Eight months into his term, President Donald Trump is finally paying attention to the ongoing Afghanistan War, where thousands of U.S. soldiers are currently fighting. Trump’s new plan seems a lot like the old ones, with even less detail about how the war—or American involvement in it—will end.
For 16 years, America has been fighting terrorists in Afghanistan and trying to help stabilize the country. America’s longest war has claimed the lives of more than 2,400 U.S. troops and 1,136 allied troops, with tens of thousands wounded. In addition to the loss of life, combat in Afghanistan has cost the American taxpayer an estimated $841 billion (if the fiscal year 2018 budget request is met) in defense costs alone.
Showing posts with label al Qaeda. Show all posts
Showing posts with label al Qaeda. Show all posts
Thursday, August 24, 2017
Tuesday, July 18, 2017
Jacob G. Hornberger: Constantly shifting array of official enemies
After George W. Bush’s invasion of Iraq ended up producing ISIS, which was quickly made into a new official enemy of the United States, I am sure that there were lots of Americans saying to themselves, “Oh my gosh, another official enemy. But once we vanquish this one, it will finally be over. We will finally have peace, tranquility, and prosperity.”
Those people were living a pipe dream. Now that ISIS has been vanquished, is the Pentagon bringing the troops home? Is there going to be a ticker-tape military parade in New York City? Is George W. Bush going to do a painting entitled “Mission Accomplished”?
Those people were living a pipe dream. Now that ISIS has been vanquished, is the Pentagon bringing the troops home? Is there going to be a ticker-tape military parade in New York City? Is George W. Bush going to do a painting entitled “Mission Accomplished”?
Friday, January 23, 2015
James Phillips: ISIS vs. Al Qaeda: The good news and the bad news
The Islamic State, formerly known as ISIS (the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria), has become a bitter rival of Al Qaeda, its parent organization. Its leaders represent a new generation of Islamist militants who have broken with Al Qaeda in a power struggle over Syria and the future of the global Islamist revolution.
Both groups share the same ultimate goal: the establishment of a global caliphate, to be ruled under a harsh brand of sharia (Islamic law). But they clash over what strategy and tactics are best, as well as who should lead the global jihad (holy war) to build the caliphate.
Both groups share the same ultimate goal: the establishment of a global caliphate, to be ruled under a harsh brand of sharia (Islamic law). But they clash over what strategy and tactics are best, as well as who should lead the global jihad (holy war) to build the caliphate.
Thursday, May 30, 2013
Sheldon Richman: Obama’s willful foreign-policy blindness
Republicans are upset about President Obama’s May 23
foreign-policy address, yet politics aside, it’s hard to say why. “We show this
lack of resolve, talking about the war being over,” Senator Lindsey Graham
(R-SC) told Fox News Sunday.
But four days later in his Memorial Day remarks,
Obama said, “Our nation is still at war.”
Tuesday, September 11, 2012
Ken Sofer: Remembering 9/11
America pauses today to remember the innocent men
and women who lost their lives in the World Trade Center, the Pentagon, and a
field in central Pennsylvania 11 years ago. Our citizens honor the police
officers, firefighters, and EMTs who entered burning buildings and dangerous
conditions that day, many losing their lives in the process of saving others.
We remember them even as their families mourn their loss.
Thursday, August 23, 2012
Peter Brookes: Afghanistan mission's new woes
The recent string of “green-on-blue” (Afghan on
US/Coalition troops) attacks in Afghanistan are cause for real worry: Not only
might the Coalition’s vital mission to provide security training to the Afghan
police and army be in trouble, but the country’s entire future might be in
question, too.
Without the high-quality training the Afghan
security forces desperately will need after Coalition forces leave in 2014 (or
maybe sooner), it’s possible Afghanistan will once again fall to the likes of
the Taliban.
And that’s exactly what the Taliban, the Haqqani
network, al Qaeda — and maybe others — want.
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