SBD-3
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What???? taliban were never their enemy. They Nurtured taliban and ISI in during Afghan civil war. during 1985-2000 they were in continuous talk with Taliban. If you search on net you can see Taliban leaders visiting USA. USA was in process to get deal of many mines in Afghanistan.
In the mean time Al-Quaida did 9/11 and hide behind Taliban's gown. USA asked Taliban to handover OBL. If taliban had handed over OBL and dismantle AQ network, USA wouldn't have attacked Afghanistan/taliban.
So Talibans were not American enemy and moreover OBL is dead, now USA has no reason to keep Taliban as enemy. 90% of Taliban are crushed by American and Afghhani Boots... Cruuuunch...
No Uncle sam U can't get away with it ...U must fight the Talibaans cuz they are ure worst enemies....They supported OBL there they gave him protection ....now U needa get rid of Talibaans.I guess U got scared of Talibaans thats why U are trying to run away from them........WASHINGTON: The United States has said that Taliban is not an enemy of America, a move seen as the latest effort of the Obama administration to send an olive branch to the terrorist outfit that ruled Afghanistan before 9/11.
"Look, the Taliban per se is not our enemy. That's critical," US Vice-President Joe Biden said in an interview to the Newsweek magazine.
"There is not a single statement that the (US) President has ever made in any of our policy assertions that the Taliban is our enemy because it threatens US interests," he said.
If, in fact, the Taliban is able to collapse the existing government, which is cooperating with us in keeping the bad guys from being able to do damage to us, then that becomes a problem for us. So there's a dual track here, Biden added.
"One, continue to keep the pressure on al-Qaida and continue to diminish them. Two, put the government in a position where they can be strong enough that they can negotiate with and not be overthrown by the Taliban," he said.
"And at the same time try to get the Taliban to move in the direction to see to it that they, through reconciliation, commit not to be engaged with al-Qaida or any other organization that they would harbor to do damage to us and our allies," Biden said.
White House press secretary Jay Carney, supporting Biden's statement, said the Vice-President does not regret having said this.
"We didn't invade Afghanistan. We did not send US military personnel into Afghanistan because the Taliban were in power. They had been in power. We went into Afghanistan because al-Qaida had launched an attack against the US from Afghanistan," he said
Taliban is not the US's enemy: Biden - The Times of India
Can anyone provide proof that the US trained Osama bin Laden or that Saddam Hussein was a CIA asset? Or how about proof that Zionists control the US? The 'proof' demand and the offer to turn ObL over to a supposedly 'neutral' muslim country was a joke that no muslim country, neutral or otherwise, took seriously.
Right there you just validated my point about members of the US political, military, intelligence and media leadership being arrogant, trigger-happy rednecks who engaged in a useless war out of a knee-jerk reaction, and ended up catalyzing the growth of terrorism and extremism world wide, rather than 'destroying Al Qaeda', and in the process causing the deaths of hundreds of thousands of innocents.We have every right to our demands just as Mullah Omar believe to his.
We do not care. And after 9/11 it would be absurd for any country to think that we should care about this internal issue
We do not care. And after 9/11 it would be absurd for any country to think that we should care about this internal issue.
Panetta is in charge of DoD - as CIA chief he authorized the drone strike on a tribal elder and political-agent meeting in NW, against the advice of DoS and the US Ambassador in Pakistan, immediately after Raymond Davis's release - I suspect his fingerprints are on the recent attack on Pakistani troops and their cold blooded murder, and I would not be surprised if he and Petraeus concoct an 'incident' in collaboration with their Afghan intelligence buddies, to try and undermine the peace initiative.It will be interesting to see DoD/Pentagon's response, if any.
Can anyone provide proof that the US trained Osama bin Laden or that Saddam Hussein was a CIA asset? Or how about proof that Zionists control the US? The 'proof' demand and the offer to turn ObL over to a supposedly 'neutral' muslim country was a joke that no muslim country, neutral or otherwise, took seriously.
OBL also resided in various other nations that the US sought to 'pressure' before ending up in Afghanistan - I don't see any consistency in the US approach when negotiating with those nations and the Taliban - where was the 'imminent invasion and threat of war' before?That is nonsense. You are talking as if the Taliban and al-Qaeda alliance were instantly formed on Sept 10, 2001 and attacked US on Sept 11, 2001. Who made the first attempt on the WTC Towers in 1993? Who attacked the US embassies in 1998? Who attacked US on the USS Cole in 2000?
The offer is not absurd at all, it was the US response that was absurd, and reflective of an inbred redneck's response.After all these years holding our hands throughout these attacks, we are under no obligations to accept that absurd offer.
As I clarified already, it is the 'mind-set' that the term describes that I find applicable in describing US leadership, irrespective of race. The n-word is simply a racial slur, not reflective of a particular 'mind-set' as is the case with the term 'red-neck'.The term 'red neck' is usually attached to white people of a certain subset of the American demographic. Your enlargement of that racist blanket is no more palatable than an Asian using the 'n-word' against a black then tried to excuse himself by saying he is not white so therefore his usage of it is acceptable.
Of course they won't 'buy it' - they have to defend a 'knee jerk and flawed decision' to go to war, despite the obvious opportunity to engage in dialog and negotiations leading towards a trial of OBL and company.No it was not. And no one in the diplomatic corps will buy that.
The US gave the terrorists a recruiting tool - the US gave the terrorists propaganda tools - it allowed the terrorists to point to the massacres of innocents in Afghanistan and the illegal war in Iraq as evidence of the US 'desire to kill and occupy Muslims and Muslim lands', which allowed them to recruit people to fight against an 'evil empire massacring Muslims and occupying Muslim lands'.But nothing about the terrorism themselves who chose to spread their wars. Nothing about their beliefs. Nothing about what they really want. Funny how other terrorist groups decided to lay down their arms while Islamic terrorist groups grew.
Right there you just validated my point about members of the US political, military, intelligence and media leadership being arrogant, trigger-happy rednecks who engaged in a useless war out of a knee-jerk reaction, and ended up catalyzing the growth of terrorism and extremism world wide, rather than 'destroying Al Qaeda', and in the process causing the deaths of hundreds of thousands of innocents.
Nonsense - the fact that the US was willing to go to war over the allegations against OBL would at the least require the US to demonstrate the 'overwhelming evidence' that they apparently possessed to take the course of action that they did.Can anyone provide proof that the US trained Osama bin Laden or that Saddam Hussein was a CIA asset? Or how about proof that Zionists control the US? The 'proof' demand and the offer to turn ObL over to a supposedly 'neutral' muslim country was a joke that no muslim country, neutral or otherwise, took seriously.
That post addresses none of the arguments made so far that debunk your opinion. Please read through the previous posts.Sorry Afghanistan war was right and US helped the world. It also helped the Afghan women from being suppressed. Pakistan never tried to help Afghanistan as long as their interest were met.