freediver wrote on Mar 5
th, 2019 at 12:12pm:
I am yet to see a better one.
Personally I think just about anything would have been better than the horror that was unleashed by the invasion and overthrow. I'd be interested to know what your threshold limit of deaths and suffering is, or if you even have one, before you draw the line and say "you know, maybe 'sticking it to the muslims' on that occassion wasn't actually worth it"
Anyway, now that the US are now in direct high level negotiations with the taliban in Doha, it would seem that they are simply doing what they could and should have done 17 years ago - minus the invasion and 10s of thousands of dead...
https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2019/03/taliban-talks-resume-doha-2-day-break-190...Keeping in mind, this was the US approaching the taliban, something they could have done 17 years ago, but refused to - a belligerence some US officials themselves described as a "missed opportunity". As it turns out the taliban are actually quite open to compromise, even when they are on the ascendancy militarily, to the extent that they are reportedly even open to the idea of US troops remaining - :
Quote:That seriousness was manifested through Taliban leaders showing pliability about the future of the U.S. troop presence. Despite their strident public position that U.S. troops must withdraw, the Taliban communicated to Raphel and Kolenda that there were circumstances under which they can envision living with a continued American military presence. And they again vowed that an Afghanistan open to Taliban political participation would not host a foreign terrorist presence, satisfying the central U.S. objective of the 17-year war.
Quote:The Taliban’s public position is—and remains—that the foreign military occupation of Afghanistan must end as a precondition for negotiations. But privately, the Taliban indicated an extraordinary flexibility, and even a theoretical openness to a residual U.S. troop presence.
If the U.S.-backed Afghan government amended the constitution, opened up the political system, and accepted Taliban participation, the Taliban negotiators said, they would entertain the idea that the resulting government could invite U.S. forces to stay. Those American troops could continue training Afghan soldiers—including, hypothetically, ex-Taliban commanders. At that point, they said, it wouldn’t be an occupation. They were even open to hosting U.S. surveillance listening posts.
https://www.thedailybeast.com/inside-the-secret-taliban-talks-to-end-americas-lo...