• @nachobel@lemmy.world
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    2211 year ago

    Remember when the Afghan people had a phenomenally well equipped and well trained army, and then they just gave up inside a week because things were “hard”?

    Like if you don’t give a shit…no one is going to give a harder shit about you than you will.

    • donuts
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      1001 year ago

      Yeah man, I feel sorry for the people who will have to live under the fucking Taliban, but we’ve spent way too much time, money and blood on Afghanistan already.

      We shouldn’t have been there in the first place, but for them to just instantly roll over to the Taliban… Just compare it to Ukraine, where they are fighting for their lives and freedom against a much more powerful enemy.

      It’s long past time for Afghanistan to deal with their own problems.

      • Roboticide
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        1 year ago

        Yeah, like what do they expect? Another foreign military intervention?

        That will not happen again for decades at best. Longer if all the developed nations really learn from America’s mistake this time.

        Sure, we can sanction them, but any aid just gets intercepted, so that’s out. It sucks so many Afghans are suffering under the system, but it’s the system they let happen. Did they want to be an occupied country forever? Was this a fight America was expected to wage indefinitely? Twenty years was already too long.

      • @Microw@lemm.ee
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        411 year ago

        They should have trained the Afghani women who have an actual reason to fight against the Taliban, instead of the lazy men who instantly capitulated.

        • vanontom
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          181 year ago

          I never thought about this at the time. It was all just shocking and frankly pathetic. Didn’t realize the men had the least at stake, while women had the most, but were not allowed to join the fight. Many men probably didn’t care or even resented the “changes”. (Women’s rights. Sounds familiar. MAGA?) Unwilling to put up any kind of fight for that kind of future for their partners and daughters.

          I wonder what most Afghan women think of these men now. And if joining the military was ever a realistic possibility, and could have changed the result.

      • @postmateDumbass@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Tbf Afghanistan defeated a much stronger Russia back in the 80s.

        With less help than Ukraine gets.

        Edit: so the downvotes are just ignorant of history or are they trying to rewrite it to suit their own agendas? Regardless, not a good sign for the future.

      • DONTBANTHISACCOUNT
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        1 year ago

        Lol 😂😆

        it’s like; imagine if more than half your military 🪖 had to leave? Then your president ran away…

        the guys who occupied and couldn’t bring a full democracy and hold a full democracy ( because they’re a flawed democracy themselves) just all up and left. And the folks who are there are outnumbered / have barely any experience compared to taliban in combat. knowing that they’d be out of supplies or maintenance quickly/ ETC…

        Why 😮 wouldn’t they just give up when knowing that they’d be totally lit?

        smh

    • @Kinglink@lemmy.world
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      501 year ago

      I wonder if it was “hard” or “I want the Taliban to take over.” There’s probably a decent amount of people in that area that can fundamentally agree with the Taliban. it’s a religious and oppression group. If you’re ideologically aligned with the Taliban, and male, you’re probably either as good or better of under them.

      Not saying this is everything but I imagine there’s at least some people who are ok with the new government, mostly because they don’t care about others over their own self.

    • livus
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      291 year ago

      First of all, none of these women were in that army so painting this as the consequences of their actions seems a bit dishonest.

      Second, I remember when they were alleged to have a phenomenal army but it turned out most of that was on paper not real.

      The facade crumbled.

      • @ballogh@lemm.ee
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        11 year ago

        none of these women were in that army so painting this as the consequences of their actions seems a bit dishonest.

        What makes you think that these women who choose their culture as dignity would oppose their rulers which they gained power from it?

        • livus
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          21 year ago

          I’m sorry but I don’t understand this question, could you maybe rephrase it or explain your reasoning? I don’t think these women have “gained power” it seems like the opposite.

          First woman quoted in the article (a refugee):

          “I had a beautiful house and a job that I loved. I lived with my family, I had friends and I was pregnant. But I lost my baby, I fled my country without my husband and now I live here alone. I’m safe, but do you think I’m happy, do you think I can sleep at night knowing my family’s situation in Afghanistan?”

      • @givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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        381 year ago

        Well, that sounds like propaganda videos where they had already surrendered and the taliban wanted to make it seem like all it would take was one person to make people volunteer…

        But, you’re also talking about all the equipment that was expensive but neither side had the knowledge or equipment to maintain, right?

          • @givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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            261 year ago

            Do you have more info about what happened then?

            About why the Taliban took over so quickly?

            Yeah, Afghanistan isn’t a normal country. It’s a loose collection of tribes that have been pitted against each other for centuries. There’s no unity, they’ve never really had a federal government just other countries that used militaries to try and force compliance from all the tribal leaders.

            So when America left with like 2 weeks notice, everyone just went back to their tribes. The “Afghan Army” had better equipment, but it was equipment they just couldn’t maintain. After a couple weeks of fighting it would have all broken down and they’d have ran out of ammo. Meanwhile the Taliban had supply lines and decades of experience fighting with their equipment.

            The Taliban is just a coalition of the most extreme tribes. One that was trained in gurellia warfare by America and is actually united in their religious extremism.

            • @SocialMediaRefugee@lemmy.world
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              1 year ago

              Yup. One of the first things we did in the invasion of Afghanistan was ally with the northern tribes. The Taliban mainly represent one ethnic group and constantly engaged in ethnic cleansing of Shia, other tribes, and various minorities.

              They have had millennia of engaging in guerilla warfare, you could probably go back to the days of Alexander the Great.

    • TheRazorX
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      31 year ago

      Remember when the Afghan people had a phenomenally well equipped and well trained army, and then they just gave up inside a week because things were “hard”?

      You didn’t read the Afghanistan Papers did you?

  • @iyaerP@lemmy.world
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    1011 year ago

    I’d have more sympathy for the people of Afghanistan if they had actually fought back against the Taliban.

    People say that America lost in Afghanistan, but we were basically the only thing propping up democracy. The people themselves made no effort.

      • @AstridWipenaugh@lemmy.world
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        71 year ago

        Nah, they didn’t make an effort. The Taliban was welcomed when they rolled in. The US military expected there would be resistance, but the Taliban had pretty much captured everything before we were even gone.

    • @SocialMediaRefugee@lemmy.world
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      101 year ago

      Outside of Kabul it seemed the average rural person felt that they had to choose between a temporary US occupation supporting an uninterested government vs the Taliban who were all around them on a daily basis and would take over the second the US left. They did the safe thing and sided with the Taliban.

  • @pixelscience@lemm.ee
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    811 year ago

    At some point, the people of Afghanistan should be able to take control of their own country. How can a vast majority of the people sit there and let a tiny percentage dictate the lives and rules for everyone? Kick the Taliban out of your country.

    • @mister_monster@monero.town
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      1 year ago

      The problem is that the Taliban have popular support. The media don’t want to report it, but this is a society where public life has always been under the purview of men, it’s a largely Muslim country, very rural, and the alternative power centers there are chock full of child molesters and corrupt individuals. The Taliban, despite their strong ideological position, has a lot going for them. They’re not taking bribes to sell out their values. They’re capable of maintaining stability. Even if people disagree with some or other things about them, theyre better than the alternatives. Fact is, they’re in power there because they’re the only organization capable of holding power there.

      • @givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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        91 year ago

        it’s a largely Muslim country

        Pretty much all the Abrahmic religions do this shit when they’re in power…

        I wouldn’t have pointed it out, because it’s kind of like saying the sky is blue. But from the rest of your comment it seems like you legitimately think it’s just Muslims., And not that entire religious family

        • @Cleverdawny@lemm.ee
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          171 year ago

          It’s not just Muslims that are fundamentalist extremists. But of every major religion, Islam has the highest rate of that kind of extremism. There are plenty of Christian countries which are socially progressive and endorse modern sensibilities. No Muslim countries are.

          I have a dear friend of mine who is a religious minority in Egypt (she’s a Copt). The paranoia that she and her parents have when interacting with Muslims is saddening, because of how it’s been justified. Her church has lost several members to religious violence, and she’s lived through a suicide bombing which happened at that church and targeted Christians.

          I’m not saying there aren’t Christian extremists. There are. But the Muslim extremist problem is an order of magnitude larger within that faith.

          Judge individual Muslims for their own beliefs. But there is no Christian version of the Taliban state or ISIS. And Islam is to blame for the actions of its extremist adherents writ large. It desperately needs a religious reformation, but instead, the Saudis are still chopping the heads off of people who offend their religious police.

          • @givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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            -81 year ago

            It’s not just Muslims that are fundamentalist extremists. But of every major religion, Islam has the highest rate of that kind of extremism

            Not really…

            There’s over 1.7 billion Muslims in the world, that’s a lot of people.

            But there is no Christian version of the Taliban state or ISIS

            So basically you’re saying we can just ignore all the countries where they’re trying to do it, just ignore them till their in power?

            Nah, I don’t see how that helps anyone except Christian extremists.

            • @Cleverdawny@lemm.ee
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              71 year ago

              I’m not saying we should ignore anything. I’m saying we shouldn’t ignore the extremely high rate of extremism within Islam.

              But if you want to prove me wrong, point to a single Muslim country where apostasy and homosexuality are socially accepted

              • @givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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                1 year ago

                I’m saying we shouldn’t ignore the extremely high rate of extremism within Islam.

                And I’m saying you don’t seem to understand how large a number 1.7 billion is…

                But if you want to prove me wrong, point to a single Muslim country where apostasy and homosexuality are socially accepted

                Lebanon

                Can you name a country where the Christian majority do that?

                They’re openly against LGBT because “the Bible says so” and they claim they have to follow it.

                The Bible also says if anyone even starts questioning if they should still be Christian, then they need to be executed to prevent the spread.

                So they might not say it, but they’re all about it, or just lying hypocrites who are making the personal choice to harass people who are LGBT.

                • @Cleverdawny@lemm.ee
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                  91 year ago

                  Lebanon isn’t a Muslim nation. It has a significant Muslim plurality. And homosexuality is de facto illegal there AND extremely socially unacceptable, with 85% of Lebanese people saying it should be “rejected by society.”

                  Give me a Muslim nation where homosexuality and apostasy are both legal and socially acceptable.

                • @Cleverdawny@lemm.ee
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                  21 year ago

                  Since you edited your post after I replied like a dirty little liar, here’s a second reply.

                  Can I name a Christian majority country where being gay is generally acceptable, being an apostate is generally acceptable, and both are legal? Yeah. Canada, the US, Australia, Spain, the UK, France, Germany, etc, etc, etc.

        • @teichflamme@lemm.ee
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          -41 year ago

          They really don’t. Israel is a Jewish country and women are allowed to go to school or university.

          There’s countless Christian countries and that shit happens nowhere.

          • @givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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            111 year ago

            You’re confusing a country where a majority of citizens are Christian with countries who are lead by Christian leaders…

            I can’t think of a single equivalent than the Vatican, and if you’re acting like that’s a great government…

            We probably dont agree on what makes a government good.

            • @teichflamme@lemm.ee
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              1 year ago

              The statement was that this happens with all abrahamitic religions in power.

              You’re confusing a country where a majority of citizens are Christian with countries who are lead by Christian leaders…

              I’m not, it’s just the closest to the stated premise.

              I can’t think of a single equivalent than the Vatican, and if you’re acting like that’s a great government…

              Same. But then I doesn’t make sense to make that statement in the first place about the other religions.

              Because there’s zero evidence to back it up.

      • DONTBANTHISACCOUNT
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        It reminds me of Iraq right before 9/11 happened… ye they had a piece of shit dictator Sadam; absolutely. But they wasn’t being bombed to smithereens. And in the mess of war in Iraq the ISIS were able to fuck shit up n grow , even growing into syria, Afghanistan n maybe other countries…

    • @chakan2@lemmy.world
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      361 year ago

      How can a vast majority of the people sit there and let a tiny percentage dictate the lives and rules for everyone?

      As an American looking at American policy right now…that’s ironic.

      • @sudo@lemmy.today
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        91 year ago

        Yeah but they’re extremists and terrorists who want to control all aspects of the media, stop women from having rights over their bodies and return to their place in society serving men, criminalize everything that goes against their religious beliefs and restrict voting and democracy to preserve their ‘values’, carry guns with them everywhere and fanatically praise their leaders.

        Err, there’s some differences somewhere I’m sure…

    • @GreenMario@lemm.ee
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      341 year ago

      No shit. The second we left they fell apart. No resistance.

      As far as I’m concerned we should only help those that help themselves, like Ukraine is doing. Afghanistan has always been Taliban simps. Those women know where their men sleep and have knives ffs.

        • @simplecyphers@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          Bro, you went so far that you actually became racist yourself. You literally said: “Do help themselves” == “white” “Don’t help themselves” == “not white”

          You are pushing the american stereotype for “lazy immigrants”

          Thats kinda cringe tbh.

            • @simplecyphers@lemmy.world
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              81 year ago

              Nah. Thats not racist. Stating that countries primarily populated by non-whites are somehow too weak or lazy to fight for themselves, however, is definitely pretty racist.

              • @aesthelete@lemmy.world
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                This particular country that we’re actually discussing was indeed too lazy to fight for itself and gave up within 2 weeks after decades of being occupied.

              • @rockSlayer@lemmy.world
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                -31 year ago

                Where did you see that? They were pointing out that the person they responded to made the very implication you’re accusing them of making.

                • @Historical_General@lemmy.world
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                  That user who suggested we ‘help’ is either malicious or ignorant. Because help doesn’t mean we release the reserves of money we’ve stolen from the Afghans. It means invade them again, whether she means it or not.

                  The best thing we can do now is let the Afghans be sovereign and no longer interfere (which won’t happen). You can expect nothing good socially from there, as the Americans helped the Taliban defeat local progressive and secular forces in the 70s. All we can hope for is for them to eventually stand up on their own two feet.

                  Anyone who whines about the plight of Afghan women is either doing propaganda or is misled. Afghan women have children too btw - children that are starving - have Biden release the reserves.

            • JasSmith
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              41 year ago

              blahaj

              Man that place really is terrible. They claim to support safety and inclusivity, but appear perfectly happy to berate, attack, and bully others, as long as their opinions are the bad opinions.

        • 👁️👄👁️
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          31 year ago

          What do you think the solution is? Indefinite US occupation? At that point wouldn’t you want America to just take them over?

        • @GreenMario@lemm.ee
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          21 year ago

          Has nothing to do with race. Ukraine didn’t bend over for Russia instead fucking their shit up day 1. Their president didn’t flee instead stayed and mocked the occupiers by showing off him and his crew were still in Kyiv.

          Afghanistan? We trained them for twenty years to stand up for themselves as a independent democratic nation and threw it away the second we left. What a fucking waste. They didn’t even have fucking OIL to take. Nor was Osama there, or ever was.

          If Afghanistan actually gave a fuck and tried but failed my opinion would be quite different. I’d be all “remember our fallen Afghan allies” o7 n shit.

          So yeah take your standard operation trolling elsewhere. I’ve seen this exact same talking point before it’s not original, think for yourself for a goddamn change*

        • DessertStorms
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          -41 year ago

          And somehow the person calling out racism is always dubbed the racist by those who refuse to acknowledge their own privilege, let alone their blatant bias. Fucking typical.

        • @rockSlayer@lemmy.world
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          -191 year ago

          That’s been the American motto since the country’s independence. Huge debates about helping the french aristocracy at the start of the reign of terror, but not even a single response to the former slaves in Haiti after their revolution.

          • @MindSkipperBro12@lemmy.world
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            We didn’t like the Reign of Terror because it was the Reign. Of. Terror. Also bribery with the XYZ Affair turned us against the murderous revolutionaries.

            We didn’t help the Haitians because of Southern Slavers were scared of that happening to them. If only it did…

            • DarkGamer
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              01 year ago

              Thank you for your nuanced view of history that takes continuity of causal events into account. Today I learned about the XYZ affair.

              • @MindSkipperBro12@lemmy.world
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                11 year ago

                No problem, it even points out within the first few paragraphs about how the French wanted to seize our ships, adding more reason for American discontempt of the French Revolution. Kinda forgot about that bit.

            • @rockSlayer@lemmy.world
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              I see you didn’t like the earliest examples I could think of with the systemic racism in foreign affairs. How about the utter contempt from Kissinger towards PoC when he was Secretary of State? How’s that African neoimperialism? Maybe you’d prefer talking about the “war” in the Philippines? Perhaps you’d like to hear about the absolute refusal for the last 120 years to make Puerto Rico a state? Maybe the US support of Nazi Germany up until 1941 is more to your liking? The genocides of Native Americans that continued into the 70s? The ongoing hypocritical genocide of latino people on our southern border? The oil wars? COINTELPRO tactics being used abroad? I have a lot of examples of racist foreign affairs from the US.

    • @gravitas_deficiency@sh.itjust.works
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      221 year ago

      The problem is that “the people of Afghanistan” don’t see themselves as a united people. Regional and tribal ties are far, far stronger in the region than any true sense of national identity outside of “let’s cooperate just long enough to kick these fucking foreigners out”. Immediately after that’s accomplished, the region regresses into very old-school power politics and warlord fiefdoms. This has happened twice now in the space of 50 years. The truly galling point, though, is that US leaders and officials should have known this… but there were effectively zero coherent plans to handle that aspect of the occupation.

    • @givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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      161 year ago

      How can a vast majority of the people sit there and let a tiny percentage dictate the lives and rules for everyone?

      Is that a serious question?

      The vast majority of the world lives like that…

      Even in first world countries.

      I’m American, and a very very tiny percentage of other Americans hold the vast amount of wealth and use it to buy the majority of both parties off so that literally no matter who wins any election, they’re going to be someone that puts corporate profits over the average American.

      Where do you live that’s truly led by the majority?

      • @rockSlayer@lemmy.world
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        Fun fact, the dynamic where the majority class controls the “rules” is called communism. Maybe they want us to give it a go here in the US?

    • DONTBANTHISACCOUNT
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      31 year ago

      Same way stuff happens in the USA… inequality n disparity keeps growing… The ruling / wealthy 🤑 class keeps consolidating wealth n we all just go on with our lives… Don’t we?

      • @aesthelete@lemmy.world
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        11 year ago

        I dunno, there’s been quite a few large protest movements in recent decades because of this, and currently there’s a large and growing labor movement.

    • DigitalTraveler42
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      11 year ago

      A lot of the Afghanistan problem is that they have no national identity, they’re a collection of tribes and warlords, so the only united group in the country is the Taliban, and the Taliban has a lot of help from Pakistan and other regional powers.

  • @InvaderDJ@lemmy.world
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    701 year ago

    IDK exactly what the “world” can do here. The Taliban is the legit government of Afghanistan now (well, maybe legit should be in quotes). Do people want another war to take out the Taliban? That didn’t go so well the first time. And there are already sanctions on the Taliban’s government but other countries are still willing to trade with them.

    I don’t see any international fix working here. There needs to be internal change. Whether that’s reform, coup, or whatever.

  • Rikudou_SageA
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    651 year ago

    Quickly forget? Didn’t US spend like 20 years there?

    • HobbitFoot
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      91 year ago

      Yeah, but we aren’t reporting at the level we used to.

      But to be fair, we still ignored Afghanistan a lot during the occupation.

      • Rikudou_SageA
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        131 year ago

        Why should we? Honestly, if I was American, I would be salty about this as hell. So much money spent and then they give up the moment US leaves? Apparently they got exactly what they wanted. Sure, not everyone likes it, but don’t blame the world “forgetting” about you, this shit is entirely of their doing.

  • @Baphomet_The_Blasphemer@lemmy.world
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    We spent twenty years fighting their battles for them, $2.3 trillion spent helping build up their infrastructure, supplying them with weapons and training, and trying to help them build a legitimate democratic government. After all our efforts, expenses, and American lives lost, it took the Taliban just ten days to retake the entire country. Freedom can’t be given it has to be won, and frankly they weren’t willing to fight for theirs… and I say this as a disabled combat veteran who lost dozens of friends to this conflict either in combat or to their own hands once they returned home. What a waste.

    • @CheeseNoodle@lemmy.world
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      To be fair Russia, the UK and the US also took turns totaly destroying the country for the better part of the last century. We can’t give them their freedom back on a plate but we shouldn’t forget that we’re also the ones that took it away. That money and those lives weren’t some kind of gift they were an attempt to undo the collective damage we’ve done. Well the American/British money and lives, pretty sure Russia didn’t give a crap.

      • Harrison [He/Him]
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        61 year ago

        The Soviets had their go at nationbuilding. Their puppet state survived eight years after they withdrew as well, which is a fair bit longer than the ten days we managed.

      • @SocialMediaRefugee@lemmy.world
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        You can go back to Alexander the Great. Mountainous regions have always been notoriously hard to control with other regions like the Caucasus and the Balkans as examples. They tend to be fragmented and loosely connected.

    • @Wakmrow@lemmy.world
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      151 year ago

      Wow I’m american and this is some american kool aide if I’ve ever seen it. The Taliban is evil but the framing of the invasion and occupation as some noble humanitarian effort is like newsmax propaganda.

      • @assassin_aragorn@lemmy.world
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        201 year ago

        Some good things did happen. More girls went to schools. You can look up data and see the infant mortality rate plummet.

        We didn’t go over there for humanitarian reasons, and our true goal wasn’t noble – but there was still good that came of it. Enough good for them to ask us why we’ve forgotten about them. And I don’t blame them – but I also can’t blame us.

      • Cethin
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        101 year ago

        You’re right, but it seems like this post is asking for it again. Whatever framing it’s given, it didn’t work and was a massive waste, of lives and money.

    • @joystick@lemmy.world
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      131 year ago

      I agree, the hard truth is it’s on them. The people of Afghanistan collectively lacked the will to fight for their freedom. It’s a stark contrast with places like Ukraine.

    • @_bac@lemmy.world
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      -31 year ago

      O fuck off. You invaded them and then left. 2.3 trillion went to pay your military and contractors.

  • @Smacks@lemmy.world
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    There was an attempt at nation building and it didn’t go well. Afghanistan and the Middle East is a culturally complicated place, it’s mostly tribes and smaller villages with a lot of history. It’s hard to point fingers at the US for leaving when a decent chunk of the country either didn’t care, or didn’t want them there anymore.

    • @Blackmist@feddit.uk
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      361 year ago

      Even if the US intentions were good (and they were not great, basically being revenge for 9/11), who wants to be ruled by a foreign invader?

      If some alien superpower invaded the USA tomorrow, gave them free healthcare, 40 days holiday a year from work, legalised abortion again and mountains of affordable housing in the places people actually wanted to live, they’d still fight back. Even if it meant things going back to how they were before.

        • @terny@lemmy.ml
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          131 year ago

          Just like Afghans, many liked the US, the taliban didn’t. There’d be a percentage of the population fighting tooth and nail.

          • @assassin_aragorn@lemmy.world
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            101 year ago

            And it creates the question – what should the aliens do long term?

            If they leave, what do they owe those of us who liked them?

            I really struggle with this. I can’t say as an American that we don’t owe them anything. But I also can’t say that it’s our job to go back and invade once more. We’ve done that. I don’t know what changes we could make to change the outcome.

            Sorry for the sudden musings, haha

      • @Mediocre_Bard@lemmy.world
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        61 year ago

        I would take that deal. All hail our Alien overlords. Now, the south would not be pleased … but they have a losing record in armed conflict.

        • @Blackmist@feddit.uk
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          61 year ago

          Most boomers are just who the oligarchs have pointed angry millennials at.

          They’ll watch you fight for crumbs while they scoff cake. This is Bumfights for them.

    • @chemical_cutthroat@lemmy.world
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      131 year ago

      I mean, literally any other country in the world is welcome to step in and fix it. Imagine the bragging rights at the next UN summit. “We fixed Afghanistan!” No? No takers? Alright.

      • @joel_feila@lemmy.world
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        41 year ago

        As cynical as a take as that is, yeah national building hard espically out there. People will resist change, you have very little infrastructure to work with, and a poor little esucation population

    • @hoshikarakitaridia@sh.itjust.works
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      21 year ago

      The second part sounds a bit like a copout. They have done military interventions in a lot of different regions. The US has ransacked a growing number of countries just to get rid of a small amount of “baddies”.

      You don’t get to destroy shit and leave. If you play world police, start doing the whole job, not parts of it. And I’m totally fine with US starting less interventions because they don’t wanna clean up after themselves. Probably a net positive given the history in the middle east.

      • @astral_avocado@lemm.ee
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        111 year ago

        I think at this point it’s best that the administration just got out because it appeared it was never going to get better. Just my perspective at reading about the attempts to build administration and actually get local citizens to build and manage their own sustainable government structures in place and it never taking off. Just read anything about the army’s attempts to create a competent Afghani security force.

        We never should have intervened in the first place, and should have gotten out as soon as we could.

      • @lingh0e@lemmy.film
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        71 year ago

        I agree with you, but also… they absolutely did not want us there. America isn’t trying to colonize.

        The people in power are corrupt, the world around. Religious states, doubly so.

        We can’t even control the zealots rising up in our own country.

      • @assassin_aragorn@lemmy.world
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        31 year ago

        The thing is, we weren’t there for a decade just destroying things. A few years, absolutely. But the rest of the time was spent trying to clean up and rebuild. Maybe the US just isn’t good at that, but what else can we do at this point? Returning would just be meddling again and earn ire.

  • Tygr
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    1 year ago

    You aren’t forgotten. US and allies accepted the decision that was made within a week of us leaving. The country, as a whole, collectively chose the easy route of Taliban rule. That decision has consequences.

    • @RandallFlagg@lemm.ee
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      221 year ago

      Yeah, I mean, we were over there for well over a decade trying to fix that shit and the country as a whole just did not want to change, so we gave up and left. It was a giant waste for everyone involved.

      • @rambaroo@lemmy.world
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        51 year ago

        Lol yeah that’s totally what happened in. It definitely wasn’t a scam where we turned Afghanistan into a black hole for contractor money.

        It’s unbelievable how naive and arrogant this thread is. How low can you get?

        • @Asafum@feddit.nl
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          11 year ago

          My dumb ass was 16 when it all started and even then I was aware enough to realize it was all about Raytheon, Haliburton, PMCs, etc…

          I blame those fucking pieces of shit Cheney and Rumsfield for not only stealing a potential future from me (because after realizing all that I said fuck joining the military) but obviously worse all the death and destruction that was caused for their financial benefit…

          Trump had a line “they’re not sending their best here” when being a dickhole in reference to immigration, but honestly that quote goes especially well for pretty much all of our politicians.

      • azuth
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        -11 year ago

        You didn’t go to fix shit. You went because you wanted revenge. You stayed because a lot of people made money.

        Everybody told you back them you can’t fix Afghanistan’s issues by force. You just killed a lot of Afghanis for nothing.

        Then you went to Iraq.

          • azuth
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            -41 year ago

            I don’t really get the stance of “you wanted revenge, bloodthirsty revenge murica”. Did you forget that innocent lives were taken, unasked?

            What the fuck would YOU do? Sit there and twiddle your thumbs all like “oh…3,000 people, never forget. sniff”.

            That is revenge. You think it is justified revenge. Perhaps it was though history did not start on 11/09/2001. It certainly is not “we were over there for well over a decade trying to fix that shit” as the guy I replied too said.

            You also kind of forgot about the guy that actually arranged the attack for a few years while many more people died than in Afghanistan and Iraq than in WTC, most of them having nothing to do with the attacks.

            • @assassin_aragorn@lemmy.world
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              11 year ago

              You also kind of forgot about the guy that actually arranged the attack for a few years while many more people died than in Afghanistan and Iraq than in WTC, most of them having nothing to do with the attacks.

              You were completely right until this point. It was absolutely for revenge, and the Bush Administration preyed on that desire to mislead the US into an awful war where even more innocent people lost their lives.

              But there’s no need to minimize the lives lost on 9/11. We can grieve for both. Arguing about which matters more because more people died takes away from the more important point – a tragedy was used to manipulate people into supporting another tragedy.

      • @Mr_Blott@feddit.uk
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        1 year ago

        trying to fix

        😂😂👆

        A giant waste for everyone

        😂😂😂😂😂😂👆👆👆 Except the military money machine

    • @SocialMediaRefugee@lemmy.world
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      131 year ago

      The feeling there was…

      1. The gov didn’t care about anyone outside of Kabul.
      2. They knew the US wouldn’t be there forever and the ANA had shitty moral. The Taliban however would be there when the US left and people didn’t want to be targeted for revenge killings, etc.
      • @AdamHenry@discuss.tchncs.de
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        1 year ago

        Many people including Americans are suffering and have been forgotten because of what happened over there. I guarantee there are many that wish they had done things differently and just minded their own business. Patriotism is a powerful con.

  • JasSmith
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    501 year ago

    I’m not sure what people want, exactly. 20 years of occupation wasn’t enough to change their culture even a little bit. Do they want permanent American occupation? That’s clearly untenable for many reasons. I don’t want America to be the world police, and I don’t want them invading countries on moral grounds.

    Any aid given to Afghanistan immediately ends up in the hands of the Taliban now.

      • @Cleverdawny@lemm.ee
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        91 year ago

        No, the Spanish Republicans definitely put up a real fight. If the Afghan Army had the same mettle as the Republican Army of Spain, then the Taliban would have been kicked back to Pakistan because of massive materiel superiority.

        • @KevonLooney@lemm.ee
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          61 year ago

          100% . The dude you responded to is just wrong. Franco started the Civil War in 1936, but it went until 1939. He had a lot of the army plus the backing of the Nazis. The Spanish Republicans had… Picasso and Ernest Hemingway.

          The painting “Guernica” is about Nazis bombing a small town. If you have to kill a horse and some children with a bomber, you aren’t going to be winning any time soon.

  • @Chee_Koala@lemmy.world
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    401 year ago

    When externals were (unsuccesfully) trying to change something in the country, it was a total bust. I read in these comments that intentions were not pure from America, and I can imagine that. I also saw interviews with US military personal after they came back from Afghanistan, who seemed to genuinely want to help, but had to deal with a lot of corruption, low education, internal theft and child abuse (Bachi Bazi). Now no one is helping, and even though I’d like for the local population to live free lives, I don’t even know how one would start to help. The Taliban will just hide and guerilla it’s way back after occupation has dissapated. It seems like a real life Kobayashi Maru situation. No winners, only losers here :(

    • @assassin_aragorn@lemmy.world
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      31 year ago

      It reminds me, I read about veterans who went to volunteer and fight for Ukraine because they wanted to help, and they felt like they hadn’t in Afghanistan.

  • I Cast Fist
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    371 year ago

    Gotta love all the 'muricans trying to defend their exceptionalism and blaming Afghanistan and its people for the country’s woes.

    USA never cared about Afghanistan or its people. In the 1980s, it, along with Saudi Arabia, Pakistan and United Kingdom, helped fund the muhajideen fighting against the Soviet Union (Soviet-Afghan war). As soon as the war was over and the soviets retreated, the funding dried up.

    After 9/11, USA went into a bloodlust, invading Afghanistan because they (Taliban) wanted proof that Osama bin Laden was involved with the terrorist attack first. bin Laden fled to Pakistan, but the USA didn’t invade them, nor threatened to. Instead, USA just kept their boots on foreign soil because, hey, free real state and cheap poppy, amirite?

    Also, since at least 2010, it’s been publicly known that Pakistan has been helping the Taliban in fighting for Afghanistan. Yet, there were no sanctions, no tough talks, no threats, nothing, against Pakistan.

    • TheRazorX
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      91 year ago

      After 9/11, USA went into a bloodlust, invading Afghanistan because they (Taliban) wanted proof that Osama bin Laden was involved with the terrorist attack first. bin Laden fled to Pakistan, but the USA didn’t invade them, nor threatened to. Instead, USA just kept their boots on foreign soil because, hey, free real state and cheap poppy, amirite?

      Just to add to your point.

      From way before 9-11

      Before the Invasion

      After the invasion.

    • @assassin_aragorn@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      What do you think should happen going forward? How should the US address this? How should your country, and the rest of the UN address this?

      It’s very easy to look at the past and just lay blame. I can’t and won’t argue with you on any of that (except the Mujahideen but I’ve discussed that in a different comment). Looking forward however, I don’t see any paths that aren’t just a retread of what was already done. And I don’t know if we could’ve done anything differently which would have a good chance of leading to a different outcome. I legitimately want to know what you think, because I’m at a loss.

      • I Cast Fist
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        21 year ago

        Considering that some tribes still remembered and resented the British from their colonial abuses, you can bet your ass Afghanis won’t forgive the USA anytime soon. If any president actually had the balls and humility to admit the USA fucked up big time, committed an international crime and several war crimes, and was actually willing to work together with the current government, under certain conditions, like ensuring women regain some of their lost rights, to repair some of those wrongs, that would go a long way. It’s not going to happen, and my guess is mainly because many other countries would start to pester the USA to admit wrongdoings against them, too.

        It’s very easy to look at the past and just lay blame

        The irony is that USA apparently didn’t learn anything from invading Vietnam, or watching the soviets invade Afghanistan 20 years prior.

        As for what I think, apparently Pakistan and Iran will step in and work as “good neighbors”. Women will still be treated like slaves and neither neighbor will bat an eye, which is horrible. If the Taliban is still being so heavily helped by the Pakistani government, then Afghanistan will just be their puppet. In that case, pressuring Pakistan to pressure the Taliban into being less radical would be more likely to yield results with lower resistance. Considering that the USA never hinted at strong arming Pakistan, despite having several bases on their territory AND knowing of their ties with Taliban, then that is unlikely to happen in the future. The “why” for that is what I’d love to know.

        It’s also rather weird when you look at Iran-Pakistan relations, which seem to be very good, despite one being a USA bogeyman and the other being an ally.

  • Pisodeuorrior
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    351 year ago

    Not to be a dick but if they don’t like it they could do something about it themselves. Hoping that “the world will do something” rarely has good results.

    • @solstice@lemmy.world
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      231 year ago

      Yeah haven’t they been at war or occupied for like 200 years? The withdrawal was a clusterfuck but it was never not going to be one. Idk what the rest of the world can do at this point. I read China wants to tap into those sweet lithium mines. Let them give it a shot I guess?

      • ObliviousEnlightenment
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        21 year ago

        Honestly, I’d love to see them try. Mostly because it’d be hilarious for them to be inconvenienced, but still

        • @solstice@lemmy.world
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          01 year ago

          Putting aside the humanitarian aspect and destabilizing the region etc etc I agree it would be an entertaining show. From what I’ve heard maybe we won’t have to wait very long.

      • @KevonLooney@lemm.ee
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        -11 year ago

        The Taliban are not the Nazis, not even close. They’re a guerilla group, and not a particularly effective one. They lost almost all engagements with the US and allied armies. They were mainly good at running away and doing drugs in the mountains.

        The problem is, the people of Afghanistan do not have the ability or desire to be a unified country right now, so there is no one to oppose them. The Yugoslav Partizans (who did fight the Nazis) would have beat their brains in. The IRA would have easily beaten them. There are even modern day rebel groups who would beat them.

        • @rambaroo@lemmy.world
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          01 year ago

          The opposition was mostly murdered by the Taliban before and after the fall. The military aid we gave the Afghans was also entirely fake and we allowed it be stolen.

          But then people in this thread have the arrogance to come in here and go on rants about how it’s all the Afghans’ fault when we literally occupied their country for 20 fucking years and achieved nothing. The US is fully responsible for his situation.

          It’s disgusting to see Americans attack Afghans in this thread because they’re butthurt that a woman said Afghans were forgotten, which they absolutely were. No wonder so many people in the world hate us.

          • @whats_a_refoogee@sh.itjust.works
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            11 year ago

            The overwhelmingly left leaning reddit, which practically never had any even right leaning headline upvoted to /r/all (besides The Donald, when it existed) are mostly Nazis…

            If r/politics are Nazis, then Mao must be a centrist by your standards. Just how deluded are you?

          • @KevonLooney@lemm.ee
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            01 year ago

            Do you… think it’s good that Europe has some of the craziest guerilla groups in history? Like do you think that’s something to brag about? Ok…

            Nigeria still has Boko Haram, which was the deadliest group in the 2010s:

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

            In DRC, there were militias responsible for multiple civil wars in the 90s and 2000s. Latin America has had a ton of rebel groups (both left and right wing) too.

            Are you happy now?

  • 👁️👄👁️
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    321 year ago

    What do they expect? Permanent US occupation? If they really expect that, then they’re going to need to make themselves a US territory or deal with themselves.

  • @DTFpanda@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Can’t believe the victim blaming going on in this thread. What the fuck? You people can’t understand that ordinary people didn’t want to rise up and risk their lives? They weren’t asking for help from citizens of other countries like them, they were asking for help from other militaries since their own failed them. Yet, the people are to blame? How is that a popular opinion? The complete lack of empathy from the privileged is alarming.

    • @Katana314@lemmy.world
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      231 year ago

      It’s kind of similar to Russia right now; in order for the country to change - and it NEEDS to change - ordinary people would need to take drastic action. The USA in Afghanistan kind of demonstrates just how incredibly hard it is for even an ultra-powerful external force to do that.

      Heck, look at formerly-Nazi Germany. It’s now a stupendous place to live, but look at what needed to get it there. In addition to multiple countries toppling the regime, they needed Germans to be active about their beliefs in the future of their nation, to the point they were willing to literally dismantle a wall.

      I don’t claim to be able to give them a guidebook, but I definitely think when the Taliban does fall, it would have to come at least from heavy, confrontational, violent rejection of them from the locals.

      • Harrison [He/Him]
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        41 year ago

        In fairness, outside of three decades or so in the 20th century, Germany has been one of the nicest places in the world to live in for at least the past 200.

    • @bric@lemm.ee
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      201 year ago

      Unfortunately, ordinary people did rise up and risk their lives, against the US and NATO. It wasn’t just that their military failed them, this wasn’t some battlefield loss, or a powerful regime keeping an iron hold on the populace, the military and the people just decided to side with the Taliban, it’s what they voted for in the most primal and basic election that exists.

      That doesn’t mean that I’m not sympathetic to the plight of a lot of people that are suffering, there are a lot of people in westernized cities that have lost their freedom and their way of life because of what the rest of their country chose, but that also doesn’t mean that it’s right to cause even more blood and death to override that choice, just because we identify with the oppressed more than the Taliban. That type of mentality is exactly what made the US and NATO so hated in the region, and frankly, I have no reason to think that if we did it again it wouldn’t end with exactly the same result

            • @bric@lemm.ee
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              1 year ago

              I don’t think that’s at all safe to say. Do you know how many American Women resisted the right to vote, thinking that politics would be “dirty” for them to get into? Womens suffrage didn’t move forward in a meaningful way until American culture, women included, moved past those ideas. Internalized oppression is a very real thing, and cultures are often enforced by everybody that’s a part of them. You can say that living under the taliban is far worse for women, I’m not arguing that, but people and cultures don’t always evaluate their options so rationally. Plenty of mothers enforce the culture’s oppressive rules on their daughters because it’s what they believe is right, and it’s what they were raised in. Also, plenty of women have just as much reason to hate the US as the men, they’ve lost family and friends to drone bombings and war. It’s totally fair for you to think women would be insane to support the taliban, but that doesn’t mean that it doesn’t happen.

              Again, no group is a monolith. There are obviously lots of women who are terrified to lose their freedom, their options for education, and their way of life, but I don’t think we can assume that that is all, or even a majority, of women just because that’s what we think they should want.

    • @assassin_aragorn@lemmy.world
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      101 year ago

      I think this is a situation where there just aren’t good answers. I prefer to draw a distinction between the politicians and cowards who handed the keys to the Taliban, vs the women and men and everyday people who opposed the Taliban.

      It’s unfair and gross to blame them. It’s also unfair though for them to blame us. We spent a lot of time in Afghanistan. American blood watered the soil, but we saw beautiful flowers bloom. Women were uplifted. The infant mortality rate plummeted. People voted for their leaders.

      What more could we do, at this point? I’d like to think that if we had armed more of the uplifted people, they would’ve maintained their government and continued to fight the Taliban. I tell myself that partially though because if that isn’t true, then there truly was nothing different we could’ve done or do now. We’d have to annex territory into a state, maybe.

      • Harrison [He/Him]
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        01 year ago

        A full military occupation followed by several years of constructing a new government like what was done in Germany or Japan might have had a chance at working. Our efforts were always half-hearted. There were never enough boots on the ground to properly police the population and there was no political will to try.

    • @SocialMediaRefugee@lemmy.world
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      71 year ago

      Other militaries DID go in and pushed out the Taliban and you know what happened? The people, especially in the rural areas, were indifferent at best and frequently hostile. They didn’t ask for anyone to “help them”, even if they politely accepted it but they still saw them as outsiders vs the Taliban who were at least from there. They also knew the US and others weren’t going to be there forever and the day would eventually come when they’d leave and then what? The Taliban would be there to fill the void. The moral in the ANA was crap so they weren’t going to stop them. So the people kept on the best terms with both sides best they could and tried not to piss off the Taliban so they wouldn’t take revenge when they returned.

    • @x4740N@lemmy.world
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      01 year ago

      Yeah I hate that and am surprised to see that on lemmy

      Reading those comments gives feelings of wtf

    • @ILikeBoobies@lemmy.ca
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      01 year ago

      So do you suggest they give up their sovereignty and become a territory of a neighbouring country?

      The Taliban is allied with China so it won’t be them, if it’s India then China and Pakistan will see it as justification. Then the next closest neighbour would be the US but the people aren’t willing. And if you throw out the Taliban it’s not going to solve anything because they will just forever war