S-2
PROFESSIONAL
- Joined
- Dec 25, 2007
- Messages
- 4,210
- Reaction score
- 0
"I'd recommend you focus your energy for more productive dialogue."
Thank you. Point taken. I'd like to find some productive dialogue but the most base issues require constant reinforcement that it proves impossible to move forward.
I'm not so certain that our respective governments don't deal with much the same among one another.
"Air-strikes all willy-nilly in Afghanistan, and previously in Pakistan, without proper prerequisites is a major no-no if the US really wants to win this "war of hearts".
I believe that you draw an offensive and grossly exaggerated picture. To be accurate you'd have to assess ALL airstrikes and their intended effect along with the results- good and bad.
You haven't and, instead, presume that the use of airpower in Afghanistan and Pakistan has been egregiously managed. It hasn't in my view.
August 9, 2009 Airpower Summary- USAF
This site details the nature and amount of sorties flown over Afghanistan and Iraq, to include combat, logistics, and intelligence. Of seventy one close support missions flown on this day in AFGHANISTAN, only six of those missions (requiring 12 sorties by my estimate) used munitions or were characterized as a "show of force (simulated weapons run without releasing munitions)".
That's not much and in every case appears to involved troops in contact. Nobody's slingin' hardware around nor has their ever likely been that degree of callousness.
Oddly, nobody here seems to much care that the taliban kill nearly 60% of afghan civilians and often by intent. Or that they've been recorded to use human shields. Doesn't raise a stink here.
Ever.
You've got my site to monitor if you wish. You know our concerns about airstrikes. You also know the military necessity and complications arising from matters such as "human shields". You know that this war, despite its travails, has cost about 20,000-30,000- many to most killed by the taliban compared to around 200,000 during the Afghan civil war and 900,000-3,000,000 during the Afghan-Soviet war.
Those are profoundly differing estimates.
What would they be had the afghan taliban no sanctuary in late 2001?
Which raises the real question of any "war of hearts". Pakistan is hardly winning such with the afghan people.
So long as Pakistanis believe that a taliban whom are rejected as too barbaric for Pakistan are perfectly acceptable to Afghanistan you'll be lying to yourselves. The taliban are hated in Afghanistan and the only reason your public justifies such is because your military for so long has sold the "necessity" of strategic depth.
Thus "good" and "bad" and acceptable and unacceptable from the two sides of the same coin. This "war of hearts" must be fought first in Islamabad and then among the Pakistani people. The afghan people already know better and deeply resent what you peddle.
Thank you. Point taken. I'd like to find some productive dialogue but the most base issues require constant reinforcement that it proves impossible to move forward.
I'm not so certain that our respective governments don't deal with much the same among one another.
"Air-strikes all willy-nilly in Afghanistan, and previously in Pakistan, without proper prerequisites is a major no-no if the US really wants to win this "war of hearts".
I believe that you draw an offensive and grossly exaggerated picture. To be accurate you'd have to assess ALL airstrikes and their intended effect along with the results- good and bad.
You haven't and, instead, presume that the use of airpower in Afghanistan and Pakistan has been egregiously managed. It hasn't in my view.
August 9, 2009 Airpower Summary- USAF
This site details the nature and amount of sorties flown over Afghanistan and Iraq, to include combat, logistics, and intelligence. Of seventy one close support missions flown on this day in AFGHANISTAN, only six of those missions (requiring 12 sorties by my estimate) used munitions or were characterized as a "show of force (simulated weapons run without releasing munitions)".
That's not much and in every case appears to involved troops in contact. Nobody's slingin' hardware around nor has their ever likely been that degree of callousness.
Oddly, nobody here seems to much care that the taliban kill nearly 60% of afghan civilians and often by intent. Or that they've been recorded to use human shields. Doesn't raise a stink here.
Ever.
You've got my site to monitor if you wish. You know our concerns about airstrikes. You also know the military necessity and complications arising from matters such as "human shields". You know that this war, despite its travails, has cost about 20,000-30,000- many to most killed by the taliban compared to around 200,000 during the Afghan civil war and 900,000-3,000,000 during the Afghan-Soviet war.
Those are profoundly differing estimates.
What would they be had the afghan taliban no sanctuary in late 2001?
Which raises the real question of any "war of hearts". Pakistan is hardly winning such with the afghan people.
So long as Pakistanis believe that a taliban whom are rejected as too barbaric for Pakistan are perfectly acceptable to Afghanistan you'll be lying to yourselves. The taliban are hated in Afghanistan and the only reason your public justifies such is because your military for so long has sold the "necessity" of strategic depth.
Thus "good" and "bad" and acceptable and unacceptable from the two sides of the same coin. This "war of hearts" must be fought first in Islamabad and then among the Pakistani people. The afghan people already know better and deeply resent what you peddle.