User Tag List

Page 1 of 10 123 ... LastLast
Results 1 to 10 of 92
  1. #1
    Account Disabled

    Thumbs up Is Iraq a distraction from the war on terror?

    The Next Stop
    Is Iraq a distraction from the war on terror? No, say Afghanistan's ambassador and the Joint Chiefs chairman.

    BY BRENDAN MINITER
    Tuesday, January 16, 2007 12:01 a.m. EST

    Following President Bush's speech last week, Afghanistan's ambassador to the United Nations allowed himself this thought: Everything the president proposes doing in Iraq would also be welcome in Afghanistan.

    For more than five years the U.S. has waged war in that landlocked, mountainous country. And at least since the liberation of Iraq, the White House has faced criticism that it is distracted from the war on terror in the country that hosted Osama bin Laden when he planned the 9/11 terrorist attacks. The president is facing a fresh round of such attacks now that he is "surging" American troops in Iraq in an effort to stabilize Baghdad. And in the process he's watching as his case for using democracy as a weapon against terrorism is swept away.

    Zahir Tanin, Afghanistan's ambassador in New York, isn't one of those critics. He stopped by The Wall Street Journal's offices Thursday and, in offering his thoughts on the current situation in his country, ended up presenting a counterargument to those who would discount the importance of establishing legitimate democratic governments as bulwarks against terrorism. The Afghanistan of his youth, he said, looked nothing like the chaotic nation that the world saw after the fall of the Taliban. Kabul, where he was born, was once a "cosmopolitan city," he said. But decades of war, including years of Soviet domination, left the country in tatters and ripe for terrorists and the Taliban to assert their supremacy. By 2001 Afghanistan had become "a disrupted state."

    His choice of words is instructive. In the war on terror the U.S. is facing an enemy that's not moored to a civilian population and doesn't feel bound by international conventions. But it is an enemy with territorial ambitions and intentions of disrupting the normal operations of civil society. Mr. Tanin, who was living in London and working for the BBC when the Taliban fell, sees progress made over the past five years and isn't now one of the president's critics. Elections have been held, roads have been built linking some of the larger cities, a small national military is taking shape, and a commercial economy, though still tiny, is up and running. All are buffers against the Taliban's return and a strong argument against the voices who've said for years that democracy can't be "imposed."




    But has the U.S., by being in Iraq, shortchanged Afghanistan and handed the Taliban an opportunity to re-emerge?


    Here we can turn to Gen. Peter Pace, chairman of the joint chiefs of staff, who was also in New York late last week. At an event sponsored by the Oxonian Society, Gen. Pace offered a few facts to rebut the claim that the administration is distracted. Approximately 80% of Afghans are illiterate, he said, suggesting that rebuilding the country will require building a viable public education system just as much as launching military offensives.

    But combat operations are far from being wrapped up. He noted that there are now two types of Taliban operating in the country. The first is the faction led by Mullah Omar, which would like to retake control of the country. The second, which the general calls "the small-t taliban," is really a bunch of drug lords trying to protect their turf. Neither group is good for the country. But, Gen. Pace said, even as the illicit heroin trade remains a significant portion of the economy--at $2 billion a year--it hasn't grown in recent years, even as the overall economy has.

    Come spring, he said, there will be a military offensive. The question is this: "Will it be ours or theirs?" He wouldn't say precisely what the U.S. is planning once the winter snows begin to recede. But it's clear by raising the question that he's watching what's happening on the ground there even as the U.S. surges in Iraq. The general was, however, willing to draw a direct parallel between the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. If the U.S. is pushed out of Iraq, he said, the next stop for al Qaeda and other insurgents is Afghanistan. If the U.S. is pushed out of Afghanistan, he said to a hushed room in New York on Friday, the next stop is here.

    Mr. Miniter is assistant editor of OpinionJournal.com. His column appears Tuesdays.


    "Used with permission from OpinionJournal.com, a web site from
    Dow Jones & Company, Inc."

  2. #2
    Account Disabled

    Re: Is Iraq a distraction from the war on terror?

    Yes. Yes it is.. A pointless, bloody and disastrous distraction

  3. #3
    Account Disabled

    Re: Is Iraq a distraction from the war on terror?

    I concur, Roach.

  4. #4
    Account Disabled

    Re: Is Iraq a distraction from the war on terror?

    Yes, a horrible distraction with an unbelievably bloody and sad result.

  5. #5
    Account Disabled

    Re: Is Iraq a distraction from the war on terror?

    Truth, I don't think anyone read your article.

  6. #6
    Account Disabled

    Re: Is Iraq a distraction from the war on terror?

    I read it. I know the Ambassador quoted in the article, where he's from, and where his family is from. It's not hard to find out the motivations behind certain comments.

  7. #7
    Account Disabled

    Wink Re: Is Iraq a distraction from the war on terror?

    Quote Originally Posted by freckles View Post
    Truth, I don't think anyone read your article.
    Freckles, and even if they had, do you think there is any comprehension beyond the petty hatred of a President they think stole an election?

    Nah. But hey, no one ever accused leftists of having OPEN minds right?

  8. #8
    Account Disabled

    Wink Re: Is Iraq a distraction from the war on terror?

    Quote Originally Posted by rajlimosiba View Post
    I read it. I know the Ambassador quoted in the article, where he's from, and where his family is from. It's not hard to find out the motivations behind certain comments.
    A fascinating study in denial.

    We will examine the motivations behind the Ambassador's and George Bush's desire to promote Democracy in Iraq, to the extent we make wild speculations, yet ignore the motivations of the desperate thugs who perpetrate all the killings.

    Let's not blame the killers, let us blame America for the deaths. Does anyone see how profoundly retarded that logic is?

    Telling.

  9. #9
    Account Disabled

    Re: Is Iraq a distraction from the war on terror?

    Who is ignoring the thugs? Is there no way for you to see all sides of an issue rather than your own metered understanding? You're the only one who brought up Bush, no one else did. The majority of Americans abhor this war now, which means a mix of left and right and center and republican and democrat. It seems most people in the country have been able to see this for what it is rather than couch it in some disgusting, manipulative rhetoric like yours.

  10. #10
    Account Disabled

    Re: Is Iraq a distraction from the war on terror?

    Quote Originally Posted by Truth Detector View Post
    Freckles, and even if they had, do you think there is any comprehension beyond the petty hatred of a President they think stole an election?

    Nah. But hey, no one ever accused leftists of having OPEN minds right?
    Is it just me, or does this guy sound a lot like RIGHTY? I wonder if he is?


 
Page 1 of 10 123 ... LastLast

Similar Threads

  1. The Distraction Has Worked
    By freethinkr in forum General Political Discussion
    Replies: 8
    Last Post: 11th October 2008, 10:56 AM
  2. Funny terror interview in Iraq
    By Coolio in forum The Lounge
    Replies: 2
    Last Post: 26th December 2007, 12:41 PM
  3. Your plan for Iraq and the war on terror
    By kmiller1610 in forum General Political Discussion
    Replies: 63
    Last Post: 25th June 2007, 01:18 PM
  4. Major policy speeches by Bush on the war on terror and Iraq
    By kmiller1610 in forum General Political Discussion
    Replies: 37
    Last Post: 28th May 2007, 01:42 PM
  5. Iraq is a front for the war on terror.
    By RonaldReaganRocks in forum General Political Discussion
    Replies: 29
    Last Post: 17th October 2006, 10:42 AM

Bookmarks

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •  

Search Engine Friendly URLs by vBSEO 3.5.2