S-2
PROFESSIONAL
- Joined
- Dec 25, 2007
- Messages
- 4,210
- Reaction score
- 0
Mr. Burke reassures the Brits that you're not circling the drain. Fine. Nobody thought your "failure" would manifest itself now...like, RIGHT NOW. It's how he began this piece-
"First for the good news: Pakistan is not about to explode."
and how it finished-
"Worrying about the imminent collapse of Pakistan is not going to help us find answers to the really difficult questions that Pakistan poses."
In-between was the meat. He nails his assessment here-
"Recent years have seen the consolidation of a new Pakistani identity between these two extremes. It is nationalist, conservative in religious and social terms and much more aggressive in asserting what are seen, rightly or wrongly, as local "Pakistani" interests. It is a mix of patriotic chauvinism and moderate Islamism that is currently heavily informed by a distorted view of the world sadly all too familiar across the entire Muslim world. This means that for many Pakistanis, the west is rapacious and hostile... you have a nuclear armed nation with a large population that is increasingly vocal and which sees the world very differently from us."
I've seen it reflected verbatim ad infinitum at pk.def. I'm not so convinced here-
"Our interest in Afghanistan has been reduced to preventing it from becoming a platform for threats to the west."
There's far more here than that and he places the imprint of a C.T. war upon the U.N. mandate. I believe the exact opposite. OBL remains a target for my nation. He doesn't dominate our operational nor strategic thinking. Not as a personality. There he's simply a guy on a "wanted" poster.
His organization, however, remains a viable operational and, worse, strategic threat. That said, A.Q. is only a modest part of the current milieu. Change the host status and that may change too.
This premise drives our efforts. We realize a holistic solution is needed internally with both Afghanistan and Pakistan. Equally, there's emerging a recognition that a broad and holistic solution is needed regionally.
Afghanistan offers unique issues and challenges but America doesn't carry the same baggage as Great Britain so our view isn't the same.
We don't view Iraq as a rejection of our values. We see hope in our mission there and believe that we've achieved much already. Great Britain's experience in Basra was far different. Their troops have battled material and manpower supply issues and their final outcome was not to their expectations nor past standards.
This owed NOTHING to their soldiers, Keysersoze and Shiny Capstar. Superb levels of soldierly professionalism in the ranks. I notice no difference in tone nor attitude between our troops and theirs-a very businesslike and calm approach to "getting on with it".
Among British field-grade officers, commanders, political leaders, and parliamentarians? Far different. Clearly, the gulf between their desires and abilities to deliver are evident-depressingly so to them. It shows in their public comments.
I think that the comments expressed by key American policy-makers, past and present, show great candor. Whether General Hayden, Robert Gates, or Bruce Riedel, nobody is denying immense challenges. What's not seen though is the abjectly morose assessments of failure that I've read from the other side of the pond. We're undaunted by the sacrifice necessary.
"Western values" are interesting. Let me know when the "orient" isn't interested in trading goods and services and being sufficiently educated to write the supporting contracts.
Upon that foundation, even an Afghanistan can find a basis for our values and develop a society worth protecting from the likes of OBL.
Some preliminary thoughts...
"First for the good news: Pakistan is not about to explode."
and how it finished-
"Worrying about the imminent collapse of Pakistan is not going to help us find answers to the really difficult questions that Pakistan poses."
In-between was the meat. He nails his assessment here-
"Recent years have seen the consolidation of a new Pakistani identity between these two extremes. It is nationalist, conservative in religious and social terms and much more aggressive in asserting what are seen, rightly or wrongly, as local "Pakistani" interests. It is a mix of patriotic chauvinism and moderate Islamism that is currently heavily informed by a distorted view of the world sadly all too familiar across the entire Muslim world. This means that for many Pakistanis, the west is rapacious and hostile... you have a nuclear armed nation with a large population that is increasingly vocal and which sees the world very differently from us."
I've seen it reflected verbatim ad infinitum at pk.def. I'm not so convinced here-
"Our interest in Afghanistan has been reduced to preventing it from becoming a platform for threats to the west."
There's far more here than that and he places the imprint of a C.T. war upon the U.N. mandate. I believe the exact opposite. OBL remains a target for my nation. He doesn't dominate our operational nor strategic thinking. Not as a personality. There he's simply a guy on a "wanted" poster.
His organization, however, remains a viable operational and, worse, strategic threat. That said, A.Q. is only a modest part of the current milieu. Change the host status and that may change too.
This premise drives our efforts. We realize a holistic solution is needed internally with both Afghanistan and Pakistan. Equally, there's emerging a recognition that a broad and holistic solution is needed regionally.
Afghanistan offers unique issues and challenges but America doesn't carry the same baggage as Great Britain so our view isn't the same.
We don't view Iraq as a rejection of our values. We see hope in our mission there and believe that we've achieved much already. Great Britain's experience in Basra was far different. Their troops have battled material and manpower supply issues and their final outcome was not to their expectations nor past standards.
This owed NOTHING to their soldiers, Keysersoze and Shiny Capstar. Superb levels of soldierly professionalism in the ranks. I notice no difference in tone nor attitude between our troops and theirs-a very businesslike and calm approach to "getting on with it".
Among British field-grade officers, commanders, political leaders, and parliamentarians? Far different. Clearly, the gulf between their desires and abilities to deliver are evident-depressingly so to them. It shows in their public comments.
I think that the comments expressed by key American policy-makers, past and present, show great candor. Whether General Hayden, Robert Gates, or Bruce Riedel, nobody is denying immense challenges. What's not seen though is the abjectly morose assessments of failure that I've read from the other side of the pond. We're undaunted by the sacrifice necessary.
"Western values" are interesting. Let me know when the "orient" isn't interested in trading goods and services and being sufficiently educated to write the supporting contracts.
Upon that foundation, even an Afghanistan can find a basis for our values and develop a society worth protecting from the likes of OBL.
Some preliminary thoughts...