We can't have it both ways. So what do you think - should we send more troops and win the war, or not?

Moderator: Andrew
Fox News wrote:Karzai Challenger Calls for 'Dramatic Increase' in Troops in Afghanistan
FOXNews.com Sunday, October 25, 2009
Afghan President Hamid Karzai's top challenger called for a "dramatic increase" in troops to ensure security in his country, suggesting a failure to send in reinforcements could put Afghanistan "at risk" of falling to insurgents.
"The need for more troops is there in order to reverse the situation," Abdullah Abdullah, who is expected to face off against Karzai in a runoff election in two weeks, told "Fox News Sunday."
President Obama is deliberating over a request from his top commander for such an increase. He's weighing a call by Gen. Stanley McChrystal and other military officials for 40,000 more troops against calls to pursue a more surgical strategy aimed at top Al Qaeda leaders, particularly in Pakistan.
But Abdullah did not say whether Obama is taking too long to determine whether to grant his top commander's request for more forces.
"Even if the decision is made today it doesn't mean tomorrow we'll have troops on the ground. It will take time," he said. But he suggested that as long as Karzai is in power, the war effort will be hampered.
"The Afghan side has not been able to deliver, and the Afghan side has been led by Mr. Karzai," Abdullah said.
A runoff was ordered following findings of widespread fraud in the August election, much of which tilted in Karzai's favor. Abdullah told "Fox News Sunday" that he was not inclined to consent to a power-sharing agreement to avoid the second round.
"I think I should rule it out, because I'm ready to go for a runoff," he said.
But he still warned about the possibility that the runoff will bring with it even more fraud if key reforms are not made. Abdullah reportedly wants the leadership of the election commission replaced before the vote.
"Perhaps we might have to go through the same sort of saga," he said. "It will make the situation very difficult if those conditions ... are not met."
Abdullah warned that without assurances that the vote will be credible it will be difficult to convince voters to turn out. He did not say whether he would consider a boycott of the runoff if reforms are not made.
Fact Finder wrote:PHOENIX, Aug. 17 -- President Obama on Monday defended his administration's new approach to the fierce fighting that rages in Afghanistan, calling it "not only a war worth fighting" but also one that "is fundamental to the defense of our people."
Candidate Obama
8/1/07
Fact Finder wrote:Listen to your Generals Barry.
The_Noble_Cause wrote:The military is overstreched and we're broke.
Bring the boys home, and while we're at it, shut down a bunch of our bases in 63 countries.
Fact Finder wrote:Our leaders are voted into office to do the will of the people - not to force their will on the people.
Whew, that's good to know then. No national health care bill huh?
Time.com wrote:Forty-six percent of respondents said it was "very important" that Congress and the President pass major health reform in the next few months, and an additional 23% said it was "somewhat important." Only 28% found the immediate effort either not very or not at all important. In a separate question, more Americans said it would be better to pass "major reform" to health care (55%) rather than "minor adjustments" (43%).
Fact Finder wrote:Voyager wrote:Fact Finder wrote:Our leaders are voted into office to do the will of the people - not to force their will on the people.
Whew, that's good to know then. No national health care bill huh?
Errrr... yes. The will of the people dictates one:Time.com wrote:Forty-six percent of respondents said it was "very important" that Congress and the President pass major health reform in the next few months, and an additional 23% said it was "somewhat important." Only 28% found the immediate effort either not very or not at all important. In a separate question, more Americans said it would be better to pass "major reform" to health care (55%) rather than "minor adjustments" (43%).
Sep 28, 2009 ... Americans, the polls suggest, like Medicare but not government-run health care
Fact Finder wrote:It's stalled because enough people don't want what they are selling yet.
Fact Finder wrote:Voyager wrote:Fact Finder wrote:It's stalled because enough people don't want what they are selling yet.
That's a good sign that our leaders are actually trying to run a democracy now. Bush and Cheney would have forced it up our asses with no stalling at all to see what the people wanted.
Good point! I think you're starting to see the light a little.
Name for me one thing Bush/Cheney rammed up our asses?
treetopovskaya wrote:i don't think nuking a whole country is the answer. yikes.
Fact Finder wrote:Behshad wrote:I had a feeling that the only way FF would be able to give his opinion would be to paste something he read elsewhere. Can you imagine if you have a debate with him in person ?!?!![]()
I'd imagine debating you in person would result in the same shocked looks I get from most of my silly friends. They throw out their stupid lib utopian ideas and I swat them away like nats. They still love me though, cause they know when the going gets tough who they're gonna call.
Fact Finder wrote:lights1961 wrote:the hell with the polls...do what it takes for outright victory... but Obama wont have the guts...and he will end up like LBJ...especially if the troops lose morale and the WILL to keep on fighting... just my opinion...
Rick
+1
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/w ... 888996.eceFrom The Sunday Times October 25, 2009
Morale dips for American marines in Afghanistan
In a remote part of Helmand troops are dismayed by the ambivalence of locals and a sense that the Taliban can outlast them
Fact Finder wrote:Behshad wrote:Fact Finder wrote:Behshad wrote:I had a feeling that the only way FF would be able to give his opinion would be to paste something he read elsewhere. Can you imagine if you have a debate with him in person ?!?!![]()
I'd imagine debating you in person would result in the same shocked looks I get from most of my silly friends. They throw out their stupid lib utopian ideas and I swat them away like nats. They still love me though, cause they know when the going gets tough who they're gonna call.
That's exactly how I pictured you debating. Swinging your arms all over the place as you are trying to come up with anything you remember reading online and trying your damndest to repeat it word by word , instead of coming with something original , thought of and described by your lil brain
You know, original thinking is ok, but a bit overrated. Learned reasoning and logic however trumps emotional ranting damn near everytime. Except of course for the entertainment factor.
Fact Finder wrote:Behshad wrote:Fact Finder wrote:lights1961 wrote:the hell with the polls...do what it takes for outright victory... but Obama wont have the guts...and he will end up like LBJ...especially if the troops lose morale and the WILL to keep on fighting... just my opinion...
Rick
+1
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/w ... 888996.eceFrom The Sunday Times October 25, 2009
Morale dips for American marines in Afghanistan
In a remote part of Helmand troops are dismayed by the ambivalence of locals and a sense that the Taliban can outlast them
Hey , you finally used some of ur own words to defend your ideas.
"+1".![]()
![]()
I'm proud if youkeep it up and we may have a nice debate at the MR II Fest
. I'll buy you the first beer
Because lights1961 had said it better than I. BTW, what do you think about Afghanistan?
I'll take you up on the Beer and I'll get next.
Voyager wrote:Bush was a dictator, Obama is not.
Seven Wishes wrote:"Abysmal? He's the most proactive President since Clinton, and he's bringing much-needed change for the better to a nation that has been tyrannized by the worst President since Hoover."- 7 Wishes on Pres. Obama
Fact Finder wrote:Voyager wrote:Fact Finder wrote:Voyager wrote:Fact Finder wrote:It's stalled because enough people don't want what they are selling yet.
That's a good sign that our leaders are actually trying to run a democracy now. Bush and Cheney would have forced it up our asses with no stalling at all to see what the people wanted.
Good point! I think you're starting to see the light a little.
Name for me one thing Bush/Cheney rammed up our asses?
Ask the dead soldiers who defended the Bush/Cheney lies about the reasons we went to war against Iraq.
This will probably get locked since it has turned into a Bush vs. Obama thread, so I'm not going to waste any more time posting on it. Bush was a dictator, Obama is not. That pretty much sums up all my answers to all your questions.
Fine, explain the 74% approval in the March 2003 run up to the Iraq War.
Behshad wrote:Fact Finder wrote:Behshad wrote:Fact Finder wrote:lights1961 wrote:the hell with the polls...do what it takes for outright victory... but Obama wont have the guts...and he will end up like LBJ...especially if the troops lose morale and the WILL to keep on fighting... just my opinion...
Rick
+1
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/w ... 888996.eceFrom The Sunday Times October 25, 2009
Morale dips for American marines in Afghanistan
In a remote part of Helmand troops are dismayed by the ambivalence of locals and a sense that the Taliban can outlast them
Hey , you finally used some of ur own words to defend your ideas.
"+1".![]()
![]()
I'm proud if youkeep it up and we may have a nice debate at the MR II Fest
. I'll buy you the first beer
Because lights1961 had said it better than I. BTW, what do you think about Afghanistan?
I'll take you up on the Beer and I'll get next.
I think going to Afghanistan was one of the few right things Bush did. However, I think he shouldve focused 100% on Afghanistan ONLY and he shouldnt have divided our troops to send half to Iraq. You can not tell me we wouldnt have won the war few years ago, had we gone in Afghanistan FULL FORCE and cleaned the damn place up and got rid of Bin Laden and all his sad followers.....
RedWingFan wrote:Voyager wrote:Bush was a dictator, Obama is not.
Probably the stupidest comment I've ever read on this forum.
Voyager wrote:RedWingFan wrote:Voyager wrote:Bush was a dictator, Obama is not.
Probably the stupidest comment I've ever read on this forum.
No, you already won that award. Don't try pushing it off on me... maybe you can sell it on Ebay.
Behshad wrote:I think going to Afghanistan was one of the few right things Bush did. However, I think he shouldve focused 100% on Afghanistan ONLY and he shouldnt have divided our troops to send half to Iraq. You can not tell me we wouldnt have won the war few years ago, had we gone in Afghanistan FULL FORCE and cleaned the damn place up and got rid of Bin Laden and all his sad followers.....
Seven Wishes wrote:"Abysmal? He's the most proactive President since Clinton, and he's bringing much-needed change for the better to a nation that has been tyrannized by the worst President since Hoover."- 7 Wishes on Pres. Obama
RedWingFan wrote:Behshad wrote:I think going to Afghanistan was one of the few right things Bush did. However, I think he shouldve focused 100% on Afghanistan ONLY and he shouldnt have divided our troops to send half to Iraq. You can not tell me we wouldnt have won the war few years ago, had we gone in Afghanistan FULL FORCE and cleaned the damn place up and got rid of Bin Laden and all his sad followers.....
So you believe every Al-Qaeda follower and operative are and were in Afghanistan? Alot of terrorists were killed in Iraq, Hussein is gone and that's a good thing. If he were still in power he'd be competing with Iran in the race for a nuke. Bush's actions in Iraq had Khadaffi acting like a boy scout. Obama's weakness has embolden him to start sabre rattling again.
Honestly if we had gone into Afghanistan exclusively, Saddam would still be in power competing for nukes. And Al-Qaeda terrorists would be gravitating to Afghanistan to fight the war there instead of Iraq. There's no way the war would be over either way. Bush was right when he said this war would outlast his presidency. He stated that from the outset. He told the truth and he was right.
Behshad wrote:Saddam was not a big threat ever since Bush Sr put him in his place. He wasn't even close to START anything nuke related , let alone finish it.
Behshad wrote: Were there terrorists in Iraq ?! Sure. But there are terrorists in many other countries too. You suggest we attack and invade any and every countries that have terrorists hiding there ,!?!?!
In the short term I agree. Removing Hussein or killing Bin Laden would not have ended anything. It would just be on to the next front or battle. Like I said Bush knew this and told us so. But I believe that it's a great thing that Iraq's future is now up to the Iraqi people.Behshad wrote:While Saddams removal from power was an accompishment. It didn't benefit us any more than if we had capture bin laden.
Behshad wrote:Saddam was a huge threat in the 80s & early 90s. However he wasn't all that powefull ever since he was pushed back by Bush Sr. The fact that we went in through his countries that quickly is proof that his once so strong army was severely weakened as a result of sanctions and two previous was he was engaged in.
Seven Wishes wrote:"Abysmal? He's the most proactive President since Clinton, and he's bringing much-needed change for the better to a nation that has been tyrannized by the worst President since Hoover."- 7 Wishes on Pres. Obama
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