J. Gayson said:
I have to kinda agree with Cannon Fodder on this one.
Afghanistan IS a worthy cause, but our mission there will not prevent terrorism from happening.
Terrorism is a global problem rooted in countries around the world. Though much of Al-Qaeda was and may still be in Afghanistan, killing them off in Afghanistan will not remove cells, and their recruiting, in other countries.
Obviously if our mission succeeds, Al-Qaeda will lose a major advantage and staging area they once had, but we have to remember, Terrorism thrives in many environments and it would not surprise me if Al-Qaeda simply further expanded its network to make up for the lack of one large space.
After all, the Terrorists who bombed London this past summer probably didn't fly directly in from Afghanistan to do their deed.
Afghanistan is but one small piece of the large terrorism jigsaw puzzle.
I believe Canada needs to do more at home and abroad.
Tougher immigration and border security comes to mind. Also I believe immigrants must not be allowed to move where they want, but be assigned a geographic location where they may live, this prevents cultural ghettos from forming (and thus terrorism recruitment pools) and allows Canada to send people to areas that need them.
From my reading, your points are:
1. Canadian involvement in Afghanistan will not prevent terrorism from happening;
2. Terrorism is routed in many areas;
3. Terrorism is one big jigsaw puzzle;
4. More immigration conditions at home.
5. Summary is questioning why Canada is in Afghanistan.
The current "war on terrorism" conflict is not unlike anything else that has happened in the last
2.5 million years of human history. More recently, there are causes, effects, and consequences
affecting 19th and 20th historyin regards to Europe, the US, Russia, China, central Asia, old
empires, authoritarians, Afghanistan, warlords, the Taliban, and Al-Qaeda, and Al-Qaeda
wannabees. This sets the context, those who ignore geo-history are doomed to repeat it.
Canadian involvement in Afghanistan is affected by the attacks performed by Al-Qaeda on
our allies, the cells and documented terrorist activities occurring through and within our borders,
threats made against our country by terrorist organizations (Al-Qaeda and Hezbollah directly),
and terrorist intimidation of Canadian interests overseas. Can it be argued that Canada is involved
whether we want to be or not?
Afghanistan was the major physical training region for Al-Qaeda for some time. Taliban
support of Al-Qaeda is a fact. Since the Taliban would not cease their support of Al-Qaeda in
the light of 9/11, the US/NATO had the means to take the fight to the region.
Canadian continuing involvement in Afganistan reduces the ability of old Taliban elements
returning to power, stops further physical support of Al-Qaeda in the region, and reduces
one area/support structure in which ourenemies can exploit.
The US and other countries are pressuring African, Middle East, Central Asian, and SE
Asian governmentsand NGOs/other from supporting AL-Qaeda through diplomacy, the UN, and
financial/military threats or incentives.
If Canada was to remove itself from Afghanistan, or countries of interest, the warlords and
Taliban authority figures with weapons would once again take power in the various AFG regions
and any rule of law or humanitarian undertaking developed would disappear. Al-Qaeda would
gain further support and that is not in Canadian interests.
In another sense, global conflicts like this cannot be solved simply in one day. Theres no easy
solution. Most conflicts are based on actions, counteractions, strategy, consequences, that play
out until there is a conclusion. Continuing involvement by countries in Afghanistan will allow the
establishment of the rule of law in the long term and eliminate the return of terrorist support.
As far as domestic Canadian policy affecting immigration, the charter of rights, and various
Acts, ...well...good luck with that. Old country problems brought into Canada from first generation
immigrants and idealogical festering in cultural ghettos can be in conflict with Canadian laws and
main-stream social value. I know a Chinese restaurant owner who served in the PLA
(or so he said). He said if the US and Canada ever went to war against China, he wouldn't be on
our side. I have no idea how much fact or bravado was in that statement. However, it kinda
bothered me as this is IN Canada. Despite this, I've seen this guy hand out food to hobos, help
people off the street, engage anyone in conversation, and seems like a decent enough guy,
even more than most. Complicated issues that cannot be addressed in bi-polarized
discussions. Good luck with that.
** Since typing this up, there were 23 replies to the thread. Holy Cr*p! I have no idea whether
anything I've written is relevent anymore (or ever was so) but I've spent enough time that i'm not
deleting it so I'm clicking post...