kenberg, on 2017-August-22, 07:39, said:
Every war is different, I start by acknowledging that. But that doesn't mean that we cannot learn from history.
Imo, a big part of what went wrong in Vietnam was that the South Vietnamese government did not have the support of the South Vietnamese people If I understand the situation correctly, the Afghanistan government does not have the support of the Afghan people. It seems impossible to stabilize a country if the enlivenment i government (spell checker apparently caught but misguessed whatever misspelling I committed) not supported by the people. I am not as opposed to the use of military force as some are, but the military should not be asked to do the impossible. I am more than willing to learn why I don't properly understand the situation.
It does seem possible to do this...when I look at history what it takes it a bloody, ruthless war, call it a bloody civil war. Often the extreme answer may be the only answer, assimilate or be exterminated or face endless conflict.
See Russia, See China, See America, see Vietnam.
We can look to Afghanistan and see what....endless conflict going on century after century..
The argument regarding Afghanistan seems to be we fight them there or we fight them here. The problem is many reject this binary choice but don't seem to persuade enough people of a viable third option.
I suppose many look to Vietnam as the answer....we stopped fighting...one side won and we did not have to fight them on the beaches of California.....If we just go home we wont have to fight them in NY.