nicky10013 said:
Thats the purpose the polls in the first place. To find out whether or not Canadian citizens support Canada's roll within Afghanistan.
The problem with that is that too few people here have any real clue what that role is, and what we're actually doing. You illustrate this quite well.
A valid poll would start out with an explanation of the mission, and then ask people if they supported those aims.
nicky10013 said:
I've seen a lot of arguments that pertain to military members or pro-military people being dissapointed and upset that Canadians could be so naive to not support a mission to fight the people responsible for 9/11.
Then you have not been paying attention.
Afghanistan was a failed state, and its government had allowed its use as a safe haven and training base for international terrorists. As such, even removal of that government was insufficient as the Taliban movement was strong enough to re-assert itself - it was the biggest band of bullies around, which is how it seized power in the first place.
The prime goal is to rebuild Afghanistan, thereby preventing its regression into failed-state status. A prosperous Afghanistan will not be a breeding ground for terrorism.
It is also right to protect people from abuse. Men were beaten for shaving their beards. Sports, music, television, radio, and children's toys were all banned. Food was extremely scarce, and many people faced starvation. Women were forced to wear burkas outside, could be beaten at whim for any of a number of trivial transgressions, stoned or shot on vague suspicion of adultery, and denied the ability to work even if they were the sole surviving parents. As they could not work at any job, they could not become doctors or nurses, and as it was also not acceptable for male doctors to treat them, they had an unnecessarily high mortality rate from illness and injury. Girls were denied education. The Taliban was an extremely repressive and opressive regime, and few Afghans harbour nostalgia for those days.
nicky10013 said:
As someone who is totally against the war in Afghanistan,
If you are against the mission, then what are you for? A return to the situation that I described above? Misery, starvation, terror, and death? That is what would befall the Afghan people if we pulled out.
nicky10013 said:
First, the military is too blunt an instrument to deal with the problem of radicalism.
Is it? Says who? Your cadet experience gives you no basis whatsoever to make this claim.
Was it too blunt of an instrument to bring peace to Cyprus, and the former Yugoslavia?
Our combat role is only one aspect of the mission. We are training the Afghan National Army and Afghan National Police. We are assisting ordinary Afghans in villages to dig wells, build schools and mosques, and all-important roads while giving them a secure environment in which to do that. Note that I said "assist". We are not doing it for them - we are helping them, providing materials where necessary, showing them how, and paying them for their labour. This gives them training and experience that they can put to use on other projects, pride in their work and a sense of real ownership, and a kick-start to an economy at the lowest level, where it is most needed. Many Taliban fighters take up arms not because they believe in the cause, but because they are paid to do so and the income is necessary for their survival. Providing an alternative shrinks the Taliban recruiting pool.
The Canadian Armed Forces is the right instrument for the job at present, and the only Canadian instrument that is truly effective as the situation stands right now.
nicky10013 said:
Indeed, as it has shown in both Iraq and Afghanistan, military presence in both countries seems to have enflamed the situation rather than help the situation.
I will leave Iraq aside. It is not our fight, despite the presence of serving CF personnel in exchange positions there, and the situation is radically different from Afghanistan.
How has a NATO-led presence in Afghanistan "enflamed" (sic) the situation? On what do you base that claim?
nicky10013 said:
but the population of those countries don't necessarily see it in such a manner.
They don't necessarily see it your way, either. And given that very many people on this site have direct experience in both places, I see no validity in your position. You are speaking from pure ignorance.
nicky10013 said:
How would we take it if we were occupied even if they were making our lives infinitely better than we had it before?
Who is "occupied"? If the Afghan population felt that we were attempting to "occupy" them, our loss rate would be staggering. As it is, we've only lost approximately the same number of dead from all causes, including accident and suicide, as were murdered in Toronto last year. There is no mass uprising, as occurred during the last real occupation, the Soviet one. Their army lost 13,000 to 15,000 during that operation. Afghans aren't even holding protests in Western cities, and neither are Iraqis for that matter. In fact, Afghans living in Canada are assisting us in predeployment training because they welcome our assistance in their homeland.
nicky10013 said:
The very notion that international troops are on their soil is an affront to their country and to their religion which contributes to the problem, it doesn't help it.
Facts would indicate otherwise.
nicky10013 said:
Secondly, through large operations, civilian casualties are bound to happen. This also radicalizes the population.
Yes, they are, unfortunately, bound to happen. We go to unbelievable lengths to ensure that they do not, however, and the Afghans are aware of that.
The same is not true of the Taliban, and Afghans know that, too.
'Tis the Taliban who have the image problem with ordinary Afghans.
nicky10013 said:
Though we haven't seen any terrorist activity in North America since 9/11, the incidences of terrorism since that day is exponentially higher than it was before through attacks in Asia and Europe.
Is it? Or do you just notice it more. There have been terrorist movements operating in Europe and elsewhere for decades prior to that day - IRA (Ireland), ETA (Spain), Baader-Meinhof Gang and Red Army Faction (Germany), and a whole menagerie of Middle Eastern, African, and South-East Asian ones come to mind. Al Qaida just did it bigger, and since being cleaned out of its Afghan safe havens, hasn't been able to come close in seven years.
nicky10013 said:
Clearly, since the epidemic of global terrorism is getting worse not better,
Clearly, you are wrong.
And even if you weren't, there is a truism in statistics that says that "correlation does not equal causality", ie just because two things happen at about the same time, Thing X causes Thing Y. It could be that Thing Y actually caused Thing X, or that Thing X reduced Thing Y, or that the two are completely independent.
Any increased level of terrorism, real or perceived, may then not actually be a result of action in Afghanistan and/or Iraq. It may have occurred anyway, and it may have been a lot worse had those actions not focussed terrorists elsewhere, reduced their effective strength, eliminated much of their command structure, deterred recruiting, and set back their training efforts.
nicky10013 said:
How many terrorist attacks have been prevented in Canada by troops in Afghanistan?
Who can say?
How many might have occurred if Afghanistan had been left as a breeding ground for terrorists? Had Al Qaida and its Taliban hosts not been smacked hard, who knows how many more airliners would have been flown into large buildings, reservoirs been poisoned, ocean liners sunk, trains blown up, or political leaders been assassinated?
nicky10013 said:
Now, how many terrorist attacks have been prevented in Canada? CSIS, RCMP, Metro Toronto Police and Durham Regional Police were watching the Toronto 17 for two years before they were arrested.
And had the infection not been rooted out at its source, how can you know that all of these other agencies would not have been overwhelmed?
You simply cannot deal with a threat of this nature with only one method. That is sheer stupidity.
nicky10013 said:
we have to pull out of Afghanistan and put emphasis on border crossings, CSIS and local and federal crime enforcement.
Doing so only grants terrorists the freedom to choose where and when they will strike. Defence never won a war. Offensive action is the only thing that can. You take the fight to the enemy, or he will take it to you. Study some history.
nicky10013 said:
To attack the groups is to attack the society which only radicalizes otherwise uninterested citizens of the middle east and other countries and indeed, even citizens in Canada.
Wrong. To attack the groups that prey on the (Afghan) society helps that society, and there are extremely few "radicalize(d) otherwise uninterested citizens" protesting our role in Afghanistan anywhere.
No matter how peaceniks long for the "good old days" of the late sixties and early seventies, nothing comes close to the protests back then. It just ain't happpening.
nicky10013 said:
Finally, to Afghanistan to be a truly independent nation, like Iraq, a peaceful government MUST be designed and ratified by the Afghani population while foreign troops are not present. The same situation goes for Iraq. Until that happens, no government will ever be a legitimate government in the eyes of the locals. As long as the government is viewed as a non-legitimate entity, there will always be factional infighting within the country as we see today.
Without the presence of those foreign troops, a "peaceful government ... designed and ratified by the Afghani (sic) population" is a complete impossibility. It had government by thuggery, and that is all that it would ever have without our presence.
May I remind you that, despite threats of death and violence by the Taliban, Afghanistan had a higher rate of voters turning out to exercise what we here take for granted than any Canadian election in years? They truly wanted what, without us, they could not have had and, without our continued presence for a few more years, they will never have again.
People like you would deny them that, and other simple freedoms and pleasures that we also take for granted.
nicky10013 said:
The Middle East has a history of colonialism, and to the populations there, they don't see any difference with what is happening today than what happened 60-70 years ago with the British. They didn't like it then and as it's been proven time and time again that they don't like it now.
Apparently, simply by their lack of opposition to our efforts, let alone more positive indicators, the Afghan population disagrees with this premise.
nicky10013 said:
Again, these are proud, nationalistic people who will never rest until occupational forces are out of their country.
If, by "occupational forces" you mean the Taliban coming in from Pakistan, then yes, you are right in this regard.
A very large number of Afghans are working tirelessly, with our help, to ensure that the Taliban never again gets a grip on their country.
That should not be too difficult to understand.
nicky10013 said:
For the Taliban, most definitely, so long as we stick with it.