Silk Road has 3 parts - North, Mid and South) and it took a while for all conquering power to control them. They all managed to control that region for a short period of time of 100 to 200 years. Therefore, what is 20 years by comparison.

For nearly or more that 3,000 years China wants to control that corridor and succeeded for a period of time only. With the Belt and Road initiative it is only in the interest of China to maintain good relationship with ****stan/Taliban to avoid the corridor being hassled (sabotage etc).

Considering that China is the "big bro" to ****stan/Iran etc, it is in the interest for China to be an ally to them rather than the West. If Western powers remain in Afghanistan they would only act as a torn to China and China doesn't want that. Therefore, China's support for ****stan is implicitly giving confidence to the Taliban (they know that as they can simply switch sides to the West). Hence, it is very difficult to defeat the Taliban (Taliban is not really Afghans only).

Remember when Soviet Union wanted to control Afghanistan who added the warlords/Taliban in those days? Well, who else ... the USA/West.

You might ask if China will continue to subdue Xinjiang or the Uyghur people and the answer is yes. Historically, for thousands of years, the population of that region came from other central Asia and middle east region for trade and settled there when China encouraged them to settle with incentive (protection of traders and low tax etc). If you ask if Xinjiang can become a torn to China on religious ground, the answer is a bit but nothing serious because it is not in the interest of ****stan/Afghanistan etc.

In my opinion the decision to pull out from Afghanistan by western power is two folds:

1. Afghanistan become the breeding ground and hideout for those that opposing western powers, which everyone knows as they can't be touched.

2. No western powers to keep check of that region and China can expand at will good or bad (they can control all the water)

Finally, if you think you can have peace in future then think again.

The decision to pull out is a bad decision if you want peace. Yes, lives can be lost if western powers stay but that is the price for peace and at least you can have some peace at home.

As they say " ... they come from the mountain and consume everything in their path ..."


 
Posted : 15/08/2021 3:11 pm
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When one of the primary earners for the locals is heroin you are really up against it.
The taliban are probably happy to export tons of it intp the west. Let it disrupt our way of life from within
Uk troops and government could not support growing and distribution network knowing it was heading west
The locals rely on the income, its a good cash crop
So what dp you do? Get the poppy growers on side by buying then destroying the drugs, not a long term solution
Ask them to grow another crop, and underwrite the sale price, again not a long term solution
Such a waste. A brigade of uk troops with air and armour could probably stopped most of the taliban assults
From the c4 news feeds its a dozen guys on knackered mopeds and a few Toyota pick ups with the obligatory gpmg mounted on the back.
Having watched Once upon a time in Iraq its hard to see any good thimgs happening in the near future for anyone unless you are in the taliban command structure


 
Posted : 15/08/2021 3:16 pm
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I'm amazed that folk blame other countries for what Afghanistan is. You think this instant reversion would have happened in a country where the majority did not want it to?.

The folk siphoning off the dollars for the past 20yrs will now negotiate buying a comfy life with the loonies.
The average people will just try and survive as best as possible. They certainly won't try and stop it happening.


 
Posted : 15/08/2021 3:37 pm
 Bazz
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Initially i was pretty shocked at how quickly this has gone pear shaped, at the beginning of the week the media was reporting 90 days until full Taliban control, by midweek that had slippewd to 30 days, and now it's all but happened. With hindsight though it was inevitable, if everyone is predicting that the Taliban will ultimately gain control again where is the incentive for the Afghan army to keep fighting? perhaps die fighting for nothing, better to surrender or switch allegiance.

It's worth noting that a lot of the Taliban fighters are not as fundamentalist as many would believe, many are simply working for a days pay if reports from a few years back are accurate, it's a win win for many poorer families, sons get a wage that isn't stolen or 'taxed' by superiors and the families opium farm is left alone.

One of the biggest failures of western intervention is to overcome the rampant corruption that existed within the government structures put in place. For many Afghans the harsh but ultimately fair rule of the Taliban is preferable to the corrupt rule that we forced upon them.

Either way, sad and hard times ahead for many ordinary Afghans.


 
Posted : 15/08/2021 3:39 pm
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From the c4 news feeds its a dozen guys on knackered mopeds and a few Toyota pick ups with the obligatory gpmg mounted on the back.

Not once they've rolled over the Afghan army we kitted out.


 
Posted : 15/08/2021 3:50 pm
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It’s worth noting that a lot of the Taliban fighters are not as fundamentalist as many would believe, many are simply working for a days pay if reports from a few years back are accurate, it’s a win win for many poorer families, sons get a wage that isn’t stolen or ‘taxed’ by superiors and the families opium farm is left alone.

Most may not but their leaders are ...


 
Posted : 15/08/2021 3:54 pm
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I see Biden has committed 5000 troops to guide the rats safely off the sinking ship.

From the c4 news feeds its a dozen guys on knackered mopeds and a few Toyota pick ups with the obligatory gpmg mounted on the back.

There's quite a variation of technical models to choose from for today's insurgency.


 
Posted : 15/08/2021 3:55 pm
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I see Biden has committed 5000 troops to guide the rats safely off the sinking ship.

Will he be able to deploy them in time though?

I'd have thought the Taliban will be happy to sit back at the gates and wait a few days for the forriners to get the hell out. Why fight when you don't have to?

EDIT: Oh, they're already in. Better get a move on, lads.


 
Posted : 15/08/2021 3:58 pm
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One of the biggest failures of western intervention is to overcome the rampant corruption that existed within the government structures put in place. For many Afghans the harsh but ultimately fair rule of the Taliban is preferable to the corrupt rule that we forced upon them.

Troo dat.  It never black and white really


 
Posted : 15/08/2021 4:21 pm
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If the taliban had no support in the country they would not have overrun it so quickly


 
Posted : 15/08/2021 4:26 pm
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When one of the primary earners for the locals is heroin you are really up against it.

We gotta keep fighting that war on drugs though. Stopping people getting high trumps, well, everything for some inexplicable reason.

Out of interest, where does the NHS for example source its morphine from? Assuming their medicine suppliers aren't meeting up with Afghan warlords.


 
Posted : 15/08/2021 4:54 pm
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Posted : 15/08/2021 4:58 pm
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One of my best friends is from Kashmir and is a devout Muslim. He absolutely hates the extreme Islam you see in Afghanistan etc. His view was this was a small extremist sect that would still be that if oil hadn’t been found in Saudi Arabia. They’ve spent billion exporting their ideology. The blame for 9/11 and 7/7 firmly lies at their door but the west won’t take them on and good Muslims around the world get tarred with the same brush.


 
Posted : 15/08/2021 5:17 pm
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Its hardly surprising a western puppet regime is overthrown by the regime that held the country prior to the invasion.

Alexander the Great and Ghengis Khan both successfully invaded, subdued and held the area which is now Afghanistan

For short periods of time.

They also employed some methods which are considered war crimes currently.


 
Posted : 15/08/2021 5:18 pm
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Its hardly surprising a western puppet regime is overthrown by the regime that held the country prior to the invasion.

Why puppet regime? Most of the regional powers have interest in that region.
That region has been fought over for nearly 3,000 years! It is a strategic location and has changed hands for thousands of years.

For short periods of time.
They also employed some methods which are considered war crimes currently.

All powers had only managed for a short time.
As for war crimes? That's a definition of entering war with one hand being tight behind the back. You already lose before entering war as they don't recoginse such concept of war crimes. Their definition of war is to eliminate their enemies at all cost.


 
Posted : 15/08/2021 5:55 pm
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I am not sure what many people expect. Look at it this way. A significant element of the population of the country are supporting the Taliban. This gives it an element of legitimacy. Another, probably larger, element are prepared to let it happen if only for an easy life. The country has been given a significant opportunity to westernise and has chosen not to. I do wonder if they should be left alone to do as they feel right. Should we attempt to impose our own standards on them? It smacks of colonialism to me in this respect.
We can't have it all ways. Asking/persuading ****stan to back off may help eventually but can ****stan afford to just ignore western pressure and thus do as it feels? If so then why would they back off.
Ultimately each country has the right to decide it's own internal life no matter how much we object to it.
Hard isn't it?


 
Posted : 15/08/2021 6:01 pm
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If the taliban had no support in the country they would not have overrun it so quickly

My conspiracy theory is that the West are complicit in what is happening ie Taliban genuinely want to rule the country, the west wants to get out, so the west pays them money so long as they keep it peaceful. Got to be cheaper than sending western troops there and getting them killed for another 20yrs


 
Posted : 15/08/2021 6:17 pm
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Ultimately each country has the right to decide it’s own internal life no matter how much we object to it.

Do they? To what extent? If the Third Reich had restricted their activities to within their borders, that would have been allowed under that definition.

The problem is, who gets to decide the rules / what is and isn't allowed? In a repeat of the Brexit, Covid scenarios, I and most on here find it utterly incomprehensible that anyone sees the women subjugating, flogging hand cutting public stoning regime as in any way legitimate and yet some - tens or hundreds of thousands do.

So we yell at them with our tanks and helicopters and demand they see our way as right. And you still don't win the argument, at massive cost.


 
Posted : 15/08/2021 6:28 pm
 dazh
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My conspiracy theory is that the West are complicit in what is happening ie Taliban

Hardly a conspiracy and most likely the simplest explanation. This was planned IMO. It seems like the US has decided that the Afghan regime was not worth propping up any more and it didn’t have the support of the afghan population. This is no different to Vietnam, and in the end the withdrawal will probably be vindicated.


 
Posted : 15/08/2021 6:29 pm
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Ultimately each country has the right to decide it’s own internal life no matter how much we object to it.
Hard isn’t it?

Yes, only if they can keep to themselves but this is extremely unlikely coz they get bored like all powers in the world.

Also bear in mind that they consider themselves saviour of humanity and the right way, just like the way the West think but in their own version. They will purge those that oppose them with no compromise once power is in their hands. It is non-negotiable. Brutality is the trademark as they consider that their ways because compromising means eroding their ideology.

Give it few years their power will grow tremendously and the world will feel their effect. Then we shall have another round of war in that region but this time much larger in size and difficult to contain. The west can no longer get a foothold there and the terrain give them the advantage to gather and to grow their strength. When they strike fear into you, you either fight to the death or run as far as you can. Alternatively you accept their ideology let them dictate to you. Nothing in between.


 
Posted : 15/08/2021 6:33 pm
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The country has been given a significant opportunity to westernise and has chosen not to.

It really has not been given that choice. No marshall plan type plan for reconstruction


 
Posted : 15/08/2021 6:40 pm
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Errmmmm – Saudi Arabia was financing and supporting many of the “terrorist” organiastions why not invade them?

Once our transition away from oil is complete then Saudi will be getting a few buckets of 'instant sunshine'. 2030deadline for ICE cars.....


 
Posted : 15/08/2021 6:49 pm
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The country has been given a significant opportunity to westernise and has chosen not to.

It really has not been given that choice. No marshall plan type plan for reconstruction

Wrong on both count.
Why westernise?
Why not their own version of "democracy" so long as they don't bother the world?
If they wanted to be westernised they would have done so long time ago during the time of Catholic Rome. (took one of the minister 4 years to travel through that region trying to establish trade or whatever with China, but died in his 4th year just before entering China)


 
Posted : 15/08/2021 6:52 pm
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The country has been given a significant opportunity to westernise and has chosen not to

Fair enough thats their choice. Westernise is not utopia but certainly preferable to the alternative in my eyes.

To me the problem was always

1. No outside force has managed to control Aghanistan for hundreds of years

2. The easy solution to stop the Taliban and Al Qaeda was to follow the money. The problem with that was it either went back to western powers or so called friends is Saudi Arabia, both of which was a bit inconvenient from a political point of view.

3. As in Iraq there was never a plan or a solution, it was lets bomb them and worry about the rest later, I suspect because in the USA at least, later means after my term in office is over so it wont be my problem.


 
Posted : 15/08/2021 6:53 pm
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Those talking about people keeping out of the way of the Taliban for an “easy life” do realise that just means trying to keep their families alive and unmutilated, yes?


 
Posted : 15/08/2021 7:00 pm
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1. No outside force has managed to control Aghanistan for hundreds of years

They did but not forever. Only managed to control for few hundred years. Normally, they lose control of Afghanistan after the death of their invading ruler(s) or from the death of neighbouring ruler(s) (the new ruler(s) than tried to control the region etc)


 
Posted : 15/08/2021 7:04 pm
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It is a strategic location that all superpowers want

There are only two superpowers: the US has just abandoned it and China does not want to occupy it. Of course China will pursue a trade and infrastructure based relationship and avoid questions around human rights: this will endear them to a Taleban government just ad the UK has endeared itself to the Saudi government.

I roughly agree with your first four points politecameraaction but point 5 is well off. The Marshall plan and investment in Germany wasn’t asset stripping and you need to explain what you mean by ethnic cleaning. Borders changed very little, people generally returned from whence they came

Germany's few remaining industrial assets after the war were seized after the war and often disassembled and shipped east or west. Many of their top scientists served as prisoners of war for years after 1945.

Ethnic Germans were ethnically cleansed from Bohemia, Moravia and the Baltic states. There was huge mass migration after the war - not to mention the POWs and anti-Communist "allied" forces sent back to their doom in the Soviet Union against their will.

the Saudis were financing them and the UK and US had trained and armed them ( taliban and al queda)

This just isn't true. The Saudi state didn't finance Al Qaeda, and neither is it true to say the Saudi establishment financed Al Qaeda. It is true that a certain section of Saudis financed groups that they knew to be - or were indifferent to being - terrorist groups. (The same is true in the UK btw). In fact, Bin Laden's activity was hotly disputed because it was so unclear where the money was going to or from.

The UK and US did not arm and train Al Qaeda. Al Qaeda and the Afghan Mujaheddin are not synonymous.


 
Posted : 15/08/2021 7:13 pm
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This just isn’t true. The Saudi state didn’t finance Al Qaeda, and neither is it true to say the Saudi establishment financed Al Qaeda. It is true that a certain section of Saudis financed groups that they knew to be – or were indifferent to being – terrorist groups. (The same is true in the UK btw). In fact, Bin Laden’s activity was hotly disputed because it was so unclear where the money was going to or from.

So where do Operation Cyclone and Jamal Khashoggi's role as the go between between Osama Bin Laden and Saudi Intelligence under Turki Bin Faisal fit into all of this?


 
Posted : 15/08/2021 7:17 pm
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Iran is so happy now.

Is it? The US has cut its losses, and Iran now has a hostile Taleban regime along its eastern border instead of a too-weak-to-threaten government that's propped up by the US at vast expense.


 
Posted : 15/08/2021 7:19 pm
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Al Qaeda and the Afghan Mujaheddin are not synonymous.

Bin laden was trained by the west as a "freedom fighter" We also trained many of the taliban

there is a big overlap between the two.


 
Posted : 15/08/2021 7:24 pm
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So where do Operation Cyclone and Jamal Khashoggi’s role as the go between between Osama Bin Laden and Saudi Intelligence under Turki Bin Faisal fit into all of this?

Operation Cyclone: the Afghan mujaheddin were not the same as Al Qaeda.

Khashoggi: he met Bin Laden and interviewed several times. LaRoucheist sources also say he tried to bring Bin Laden back to Saudi. If that is true (which seems unlikely considering the source), he was unsuccessful, and is not evidence of the Saudi state funding Bin Laden.


 
Posted : 15/08/2021 7:25 pm
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Bin laden was trained by the west as a “freedom fighter

No, he wasn't.


 
Posted : 15/08/2021 7:29 pm
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The mission in Afghanistan was to deprive AQ a safe haven and that was achieved within a year or so.

It was never about tackling the Talban, mission creep set in, probably because too much money was there to be made, for the military industrial complex, for all the military contracting companies (plenty of shareholders in the Republican party) and billions in cash constantly thrown around on the ground.


 
Posted : 15/08/2021 7:32 pm
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is not evidence of the Saudi state funding Bin Laden

Well according to the NY times, the CIA financed Bin Laden and the construction of his Tora Bora hideout...

Bin Laden Tora Bora

And whether or not individual invoices are catalogued, given the wider remit of Operation Cyclone, it would be odd to suggest the Saudi state (along with many others, including CIA, MI6, ISI, Mossad etc) wasn't in some way involved in funding Bin Laden, during his years in the mujahideen, before the mujahideen branched off into Al Qaeda and the Taliban


 
Posted : 15/08/2021 7:38 pm
 MSP
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The Saudis funded the spread of Wahhabism, the Taliban, AQ and ISIS are just the military arms of the doctrine.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/International_propagation_of_Salafism_and_Wahhabism


 
Posted : 15/08/2021 7:44 pm
 dazh
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As I was saying..

https://twitter.com/asranarshism/status/1426708179254054916?s=21


 
Posted : 15/08/2021 7:46 pm
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There are only two superpowers: the US has just abandoned it and China does not want to occupy it. Of course China will pursue a trade and infrastructure based relationship and avoid questions around human rights: this will endear them to a Taleban government just ad the UK has endeared itself to the Saudi government.

US may think that they made the right decision but it will come back to bite them in the long run. China's main objective is to trade with the West etc, which they can out compete against easily, or using trade to control the others. Historically, China would try to maintain peace with their neighbours so long as their interest is not disputed. The current situation is just fine for China as ****stan still have the ability to "control" the Taliban, so the mutual understanding and interest remain.


 
Posted : 15/08/2021 7:47 pm
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Al Qaeda and the Afghan Mujaheddin are not synonymous.

splitting hair there ... they can easily switch. I think the latter is more related to the warlords.


 
Posted : 15/08/2021 7:49 pm
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jivehoneyjive

Holy shit! How bizarre that this name should reappear right now - makes you think...


 
Posted : 15/08/2021 7:51 pm
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Well according to the NY times, the CIA financed Bin Laden and the construction of his Tora Bora hideout…

If you actually read what you posted, it doesn't say that the CIA financed Bin Laden. (It also doesn't say that the Saudi state financed Bin Laden). It does say that the CIA had financed the Tora Bora complex - 20 years before Bin Laden hid out there after 9/11.

I'm not talking about this further with jivehoneyjive, an Ickean conspiracy theorist who pulls stuff out of thin air and gish gallops like this:

it would be odd to suggest the Saudi state (along with many others, including CIA, MI6, ISI, Mossad etc) wasn’t in some way involved in funding Bin Laden,

It would be extremely odd to suggest that in 2021 because the question has been researched to death by real actual historians (not cranks with a Facebook account) for two decades and there's no credible evidence of it.

Bin Laden was bringing money from Saudi circles to distribute to the Arab Afghans: he was a bag carrier and operator of training camps for jihad-vacationing Saudi youth, not a fighter or military leader.


 
Posted : 15/08/2021 7:54 pm
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Iran has had 2 million Afghan refugees for years which puts the tabloid (and government)froth over a few hundred refugees crossing the English Channel very much into perspective.Turkey has similarly had to manage millions of refugees from Syria for years.
80 % of Afghanistan's economy is made up of foreign aid.
Can't see many will be willing to continue to contribute this to a Taliban led "government".A humanitarian disaster in waiting and not just because of the barbaric practices of the Taliban.
Saudi has been mentioned and let's face it their brutal regime is "Sharia" based and is not much different from the Taliban's.Nor Al Qaeda's for that matter who in their stated manifesto had free food and housing for all believers whereas the Saudis buy London property,jet fighters,racehorses and football clubs.
The financial cost of the 20 year campaign has been astronomical.We could have just given £300,000+ to each Afghani family.And the loss in life has been terrible not just for the alliance military and civilian workers but for a quarter of a million ordinary Afghani victims .


 
Posted : 15/08/2021 7:58 pm
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Holy shit! How bizarre that this name should reappear right now – makes you think…

How bizarre that once again it turns out to be Mossad's fault - makes you think...do your own research...I'm just asking questions...


 
Posted : 15/08/2021 8:00 pm
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Iran is so happy now.

Is it? The US has cut its losses, and Iran now has a hostile Taleban regime along its eastern border instead of a too-weak-to-threaten government that’s propped up by the US at vast expense.

There will be a period of stability there now that the West has lost their strategic location where they could keep an eye on Iran etc from a high point.
The balancing power there is China and if Taliban is to destabilise or cause troubles to Iran then they would be in for a rough ride for another few thousand years ... delaying their plan to dominate world with their ideology. Unlike the West China is at their doorstep. Their escape routes are via ****stan or Central Asia only. i.e. in the East China, West Iran and South India (they wouldn't accept them)

Also as long as the West do not criticise the dictators in Central Asia etc there will be a period of peace.


 
Posted : 15/08/2021 8:11 pm
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A humanitarian disaster in waiting and not just because of the barbaric practices of the Taliban.

Pretty much sums up the next few months and years. I really feel for the average citizen over there and I’m especially worried for the young women and children who have had a taste of freedom and now likely face a life of subjugation and radicalisation.


 
Posted : 15/08/2021 8:12 pm
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Pretty much sums up the next few months and years. I really feel for the average citizen over there and I’m especially worried for the young women and children who have had a taste of freedom and now likely face a life of subjugation and radicalisation.

Those Afghan families who worked for the West should be given asylum as first priority. These are the ones that have been "westernised" and willing to adopt to a new way of life.

... and I’m especially worried for the young women and children who have had a taste of freedom and now likely face a life of subjugation and radicalisation.

It works both ways some may or may not be radicalised but I suspect many will suffer mentally if they cannot adopt to the radical lifestyle.


 
Posted : 15/08/2021 8:21 pm
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the west via ****stan funded , armed and trained the Mujaheddin funneling the money via ****stand. this was during the time Bin laden was one of the "freedom fighters" as the Mujaheddin were called then

Its completely hairsplitting and rewriting history to claim that the west did not fund and train him and a lot more.

without western support for the Mujaheddin they would not exist in the same way now


 
Posted : 15/08/2021 8:33 pm
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Bin Laden was bringing money from Saudi circles to distribute to the Arab Afghans: he was a bag carrier and operator of training camps for jihad-vacationing Saudi youth, not a fighter or military leader.

Ah, fair, how foolish of me, clearly a cuddly lamb...

Of the kind so favoured by the Saudi establishment no doubt


 
Posted : 15/08/2021 8:40 pm
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Its completely hairsplitting and rewriting history to claim that the west did not fund and train him and a lot more.

without western support for the Mujaheddin they would not exist in the same way now

^^^ This and the entire Islamic world.

Because Soviet Union was in the process of controlling the region but US intervened to destablise their control by supporting the warlords/mujaheddin/whatever etc (Was Biden the advisor at that time?)


 
Posted : 15/08/2021 8:40 pm
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Can’t see many will be willing to continue to contribute this to a Taliban led “government”. A humanitarian disaster in waiting and not just because of the barbaric practices of the Taliban. Saudi has been mentioned and let’s face it their brutal regime is “Sharia” based and is not much different from the Taliban’s

Well if there's not much difference, the West deals with Saudi so why not the Taliban?


 
Posted : 15/08/2021 9:53 pm
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I'm guessing the Taliban are run by arsehole "alpha males"with guns and lots of attitude. Will there be bloodshed while they work out who will be the new emperor?


 
Posted : 15/08/2021 10:01 pm
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Well if there’s not much difference, the West deals with Saudi so why not the Taliban?

... because Taliban has the mountain to shelter them. They can dictate the terms and they have their big bros behind them. Saudi is just desert flat land near to the sea and expose to invasion.

West was doing well by chipping away their strength until the withdrawal.

I’m guessing the Taliban are run by arsehole “alpha males”with guns and lots of attitude. Will there be bloodshed while they work out who will be the new emperor?

No bloodshed as they have already worked out their hierarchy and they are very united. Bloodshed more towards the warlords who they will divide and conquer. I give them 3 years to solidify their strength before something happen in the west. I bet they already have cells established in the west only waiting for the right moment.


 
Posted : 15/08/2021 10:08 pm
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the West deals with Saudi so why not the Taliban

Saudi has oil and buys a lot of guns


 
Posted : 15/08/2021 10:13 pm
 pk13
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The flight tracker just shows globe masters after one another. looks like operations slash and burn is well under way.

Really feel for anyone who has been seen to have helped the western movement. The Taliban will have been spying for years.
Also looks like they have been on a media training course doing interviews on the radio.
I see a blanket ban on reporters and an internet black out comming followed by revenge. the banks have ran out of cash already so I guess that's been nicked by the leaving government.


 
Posted : 15/08/2021 10:15 pm
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jivehoneyjive

Holy shit! How bizarre that this name should reappear right now – makes you think…

Not a name I expected to see back on here. Not under that name anyway.


 
Posted : 15/08/2021 10:17 pm
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Really feel for anyone who has been seen to have helped the western movement. The Taliban will have been spying for years.

They have to. They have learned the lesson of Bin Laden and will not let that happen again.

Also looks like they have been on a media training course doing interviews on the radio.

They are brilliant at that.
Very good at sweet talking as they have been trained for thousands of years in trade to survive.
Very intelligent people so underestimate them at your peril as they can learn very fast. Just because they don't speak English etc does not mean they are inferior.

I was not surprised at all with the Taliban strategy of encircling Afghanistan. Doesn't take a genius to see the way they cut out the supply or escape routes but it is the speed at which it happened.


 
Posted : 15/08/2021 10:22 pm
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Complete moral vacuum of leadership
https://twitter.com/Charlie533080/status/1426787567073177602


 
Posted : 15/08/2021 10:40 pm
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Complete moral vacuum of leadership> https://twitter.com/Charlie533080/status/1426787567073177602

These are the people (assuming legit and not spy etc) that should be given asylum and not those that crossed the channel with boats. Those people are already safe the moment they stepped on EU soil, that's the different. The threat to those who worked for the West is real. They will be hunted down like an animal and probably their entire family will be treated like slaves.


 
Posted : 15/08/2021 10:44 pm
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… because Taliban has the mountain to shelter them. They can dictate the terms and they have their big bros behind them. Saudi is just desert flat land near to the sea and expose to invasion.

I think you are misunderstanding what I meant by "deal with". I was talking about "doing business with".


 
Posted : 15/08/2021 11:03 pm
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I think you are misunderstanding what I meant by “deal with”. I was talking about “doing business with”.

Firstly, the West is much more accommodating to Saudi because of the "black gold".
Secondly, Saudi (Kingdom) would rather have peace than to deal with the hassle. Even if they wish to fight they have nowhere to hide.
Hence, both are willing parties to enjoy whatever is there.

The Taliban on the other hand cannot be negotiated with. What they want the world will not or cannot give. i.e. what is there to negotiate when they only accept and dictates their own terms? It's like negotiating with yourself looking at the mirror. Besides, what is there for them to loose? Nothing, and they are not afraid of the West with the mountain behind them.


 
Posted : 15/08/2021 11:15 pm
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<ArmChairGeneralMode>
Right back at the arse end of 2001 it was clear the ones with the most to gain and most to therefore loose were women. The Coalition forces should have moved to make the entire native security and military structures run, armed and populated by women, then treated any encountered armed, non coalition males as an active enemy combatant and killed them.
</ArmChairGeneralMode>

Can see this not being popular but, like you (and your wife/mother/daughter), I'm safe behind a keyboard.


 
Posted : 16/08/2021 8:01 am
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Two questions and a bit of context that the powers that be choose to keep quiet.

1. Has any external 'developed' country ever succeeded in imposing any form of government on Afghanistan long-term?

2. How many 'puppet' governments put in place by 'developed' countries have stayed in power for any length of time after the threat of massive military force has been removed?

Also, look at Afghanistan before 1979. Sure, I'll bet there were very conservative attitudes in the sticks beyond the cities, but this video of Afghanistan in the 60s doesn't look like the 'intractable fundamentalist hell hole' that many would like to write it off as.


 
Posted : 16/08/2021 8:16 am
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Sure, I’ll bet there were very conservative attitudes in the sticks beyond the cities, but this video of Afghanistan in the 60s doesn’t look like the ‘intractable fundamentalist hell hole’ that many would like to write it off as.

Yes, but Lebanon, Vietnam, etc. were the same. You have a wealthy, internationalized elite living in the cities, but the majority of the population are living in poor rural areas. Their loyalties will be primarily to their village or region, not to a nation-state, definitely not to a bunch of western-educated bureaucrats living in the capital city. Westerners think of the Vietnam War and Korean war in terms of a capitalist-socialist struggle. For the locals, it was a civil war and the communist side could portray itself as nationalists fighting to expel the foreigners. Same in Afghanistan, the Taliban now have legitimacy as the guys who expelled the infidels who sent drones to murder innocent civilians at weddings, etc.


 
Posted : 16/08/2021 8:28 am
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Also, look at Afghanistan before 1979.

"Bitter Lake" is an interesting watch, if you've not seen it.


 
Posted : 16/08/2021 8:32 am
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It wasn't the case of not wanting to 'westernise' but rather the trillions were spend on military oppression rather than infrastructure, housing, hospitals, schools, etc.
NB always interesting to spot new names appearing when these sort of discussions occur on STW.


 
Posted : 16/08/2021 8:53 am
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NB always interesting to spot new names appearing when these sort of discussions occur on STW.

You know what STW stands for, right? 🙂


 
Posted : 16/08/2021 9:05 am
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the trillions were spend on military oppression rather than infrastructure, housing, hospitals, schools, etc.

There was a lot of money provided for infrastructure, etc., but you can't build that without getting local officials involved. The entire bureaucracy is corrupt and salaries don't get paid so money for infrastructure gets siphoned off. Unless you put armed guards on every site, equipment just gets stolen. If the guards don't get paid, they'll just steal the stuff themselves and sell it to the Taliban, who had money from growing opium. Military aid is probably much easier to account for because a lot of it is just provided as equipment, and it's a lot easier to do an audit of a military base than tour construction sites in remote areas.


 
Posted : 16/08/2021 9:06 am
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but rather the trillions were spend on military oppression rather than infrastructure, housing, hospitals, schools, etc.

The money pouring into Afghanistan has been a massive "grift" for many US corporations since the invasion. there's plenty of folk who've made a fortune off the backs of people "far far away in another country". Not much, if any, of it stayed in Afghanistan


 
Posted : 16/08/2021 9:12 am
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