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Finally done in Afghanistan?


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On 4/18/2024 at 10:36 PM, Prosuper said:

Today watching Tim Pool he informed his audience that You Tube has deleted some of his shows for violating You Tube rules. Who owns You Tube , Google does, what are the two biggest share holders of Google, Vanguard and Blackrock. In fact look at every major media corporation who are the two largest shareholders, the same. They almost have controlling interest in every Fortune 500 corporation. It will be just like 2016 again with alternate media types getting deplatformed for fact checking the mainstream media. Don't even get me started on the on the military industrial complex and who has majority interest.  

https://www.wired.com/story/right-wing-influencer-network-tenet-media-allegedly-spread-russian-disinformation/

a man and a woman are standing next to each other and talking .

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On 8/12/2024 at 1:59 PM, polcat said:

I'll second your recommendation on this book. I just finished the read and am not surprised, especially while I was in Kuwait during the NEO. How we let our Afghani comrades behind and the overall sh1tshow of the withdrawal is an understatement of the century.

I have a controversial take on this, so I’ll just ask: did we ever have an obligation to evacuate them?  Did they have an obligation to fight for their own country?  Why did anyone have the impression we would take them to the US if they failed to secure their own country?

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2 hours ago, tac airlifter said:

I have a controversial take on this, so I’ll just ask: did we ever have an obligation to evacuate them?  Did they have an obligation to fight for their own country?  Why did anyone have the impression we would take them to the US if they failed to secure their own country?

While I agree with the overall premise, these people volunteered to help us on the promise we would see the war through (like with Japan and Germany). We didn't. 

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7 hours ago, tac airlifter said:

I have a controversial take on this, so I’ll just ask: did we ever have an obligation to evacuate them?  Did they have an obligation to fight for their own country?  Why did anyone have the impression we would take them to the US if they failed to secure their own country?

No, Yes of course, not sure 

I know this, the whole world watched us F that situation away. If you were an emergent regional power and you saw that, how much faith would you have in the United States?

It’s no wonder you are seeing the rise of coalitions like BRICS. We have become a laughing stock. 
 

 

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11 hours ago, tac airlifter said:
I have a controversial take on this, so I’ll just ask: did we ever have an obligation to evacuate them?  Did they have an obligation to fight for their own country?  Why did anyone have the impression we would take them to the US if they failed to secure their own country?


The Afghans that the U.S. intended to evacuate were those that held U.S. passports or had a Special Immigrant Visa (SIV), both of which were issued to Afghans that had provided assistance to the U.S. for a number of years at significant personal risk to them and their families. These are people that we definitely had an obligation to evacuate, hell we gave them the documents to come to the U.S.

Of course, that all fell apart when the entire city of Kabul rushed to HKIA. Of the tens of thousands that were NEO’d from Afghanistan, only a portion of that population was the target group of evacuees. Many had no documentation whatsoever (best case had an Afghan passport). We definitely left U.S. passport holders and SIVs behind, while others got a lucky ride out.

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9 hours ago, Lord Ratner said:

While I agree with the overall premise, these people volunteered to help us on the promise we would see the war through (like with Japan and Germany). We didn't. 

They had an obligation to fight, and they didn't.  There were certainly individual acts of valor and individual members who were invested (one dude was shot down, disguised himself as taliban and walked 90 miles back HKIA and continued fighting; he's now a sensor operator for a firefighting company in Montana).  But in aggregate, GIRoA and the ANA/AAF were not good faith partners. And not just in some ethereal policy level strategic sense, I mean at the member level they'd use A29s to bring honey back from their bee farms in Fayzabad instead of sitting alert for TICs.  And when the city was invaded they left their families to the fates, stole planes and fled.  Can you imagine doing something so cowardly yourself?  Guessing you'd struggle to even comprehend that level of douchebaggary.

34 minutes ago, Dapper Dan Man said:


The Afghans that the U.S. intended to evacuate were those that held U.S. passports or had a Special Immigrant Visa (SIV), both of which were issued to Afghans that had provided assistance to the U.S. for a number of years at significant personal risk to them and their families. These are people that we definitely had an obligation to evacuate, hell we gave them the documents to come to the U.S.

Of course, that all fell apart when the entire city of Kabul rushed to HKIA. Of the tens of thousands that were NEO’d from
Afghanistan, only a portion of that population was the target group of evacuees. Many had no documentation whatsoever (best case had an Afghan passport). We definitely left U.S. passport holders and SIVs behind, while others got a lucky ride out.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

I typed a long response and realized I remain to angry about the situation to have a constructive discussion. Suffice to say 1- 3% of people evacuated meet your above criteria; the vast majority were criminals (purposefully bussed from prisons by the Taliban to flood the airfield), AWOL military members, government bureaucrats, and randoms.  Imagine watching 50 commandos throw down their weapons and run from 3 guys in a truck and I'm not allowed to shoot the truck... WTF.  Same thing happened in Mosul when ISIS invaded in 2014 (large & well equipped Iraqi army threw away weapons and ran from a minimal enemy force) although this one was more dramatic and at scale.  I feel nothing but contempt for those people, and certainly no obligation to bring them CONUS.
 

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3 hours ago, tac airlifter said:

  I feel nothing but contempt for those people, and certainly no obligation to bring them CONUS.
 

Could you imagine if we had 80,000 Afghans who fought the Taliban as hard as they fought to get a ride out of Kabul? We'd have won the war in 2005.

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22 hours ago, tac airlifter said:

I have a controversial take on this, so I’ll just ask: did we ever have an obligation to evacuate them?  Did they have an obligation to fight for their own country?  Why did anyone have the impression we would take them to the US if they failed to secure their own country?

If you didn't read the book that was referenced then your take makes sense. It describes specific AFGAN SOF members and interpreters that saved american lives that the US granted SIVs to, groups of young women, as well as US citizens.

Yes, I think we have/had an obligation to help those specific individuals. They were abandoned by their government and their MIL leadership, and by all accounts resisted to their utmost.

How we porked away not prioritizing their evacuation first, or only their evacuation is mind boggling. I definitely agree the knee pad wearers deciding who was allowed on our jets went full retard.

 

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Anybody see the Taliban parade at Bagram the other day? Why oh why we didn't drop a present on the reviewing stand is beyond me. The official headline would be "Car Bomb Detonates Near Taliban Leadership During Parade" Just to remind them what can happen.

 

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4 hours ago, fire4effect said:

Anybody see the Taliban parade at Bagram the other day? Why oh why we didn't drop a present on the reviewing stand is beyond me. The official headline would be "Car Bomb Detonates Near Taliban Leadership During Parade" Just to remind them what can happen.

 

My favorite video is the Taliban Blackhawk crashing.    They had that beast flying for a few months until Allah pulled it into the dirt.   

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2 hours ago, DirkDiggler said:

 

 

Enjoyed the read and I hope this dude finds his peace.  I really don't struggle to find meaning for my trips to Afghanistan (all post 2010), it can be summed up rather simply...a complete waste of my time away from family.  Thankfully I'm at peace with that.  Sadly, I think the lessons will be lost in time and the bureaucracy that is our government/military.  If that weren't true, we wouldn't have made the same mistakes as we did in Vietnam.  

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3 hours ago, SocialD said:

 

 

Enjoyed the read and I hope this dude finds his peace.  I really don't struggle to find meaning for my trips to Afghanistan (all post 2010), it can be summed up rather simply...a complete waste of my time away from family.  Thankfully I'm at peace with that.  Sadly, I think the lessons will be lost in time and the bureaucracy that is our government/military.  If that weren't true, we wouldn't have made the same mistakes as we did in Vietnam.  

I had a family member (actually two) who was a Viet Nam Veteran. When I was young, I never really comprehended his bitterness to the political establishment for pissing away the mission there. After Aug 2021 I had a much better understanding of his point of view.

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7 hours ago, SocialD said:

 

Enjoyed the read and I hope this dude finds his peace.  I really don't struggle to find meaning for my trips to Afghanistan (all post 2010), it can be summed up rather simply...a complete waste of my time away from family.  Thankfully I'm at peace with that. 

I'm on the same boat regarding that point. I never had a problem negotiating that conclusion either, but I have nothing but empathy for those who struggle with what essentially is a public loss of their religion. I lost my OTS class leader to green-on-blue over there. Complete waste of potential; a solid human being and family man at the hands of a distrungled and corrupt local. A true believer my friend was, and a bona fide hero in my eyes. Such Heroism wasted on an unreedemable place, and unreedemable people. I got too many stories of personal corruption and cowardice from that so called allied force, even stateside. Fuck. That. Place. 

In the macro, I never bought into any of that shit. Our self-defense Air Power objectives in that shithole were largely completed by 2003 from where I saw it as a civilian college student. That was a full 3 years before I would even see the inside of a military building. So 9/11 was never a draw for me. Lord knows I disagreed with the second invasion of Iraq from the jump, as I also disagreed with the criminal decision to disband the Iraqi Army (may Paul bremer and his blood-soaked hands burn in hell.... a lackey of Kissinger, this is my shocked face).

Full circle now during my time in, we get tasked to bomb the predictable offspring of that decision 10 years later in Syria, and I'm supposed to put my brain on pause and grab some pom poms? Nah I'm good. It was a waste when my friend Nylander lost his life, and it was still a waste in the Levant as we wrecked strategic heavy bombardment assets over turkey shoot medals with what could have been accomplished with surplus Yak-52s and recreational AR rifles a la Texas hog hunts. Digressing.

In due credit to the Service, it did afford me the opportunity (via ARC) to focus on a role I not only could tolerate for 14+ years, but personally thrive in. I was always an aviatior purist at heart. I've never been fazed by the "flying for the sake of flying" supposed aspersion it's meant to imply, usually uttered by cOmBaT veT true scots fallacy merchants. I've legit enjoyed the amount of upside down flying the service has afforded me as a career instructor. Much bigger sense of personal accomplishment, in what conservatively is circa 500+ individual pilots and still counting. My time in the CAF left me rather unfulfilled by comparison, though that was a combination of poor career timing and luck (BRAC 05 no fighter soup fo you, TAMI-21, then PRP/PACAF babysitter bitch while the bones got all the turkey shoots).

At any rate, my decades spent building something of personal import to me in the training command is a legacy that will outlive both me, as well as all of Uncle sammy's bullshit wars... and I'm here for it. We all have our rationalizations, I won't apologize for mine.

My username checks. Now FUPM. 😄 

 

Edited by hindsight2020
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