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Excellent article sir...thank you for this I enjoyed it a lot and I hope a lot of people get to read it in newspapers across the land.
Wootan 9 said:Here's a draft OpEd that I sent to the "Citizen"...
PMedMoe said:...By the way, do you know if they ever got that ROWPU?
http://www.canada.com/nationalpost/news/story.html?id=2211823c-e0bb-445e-bfae-357f8a670cb7Last month, both Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch accused the Taliban of "war crimes" for targeting civilians, or making no effort to avoid civilian casualties in attacking military targets.
atlas said:Before you slight Amnesty International "types", whatever you mean by that, consider that if it weren't for groups like Amnesty International then the outside world wouldn't have even known about human rights abuses occurring in places like Afghanistan in the first place.
atlas said:Before you slight Amnesty International "types", whatever you mean by that, consider that if it weren't for groups like Amnesty International then the outside world wouldn't have even known about human rights abuses occurring in places like Afghanistan in the first place.
NGOs have improved the standards of living in most countries around the world without resorting to warmaking. That's probably why you don't like them, because of the fact their day to day activities destroys the military's non-sensical argument that war is necessary for development and the flourishing of democracy.
NGO members have been risking their own lives in foreign places, without weapons, for years and at a great sacrifice to themselves. If you don't believe it, consider the fact that more journalists (many of whom work for NGOs) have died in Iraq than Canadian soldiers have died in Afghanistan. Consider that people like Mother Theresa spent her life in disease-infested slums just to care for and feed hungry children. Consider that Mohatma Gandhi led a pacifist revolution that drove the English from India and gave that country its independence. All of these people made a difference through non-violence. If you look at any of the other 194 countries around the world, most of them have much increased standards of living and democratizaton despite the fact that their governments are corrpt, incompetent or just plain callous. You can thank NGOs for this.
I read today that 7 boys were killed in a NATO bombing raid. If those boys have any family members who are stll alive, then I suspect we created dozens of more insurgents today. If it were my son or brother, I wouldn't give two hoots about NATO's "good intentions". So the cycle continues and violence begets violence.
Ironically, I've read and heard that development workers and organizations had a better time working in Afghanistan before the fall of the Taliban. (Doctors with Borders, Amnesty International, the Red Cross, UN, etc) These groups now say their work has become alot more difficult because of the war and their association with the NATO presence in the eyes of locals, so they try to distance themselves now.
This mission is about counter-insurgency. There are millions of Afghans who oppose our presence. We may disagree with their dislike of our presence, but it's their country after all, so we should stick to traditional forms of development work in places like Afghanistan.
The way things are going, Canadians will demand a pulllout before 2009.