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Gunner said:Infanteer, that is a pretty tenuous argument trying to lump the Soviet installed regime against Karzai and a UN sponsored, internationally approved, stability process commencing in December 2001, the Loyal Jurga in 2002, and democratic nationwide Presidential election in October 2004 and Parliamentary elections earlier this year.
"UN Sponsored" and "Internationally approved" are two malleable and ambiguous terms. The invasion of Kosovo was neither - what does this mean for Canada? I'm pretty sure in 1983 the USSR could have drummed up a long list of nations that support what they were doing in Afghanistan - Bulgaria, Hungary, East Germany, Uganda...
Remove US troops and support, and see how much the UN and the International Community really mean in Afghanistan. Does Karzai still have US bodyguards?
The international community approved the best available option (Karzai), which was dressed up in the proper window dressing of elections by the US. He's probably the best thing for the country in decades, but that doesn't make the political process different. I don't know the details of the Afghani electoral process, but I would be surprised if it didn't reflect pre-existing ethnic and tribal politics and Karzai and his government was made to meet these realities.
I saw our Afghani operation go something like this:
Failed state becomes a threat to us.
We invade, and help overthrow the existing regime.
We assist in installing a new regime, and back that new regime with force of arms, securing its capital region and now helping in offensive operations.
Morals make a nice background and justification, but we invaded Afghanistan for specific reasons of national interest in 2001, we deployed a stabilization force a couple years later for the same reasons, and now we are moving onto broader combat operations. All of which I applaud.
We have an interest in the stability of Afghanistan - and so did the USSR, and so did Britain and Russia in 1900. We are using force to support and encourage that stability. So did the Soviets, and the British, and whoever else has marched through. We are trying to make the world a better place through liberal democracy and elections. The USSR was using state ownership, command economy, and authoritarianism.
I agree with everything Canada has done in Afghanistan, and I know we have carried it out with a unheard of degree of humanism, restraint, and accountability, but I like to be realistic about why we're doing what we're doing, and the real background. I thought that a foreign policy based in values and morals went out with Lloyd Axworthy and that we are trying to escape the idea of neutral peacekeeper.
Why? They've had UN approved elections, and the government in Iraq has sovereignty and international recognition, and arguable has more of a state apparatus in place than Afghanistan. The planned End State for Iraq and Afghanistan are exactly the same.Gunner said:I don't agree with your assessment. If you were comparing the Soviet Union in Afghanistan with the US in Iraq it would be a much clearer analogy.
I don't know why we have to pretend like we're doing something new. We're doing it a lot better, and a lot nicer, then ever before - but its the same bag of tricks.