Afghanistan needs such common vision. I propose a post-islamic, civilized (not religious, not tribal) vision for all Afghans. Invent a new national meta-narrative and sell it to the people. — DiegoT
Like the communists had done in the Saur-revolution? They surely wanted to "modernize" Afghanistan. What better way to bring "modernization" than to kill the "Islamists" (as we would call them today):propose a post-islamic, civilized (not religious, not tribal) vision for all Afghans. Invent a new national meta-narrative and sell it to the people. — DiegoT
Between April 1978 and the Soviet invasion of December 1979, Afghan communists executed 27,000 political prisoners at the sprawling Pul-i-Charki prison six miles east of Kabul. Many of the victims were village mullahs and headmen who were obstructing the modernization and secularization of the intensely religious Afghan countryside. By Western standards, this was a salutary idea in the abstract. But it was carried out in such a violent way that it alarmed even the Soviets.
Huge.I'd ask ssu to chime in again, out of my curiosity, just what is Pakistan's role in all this. — Wallows
Great. Economics is important.I majored in economics too. — Wallows
No. I don't think so.And, yes, so it seems to me really paradoxical how US interests are misaligned with competing interests in the Middle East. Is this just a feature of US democracy as to create chaos and then declare the need for policing? — Wallows
Democracy would not be an option, because the country is run by tribes and democracy doesn´t work on a tribal and patriarchal network. — DiegoT
A citizenship would have be slowly built, women would have to have less children, an internal cultural revolution (based on the pre-islamic past, like we did in Europe in the Renaissance) would need to be supported. — DiegoT
Two more generations, and until them, the doctor prescribes an authoritarian transition to keep peace and order and to make changes possible. — DiegoT
I propose a post-islamic, civilized (not religious, not tribal) vision for all Afghans. — DiegoT
The real problem of Afghanistan is that the country has a myriad of different people so that it resembles a Central Asian version of Yugoslavia. Afghanistan is of course much older and the present country can be traced back to the Durrani Empire if not earlier. If successful in denying the Soviets a victory, the Mujahideen were incapable of forming afterwards a functioning coalition and guiding the country back to peace. This has been difficult in many countries where similarly the insurgency hasn't been lead by one single actor, but a whole multitude of various groups with totality different agendas and objectives and that have been united only against the common enemy. So just to blame Afghans as people for not "getting their act together" after the Soviet retreat and the fall of the Communists is quite ignorant and rather condescending.Why would they give up that kind of power and ability? Would you do that? I admire them for what they have achieved. — alcontali
Anybody who dares to contemplate engaging in that kind of behaviour, is at risk of getting unceremoniously terminated by their own relatives. You cannot make an omelette without breaking eggs. — alcontali
I think the structural problem is that if you go to war, your objective would be to win it. In truth, that hasn't been at all the objective. Nothing like that. Just fanciful rhetoric to pander the American voter. This is why American wars get so fucked up.Still, the point here is nation-building, not fighting a landlocked war between Pakistani, Saudia Arabian, and Iranian influence. — Wallows
So, Taliban is back mostly in Afghanistan. Anything new changed or is it same old? — Shawn
Afghanistan — Shawn
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