tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3957366923512814537.post627534673037912496..comments2023-10-26T02:05:15.270-07:00Comments on Offcenter with Ehkzu: It's not a clash of civilizationsUnknownnoreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3957366923512814537.post-19608702876775719642009-12-07T11:31:38.856-08:002009-12-07T11:31:38.856-08:00The hardest decisions to make are the ones where e...The hardest decisions to make are the ones where every alternative is awful.<br /><br />I wonder whether the President disagrees with you? He may well agree, but believe that the path he's chosen is the least worst way to keep us safe. <br /><br />One problem you didn't address is how well-financed the Taliban is. They pay foot soldiers twice what the government pays soldiers. <br /><br />That money comes from drugs. If America and Europe legalized opiates it would cut off Taliban financing at the knees. <br /><br />Just a thought....Ehkzuhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17090000685352164879noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3957366923512814537.post-9180530149430320952009-12-07T10:49:18.883-08:002009-12-07T10:49:18.883-08:00Ehkzu,
Two responses came to mind, so I'll go...Ehkzu,<br /><br />Two responses came to mind, so I'll go ahead a include both:<br /><br />1)<br /><br />Well put. However, I'd venture to suggest these civilization/tribal clashes (or should I rather call it an 'issue', or perhaps a 'challenge?') are simply a by-product of the festering disaster-of-a-conflict that Afghanistan has turned into. The way I see it, the dilemma the US has found itself in with Afghanistan (or Iraq?) has certainly become increasingly wretched. The sad truth is that the main goal/objective of our role in Afghanistan is clouded.<br /><br />How so? <br /><br />It's clouded in the sense that our goals/objective shifts to-and-fro to the point that most people (columnists and politicians alike) can't really place a finger on what they want to accomplish there. Furthermore, the appropriate means to accomplish whatever shifting objective we may have there is constantly being second-guessed to the point that decisive action is only possible in only the smallest of operational spheres. This leaves the larger, ultimate goal (which has quite possibly suffered another 're-evaluation') festering.<br /><br />Sometimes I feel that the moment a national consensus on a salient, collective goal is on the brink of being adopted, yet another crises derails our train of thought. These crises are often in the form of internal military problems (ex: Abu Ghraib) or some other public hysteria (ex: controversy over the media's coverage of returning caskets). At this point, a shouting match ensues. If this happens to take place during a political campaign, this effect is even more pronounced.<br /><br />The result?<br /><br />If we had something moving in the right direction, it's fixed until it's broke. <br /><br />I'd venture to say that there quite possibly could be a decisive solution out there (that someone at the Pentagon/White House has cooked up), but it will likely fail.<br /><br />2)<br /><br />'Nation-building' would be daunting even if we had an easy culture to work with. To think that we can change the hearts and minds of a people that are determined, ignorant, very capable of resistance, or worse (some horrible combination of all three) is laughable. The Afghans are not exactly willing or able to fix there current problems. Nor are they willing or able to accept our help. Throw in the complexity that Pakistan tends to add, and we have a recipe for a steaming pile of failure. Has there ever been any other country or civilization that has been able to nation-build successfully? Let me re-phrase that: Has there been any other country or civilization that has been able to nation-build without annihilating the existing culture first?Seanhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/07644544726160365344noreply@blogger.com