GreyMatter said:
I cant believe Im actually checking to see if V2007 has written anything back...what is the world coming to...
GreyMatter -- you're jonesing for a fix! Here's something to tide you over:
We address some of the so-called "argumentative errors" that GreyMatter has outlined below ...
GreyMatter said:
“The corrupt and mafia government of Mr. Karzai…” statement – V2007 treats it as a fact. It’s not a fact, it’s a statement made any another person, thus is no more valid than anyone else’s opinion. How are they corrupt and a mafia, or at least any different from any other government?
Our quote is from RAWA (http://www.rawa.org), a feminist Afghan organization. The members of RAWA are truly courageous in their sustained opposition to fundamentalist forces in their country. They have been consistent in their opposition to all fundamentalist forces, and not hypocritically and self-servingly choosing certain warlords to be allies, and others to be enemies. We assert that their point of view is a valid one to share, and has a high degree of credibility. How is sharing this view of the Karzai government (widely acknowledged to include warlords) an “argumentative error”?
GreyMatter said:
“Canada cannot separate itself from its US allies, the key foreign force in Afghanistan.” statement. Again, opinion.
“Canada’s role is inseparable from the NATO role. NATO soldiers are killing Afghan civilians in increasing numbers.” Statement. V2007 implies that NATO soldiers are killing Afghan citizens therefore Canada as part of NATO is killing Afghan citizens. Political rhetoric, and false logic that falls under the category “if you pull off all four legs, the frog goes deaf” logic.
We've addressed both these interpretations (interpretations made from facts) in our previous posts, most recently here: http://forums.army.ca/forums/threads/63128/post-579738.html#msg579738
Moreover, our original letter – yes, the letter that started this whole thread (http://www.valcartier2007.ca/openletter.htm) – clearly provided examples of civilians killed by Canadian soldiers. Those examples stand unrefuted on this forum (despite RecceProfessor's attempt).
GreyMatter said:
“Actually, our Open Letter was based on the reverse assumption: it is because we believe that soldiers can be autonomous and free thinking (and we know soldiers who are free-thinking) that we’ve decided to try to dialogue directly with you.” statement. A backhanded complement. We ’can be’ free-thinking’, and they ‘know soldiers who are freethinking’…but the phrasing indicates we are not included in that group.
We appreciate the openness by many on this forum to engage our ideas and debate. Moreover, we were responding to the assertion by one person on this forum than somehow we stereotypically dismissed all soldiers as non-thinking robots. We don't believe that to be the case. The entire premise of our mailout to more than 2000 soldiers proves we don't think soldiers are monolithic in their thinking. Why assume the worst in our intentions?
GreyMatter said:
“Gordon O'Connor is Canada's Donald Rumsfeld” statement. A V2007 opinion, not a fact.
Yes, our opinion, based on how O'Connor bungled the prisoner torture scandal, and his links to companies and PR firms in the military-industrial complex. But how is this an “error”. You might disagree with our opinion, but where’s the “error”.
GreyMatter said:
“In the same speech, he stated: ‘Every time you kill an angry young man overseas, you're creating 15 more who will come after you.’” Statement. V2007 makes a series of interpreted logic from a selected statement that is obviously not a fact, but may be the Generals personal opinion.
We posted a reply about General Leslie's logic: http://forums.army.ca/forums/threads/63128/post-579737.html#msg579737
No one has responded to that yet.
Others have agreed with Leslie’s comments, as do we: when you kill fighters in an insurgency, you don’t necessarily eliminate the insurgency, but you create the basis for a sustained insurgency (or, as Leslie put it, ‘Every time you kill an angry young man overseas, you're creating 15 more who will come after you.’).
Again, where’s the “argumentative error”, aside from GreyMatter just saying so?
GreyMatter said:
“Canada's role in Afghanistan sounds like a plan for disaster, mainly for the people of Afghanistan. No wonder that "reconstruction" and "development" are being used as cover for Canada's "killing"; and no wonder Canada's military is being used as cover for American-led imperialism in the Middle East” statement. Imaginative use of the words ‘sounds like’ and ‘being used as a cover’. These are not facts these are opinions.
Under COIN doctrine (both US and the new Canadian COIN policy), reconstruction and development are necessary to fight insurgency; they're cover for the real point of COIN, which is killing insurgents. This is a pretty straightforward assertion. Read the COIN manuals; we have.
GreyMatter said:
“Franciso Juarez is not our poster boy. We simply cite him as a clear example of someone who objected to Canada’s role in Afghanistan, and suffered the consequences.” statement. Denial of alternate perceptions of the events involving Juarez is not logic, its bias.
We've addressed this point at length in a previous post here: http://forums.army.ca/forums/threads/63128/post-578958.html#msg578958
GreyMatter said:
“Plus, let’s be practical here: ISAF is a smokescreen (kind of like the “coalition of the willing” in Iraq); you soldiers know just as well as us anti-war activists that the Afghan mission is led by the United States, thru NATO, with Canadian, British, German and other soldiers playing specific supporting roles. The US leads this thing via NATO.” Opinion.
Again, do folks seriously think the US is not the main force in deciding what happens in Afghanistan? And, GreyMatter, how is asserting this view (call it an opinion), an “argumentative error.”
GreyMatter said:
“You ask for evidence for the Canadian military being used as a smokescreen for American-led imperialism in the Middle East. 2500 Canadian troops in Afghanistan, as part of the US “War on Terror,” gives credibility to that war. Do people seriously think otherwise?” statement. Opinion again, despite implying they would give evidence.
“Evidence”. For the sake of argument, how about a counter-fact: 2500 Canadian troops in Afghanistan does NOT lend credibility to the US-led “War on Terror”. Not sure why we would have to prove on an army forum that the use of Canadian forces in a US-led conflict lends credibility in the eyes of international opinion, and not the opposite. But if you’re suggesting that Canada’s invovlement does not lend credibility, so be it. We disagree.
GreyMatter said:
“Again, development and reconstruction are useful smokescreens. It’s what’s done under modern-day COIN doctrine.” statement. Development and reconstruction projects are developed and run by foreign affairs departments and NGO’s, not the military. This is not just opinion and bias, its paranoia.
Edit - This used to be a pretty solid rule up until last year. The line is probably a lot murkier now.
Under COIN doctrine, development and reconstruction are part of a broader counter-insurgency strategy. You might disagree about the “smokescreen” remark, but where’s the paranoia? Again, read the COIN manuals.
GreyMatter said:
“The Taliban is the "blowback" of those previous (US) policies.” While many of the world’s errors could be attributed to the USA, it’s a pretty big reach here. It’s the same as saying that the US was responsible for the fall of the USSR. It ignores a million other factors that contributed to the situation. More ‘deaf frog’ logic.
The US (and Pakistan, and Saudi Arabia) providing money and arms into Afghanistan in the 1980s directly contributed to the strength of fundamentalist militias and warlords. In some cases, the militias were created by those outside funders. That is an incontrovertible fact. Does anyone on this forum seriously want to take issue with the fact that the US crucially contributed to the creation of fundamentalist warlords and militias in the 1980s? And now, in the 2000s, you’re fighting the blowback of that policy (the Taliban) while allying with other fundamentalist warlords whose own atrocities you ignore.
GreyMatter said:
“Here's how Block the Empire-Montreal is self-described: Block the Empire-Montreal is an anti-authoritarian, direct-action collective opposed to war and militarization, and their roots and manifestations: colonialism, imperialism and capitalism.” followed by “One war, for example, that many of us would support…” and even later admit that they are willing to be violent ("we are not all pacifists") and “willing to fight for what they believe in”. Isn’t this counter to anarchist anti-war ideology? Or is it a case of ‘the end justifies the means’?
Finally, an argumentative error ... but by GreyMatter. How does saying “we are not all pacifists” mean “we are willing to be violent”. About supporting or not supporting wars: we oppose all wars undertaken to further a capitalist, colonialist or imperialist agenda. Supporting the fight against fascism by Franco (or the fight against Nazi occupation by Jewish partisans, or the maquis against Vichy and the Nazis) does not make us violent.
GreyMatter said:
Sidenote: Army Vern notes that the V2007 crew are logging on as guest rather than by account. It may be that they are at a workplace where the company has a policy against non-work-related Internet use… or they just thought they were being covert.
We already explained this elsewhere: it’s not about “company policy” or about “being covert”. And, from ArmyVern’s response to us, she was helpfully pointing out the advantages to being logged in more regularly, rather than reading as a guest. Not sure what GreyMatter is trying to imply about our motives here.
GreyMatter said:
“We don’t presume to have a full understanding of any geopolitical situation (who can?), but don’t take us for naïve” statement. Admitting you are ignorant of a full understanding doesnt mean your limited knowledge makes you right. It means that you havent looked at both sides of a conflict and that you have only a half-full understanding of the situation. Its not about being naive, its about not being informed. (Especially when you blame Harper for our being in Afghanistan despite the fact that Chretien and the Liberals approved our intervention there.)
We also opposed the Chretien Liberals and their policy on Afghanistan, and we’re fully aware that there’s a continuity between the Liberals and Conservatives.
But again, where’s the “argumentative error” that GreyMatter said he would prove?
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