Discussion:
OT: "I'm Worried About Graham". 🙏
(too old to reply)
De-Trois-Leaning
2024-11-15 16:58:07 UTC
Permalink
Only 9%????  You did good.  I moved to CT in 1981 under Reagan and got a
good deal at 15%.  Yes, my 15% trickled down to the bankers.
<I was going to post>
Thanks, but Carter got the wheels in motion to start the problem, and
Reagan solved the problem. Rot from the previous administration poisoned
the economy for a while.
Tell me again how Trump was responsible for the clown show withdrawl
from Afghanistan. I love to laugh. DEI! DEI! DEI!
The Trump administration signed a deal with the Taliban.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States%E2%80%93Taliban_deal

The Trump administration agreed to an initial reduction of US troops in
Afghanistan from 13,000 to 8,600 within 135 days (i.e., by July 2020),
followed by a full withdrawal within 14 months (i.e., by 1 May 2021),
*if the Taliban kept its commitments.*
It was negotiated and signed under the Trump administration
So?

Did you want us to stay there forever?

"On 20 January 2021, at the inauguration of Joe Biden, there were 2,500
US soldiers still in Afghanistan. Biden's national security adviser,
Jake Sullivan, said that the administration would review the withdrawal
agreement."
and the shameful
withdrawal of US troops and stranding of loyal <?> Afghans would have
been carried out under the re-elected Trump administration
That is speculative BULLSHIT, see above, you lying son of a bitch!

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-afghanistan-idUSKBN29R2NG/

Sullivan told Afghan national security adviser Hamdullah Mohib that the
review would assess "whether the Taliban was living up to its
commitments to cut ties with terrorist groups, to reduce violence in
Afghanistan, and to engage in meaningful negotiations with the Afghan
government and other stakeholders," the statement said.
The White House statement said Sullivan underscored that the U.S. will
support the peace process with "a robust and regional diplomatic
effort," which will aim to help the two sides achieve a durable and just
political settlement and permanent ceasefire.

So what the FUCK happened to the Biden administration;s review process?

THEY had every tool to revise or reneg if they though it was a bad deal,
didn't they , you asshole?

But somehow _their failure to revise_ is now Trump's fault?

Do you see what kind of deceitful madness your TDS spite fever is?

https://www.nbcnews.com/investigations/biden-officials-warnings-crumbling-security-afghan-withdrawal-rcna170121

In the months before the chaotic U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan, Biden
administration officials “watered down” warnings about crumbling
security and failed to launch an emergency evacuation of Americans and
Afghan allies until it was too late, says a new report by House Republicans.

“Our investigation reveals the Biden-Harris administration had the
information and opportunity to take necessary steps to plan for the
inevitable collapse of the Afghan government," said Rep. Michael McCaul,
R-Texas, the committee's chair. "At each step of the way, however, the
administration picked optics over security."

Biden bungled the execution of the withdrawal itself.

After Biden announced in April that all U.S. troops would leave by the
end of August, an employee at the U.S. Embassy in Kabul described being
stunned that “our posture had not shifted to a point that we could get
out relatively easily,” the report said, citing the State Department
documents. Embassy staff members “tried to raise these issues in various
ways, but post leadership never wanted to hear it,” the report said.

By July 13, 2021, 26 officials and staff members at the embassy wrote to
senior leadership about their concerns in a “dissent cable,” the State
Department’s official channel for expressing internal disagreements.
Warning the Afghan government would lose control in Kabul soon after
American troops departed, the cable urged the State Department to take
its evacuation planning seriously, address the backlog of visa
applications from Afghans who worked for the U.S. government and secure
the safety of those aiding the embassy in Afghanistan.

The report focuses heavily on what it said was a failure by the White
House and the State Department to plan for an emergency evacuation of
Americans and Afghans out of the country in case of a Taliban takeover.
It also criticized what it said was the Biden administration’s failure
to promptly order the evacuation once circumstances deteriorated.

In previous testimony to the committee, Army Gen. Mark Milley, the
chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff at the time of the withdrawal,
said the State Department’s decision not to request an evacuation of
personnel until Aug. 15 — the day Kabul fell to the Taliban — was a
“fundamental mistake” that led to the frenzied scenes at the Kabul airport.
had the Democrats not stolen the election.
But they did, and then a whole LOT worse:

https://www.heritage.org/heritage-national-security-experts-never-forget-bidens-botched-afghanistan-withdrawal-killed-13

“Three years after the disastrous withdrawal from Kabul where 13
Americans were killed at Abbey Gate, the Taliban paraded abandoned U.S.
military equipment reminding us of the steep costs of embarrassingly bad
decisions made by the Biden-Harris administration.
“The Biden-Harris administration has returned control of Afghanistan to
the Taliban—now the best equipped terrorist state in history. The 2,459
U.S. military personnel and 20,769 wounded in action in Afghanistan did
not serve for this end result.
“ISIS is rebuilding, Al-Qaeda is resurgent, the administration is
reportedly paying the Taliban $30-40 million a week, and we’ve not
conducted an “over the horizon” counterterrorism strike since the
withdrawal.”

https://foreignpolicy.com/2022/08/15/afghanistan-withdrawal-pullout-military-taliban-chaos-evacuation-biden-inhofe/

After taking office, Biden undertook a superficial review of our
Afghanistan policy—one that totally ignored the advice of his top
military advisor and his commanders on the ground. On April 14, 2021, he
reversed the Trump administration’s conditions-based drawdown policy and
announced that all U.S. forces would be withdrawn from Afghanistan by
Sept. 11 of that year, whether or not the Taliban had met its
commitments under the 2020 agreement.

Today is a deeply sad anniversary. One year ago, the Taliban seized
Kabul, the Afghan government collapsed, and U.S. President Joe Biden
ordered a hasty and chaotic evacuation from Afghanistan. When the crisis
ended two weeks later, 13 U.S. service members had been killed and
hundreds or more U.S. citizens had been left behind to fend for
themselves under the Taliban’s brutal rule.

Future historians will ask how a global superpower like the United
States seemed so unprepared for Afghanistan’s unraveling. Here’s what
they should know: Almost everyone who paid any attention to Afghanistan
saw it coming—everyone, that is, except Biden and his insular circle of
advisors.

The United States went to war in Afghanistan following the 9/11
terrorist attacks for two main reasons: to punish those responsible and
to prevent any future attacks from being planned and organized from
Afghan soil. The two-decade war was costly, not least to our men and
women in uniform: 2,448 U.S. service members were killed and 20,752
service members were wounded during the war. Yet the U.S.-led effort
also helped sustain an Afghan government that, for all of its many
shortcomings, prevented the Taliban’s resurgence, countered al Qaeda and
the Islamic State, and afforded Afghans unprecedented freedoms for
nearly two decades.

Nobody wanted a “forever war” in Afghanistan—I certainly didn’t. That’s
why I supported then-U.S. President Donald Trump’s February 2020
agreement with the Taliban, which conditioned the withdrawal of U.S.
troops from Afghanistan on the Taliban’s implementation of wide-ranging
counterterrorism commitments. In the interim, Trump right-sized the U.S.
force posture, reducing troop levels from roughly 12,000 service members
in February 2020 to 2,500 service members (according to U.S. Defense
Department numbers) by the time he left office—a sufficient presence for
supporting the Afghan government’s security efforts and ensuring that
the Taliban kept their end of the bargain.

After taking office, Biden undertook a superficial review of our
Afghanistan policy—one that totally ignored the advice of his top
military advisor and his commanders on the ground. On April 14, 2021, he
reversed the Trump administration’s conditions-based drawdown policy and
announced that all U.S. forces would be withdrawn from Afghanistan by
Sept. 11 of that year, whether or not the Taliban had met its
commitments under the 2020 agreement.


The only thing that has been “decimated” in Afghanistan, to borrow
Biden’s term, is everything that U.S. service members sacrificed to build.

Eight days after Biden’s announcement, the commander of U.S. Central
Command, U.S. Marines Gen. Kenneth “Frank” McKenzie Jr., told the Senate
Armed Services Committee that he was concerned about the “ability of the
Afghan military to hold the ground that they’re on now without the
support that they have been used to for many years.” He also
acknowledged that counterterrorism strikes would be much harder without
a U.S. presence.

In May 2021, USA Today reported that Afghan translators, who had worked
alongside U.S. personnel for years, feared that the Taliban would take
over and kill them once U.S. troops departed. They begged the Biden
administration for help—and members of Congress, on both sides of the
aisle, echoed their pleas to start evacuating U.S. citizens and
partners. Meanwhile, the Taliban saw Biden’s unconditional withdrawal as
an invitation to ramp up their offensive. Afghan government forces stood
down because they saw no chance of winning without U.S. support.

Throughout this period, Biden refused to reexamine his policy. On July
8, 2021, even as the Taliban were on the march, he insisted that the
Taliban’s takeover of Afghanistan was not yet inevitable. Meanwhile, his
administration refused to expedite the evacuation of U.S. citizens and
Afghan partners because it feared this would signal a lack of confidence
in the Afghan government.

When the Taliban finally entered Kabul on Aug. 15, 2021, they took the
Afghan capital without a fight. Even with many thousands of U.S.
citizens and Afghan partners still in the country, the Biden
administration stuck to its new, self-imposed Aug. 31 deadline for
completing the withdrawal. The result was utter chaos: Thousands of U.S.
service members were suddenly deployed to Kabul’s international airport
to assist the evacuation effort and contend with masses of ordinary
Afghans desperate to escape Taliban rule.

Our service members rose to the occasion, as they always do, and helped
evacuate around 124,000 people under incredibly difficult circumstances.
But the Islamic State still found a way to exploit the havoc, killing 13
U.S. service members near an airport gate on Aug. 26, 2021. Nearly one
year later, the Biden administration has failed to hold the perpetrators
accountable because the withdrawal has severely diminished U.S.
counterterrorism capabilities in Afghanistan."


Now take your bullshit Trump hate and go fucking kill yourself, you
great whinging canuckleheaded gasbag!
De-Trois-Leaning
2024-11-15 16:59:52 UTC
Permalink
Tell me again how Trump was responsible for the clown show withdrawl
from Afghanistan. I love to laugh. DEI! DEI! DEI!
He did make a deal with the Taliban.  Seems he has a bit of
responsibility too.
You're as big a moron as the pecksniff canuck hoser!



https://www.heritage.org/heritage-national-security-experts-never-forget-bidens-botched-afghanistan-withdrawal-killed-13

“Three years after the disastrous withdrawal from Kabul where 13
Americans were killed at Abbey Gate, the Taliban paraded abandoned U.S.
military equipment reminding us of the steep costs of embarrassingly bad
decisions made by the Biden-Harris administration.
“The Biden-Harris administration has returned control of Afghanistan to
the Taliban—now the best equipped terrorist state in history. The 2,459
U.S. military personnel and 20,769 wounded in action in Afghanistan did
not serve for this end result.
“ISIS is rebuilding, Al-Qaeda is resurgent, the administration is
reportedly paying the Taliban $30-40 million a week, and we’ve not
conducted an “over the horizon” counterterrorism strike since the
withdrawal.”

https://foreignpolicy.com/2022/08/15/afghanistan-withdrawal-pullout-military-taliban-chaos-evacuation-biden-inhofe/

After taking office, Biden undertook a superficial review of our
Afghanistan policy—one that totally ignored the advice of his top
military advisor and his commanders on the ground. On April 14, 2021, he
reversed the Trump administration’s conditions-based drawdown policy and
announced that all U.S. forces would be withdrawn from Afghanistan by
Sept. 11 of that year, whether or not the Taliban had met its
commitments under the 2020 agreement.

Today is a deeply sad anniversary. One year ago, the Taliban seized
Kabul, the Afghan government collapsed, and U.S. President Joe Biden
ordered a hasty and chaotic evacuation from Afghanistan. When the crisis
ended two weeks later, 13 U.S. service members had been killed and
hundreds or more U.S. citizens had been left behind to fend for
themselves under the Taliban’s brutal rule.

Future historians will ask how a global superpower like the United
States seemed so unprepared for Afghanistan’s unraveling. Here’s what
they should know: Almost everyone who paid any attention to Afghanistan
saw it coming—everyone, that is, except Biden and his insular circle of
advisors.

The United States went to war in Afghanistan following the 9/11
terrorist attacks for two main reasons: to punish those responsible and
to prevent any future attacks from being planned and organized from
Afghan soil. The two-decade war was costly, not least to our men and
women in uniform: 2,448 U.S. service members were killed and 20,752
service members were wounded during the war. Yet the U.S.-led effort
also helped sustain an Afghan government that, for all of its many
shortcomings, prevented the Taliban’s resurgence, countered al Qaeda and
the Islamic State, and afforded Afghans unprecedented freedoms for
nearly two decades.

Nobody wanted a “forever war” in Afghanistan—I certainly didn’t. That’s
why I supported then-U.S. President Donald Trump’s February 2020
agreement with the Taliban, which conditioned the withdrawal of U.S.
troops from Afghanistan on the Taliban’s implementation of wide-ranging
counterterrorism commitments. In the interim, Trump right-sized the U.S.
force posture, reducing troop levels from roughly 12,000 service members
in February 2020 to 2,500 service members (according to U.S. Defense
Department numbers) by the time he left office—a sufficient presence for
supporting the Afghan government’s security efforts and ensuring that
the Taliban kept their end of the bargain.

After taking office, Biden undertook a superficial review of our
Afghanistan policy—one that totally ignored the advice of his top
military advisor and his commanders on the ground. On April 14, 2021, he
reversed the Trump administration’s conditions-based drawdown policy and
announced that all U.S. forces would be withdrawn from Afghanistan by
Sept. 11 of that year, whether or not the Taliban had met its
commitments under the 2020 agreement.


The only thing that has been “decimated” in Afghanistan, to borrow
Biden’s term, is everything that U.S. service members sacrificed to build.

Eight days after Biden’s announcement, the commander of U.S. Central
Command, U.S. Marines Gen. Kenneth “Frank” McKenzie Jr., told the Senate
Armed Services Committee that he was concerned about the “ability of the
Afghan military to hold the ground that they’re on now without the
support that they have been used to for many years.” He also
acknowledged that counterterrorism strikes would be much harder without
a U.S. presence.

In May 2021, USA Today reported that Afghan translators, who had worked
alongside U.S. personnel for years, feared that the Taliban would take
over and kill them once U.S. troops departed. They begged the Biden
administration for help—and members of Congress, on both sides of the
aisle, echoed their pleas to start evacuating U.S. citizens and
partners. Meanwhile, the Taliban saw Biden’s unconditional withdrawal as
an invitation to ramp up their offensive. Afghan government forces stood
down because they saw no chance of winning without U.S. support.

Throughout this period, Biden refused to reexamine his policy. On July
8, 2021, even as the Taliban were on the march, he insisted that the
Taliban’s takeover of Afghanistan was not yet inevitable. Meanwhile, his
administration refused to expedite the evacuation of U.S. citizens and
Afghan partners because it feared this would signal a lack of confidence
in the Afghan government.

When the Taliban finally entered Kabul on Aug. 15, 2021, they took the
Afghan capital without a fight. Even with many thousands of U.S.
citizens and Afghan partners still in the country, the Biden
administration stuck to its new, self-imposed Aug. 31 deadline for
completing the withdrawal. The result was utter chaos: Thousands of U.S.
service members were suddenly deployed to Kabul’s international airport
to assist the evacuation effort and contend with masses of ordinary
Afghans desperate to escape Taliban rule.

Our service members rose to the occasion, as they always do, and helped
evacuate around 124,000 people under incredibly difficult circumstances.
But the Islamic State still found a way to exploit the havoc, killing 13
U.S. service members near an airport gate on Aug. 26, 2021. Nearly one
year later, the Biden administration has failed to hold the perpetrators
accountable because the withdrawal has severely diminished U.S.
counterterrorism capabilities in Afghanistan."
De-Trois-Leaning
2024-11-15 17:04:29 UTC
Permalink
Tell me again how Trump was responsible for the clown show withdrawl
from Afghanistan. I love to laugh. DEI! DEI! DEI!
He did make a deal with the Taliban.  Seems he has a bit of
responsibility too.
Oh course he was. It was negotiated by his administration.
So what - they had every opportunity to review and reneg if conditions
were not to par, and they BLEW that chance:


https://www.nbcnews.com/investigations/biden-officials-warnings-crumbling-security-afghan-withdrawal-rcna170121

In the months before the chaotic U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan, Biden
administration officials “watered down” warnings about crumbling
security and failed to launch an emergency evacuation of Americans and
Afghan allies until it was too late, says a new report by House Republicans.

“Our investigation reveals the Biden-Harris administration had the
information and opportunity to take necessary steps to plan for the
inevitable collapse of the Afghan government," said Rep. Michael McCaul,
R-Texas, the committee's chair. "At each step of the way, however, the
administration picked optics over security."

Biden bungled the execution of the withdrawal itself.

After Biden announced in April that all U.S. troops would leave by the
end of August, an employee at the U.S. Embassy in Kabul described being
stunned that “our posture had not shifted to a point that we could get
out relatively easily,” the report said, citing the State Department
documents. Embassy staff members “tried to raise these issues in various
ways, but post leadership never wanted to hear it,” the report said.

By July 13, 2021, 26 officials and staff members at the embassy wrote to
senior leadership about their concerns in a “dissent cable,” the State
Department’s official channel for expressing internal disagreements.
Warning the Afghan government would lose control in Kabul soon after
American troops departed, the cable urged the State Department to take
its evacuation planning seriously, address the backlog of visa
applications from Afghans who worked for the U.S. government and secure
the safety of those aiding the embassy in Afghanistan.

The report focuses heavily on what it said was a failure by the White
House and the State Department to plan for an emergency evacuation of
Americans and Afghans out of the country in case of a Taliban takeover.
It also criticized what it said was the Biden administration’s failure
to promptly order the evacuation once circumstances deteriorated.

In previous testimony to the committee, Army Gen. Mark Milley, the
chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff at the time of the withdrawal,
said the State Department’s decision not to request an evacuation of
personnel until Aug. 15 — the day Kabul fell to the Taliban — was a
“fundamental mistake” that led to the frenzied scenes at the Kabul airport.
If the
election had not been stolen from him, as he claims, the withdrawal
would have happened under his second regime.
Who had EVERY OPPORTUNITY to review, reneg, alter, or do NOTHING if the
Taliban missed their promises, and they did!


https://www.heritage.org/heritage-national-security-experts-never-forget-bidens-botched-afghanistan-withdrawal-killed-13

“Three years after the disastrous withdrawal from Kabul where 13
Americans were killed at Abbey Gate, the Taliban paraded abandoned U.S.
military equipment reminding us of the steep costs of embarrassingly bad
decisions made by the Biden-Harris administration.
“The Biden-Harris administration has returned control of Afghanistan to
the Taliban—now the best equipped terrorist state in history. The 2,459
U.S. military personnel and 20,769 wounded in action in Afghanistan did
not serve for this end result.
“ISIS is rebuilding, Al-Qaeda is resurgent, the administration is
reportedly paying the Taliban $30-40 million a week, and we’ve not
conducted an “over the horizon” counterterrorism strike since the
withdrawal.”

https://foreignpolicy.com/2022/08/15/afghanistan-withdrawal-pullout-military-taliban-chaos-evacuation-biden-inhofe/

After taking office, Biden undertook a superficial review of our
Afghanistan policy—one that totally ignored the advice of his top
military advisor and his commanders on the ground. On April 14, 2021, he
reversed the Trump administration’s conditions-based drawdown policy and
announced that all U.S. forces would be withdrawn from Afghanistan by
Sept. 11 of that year, whether or not the Taliban had met its
commitments under the 2020 agreement.

Today is a deeply sad anniversary. One year ago, the Taliban seized
Kabul, the Afghan government collapsed, and U.S. President Joe Biden
ordered a hasty and chaotic evacuation from Afghanistan. When the crisis
ended two weeks later, 13 U.S. service members had been killed and
hundreds or more U.S. citizens had been left behind to fend for
themselves under the Taliban’s brutal rule.

Future historians will ask how a global superpower like the United
States seemed so unprepared for Afghanistan’s unraveling. Here’s what
they should know: Almost everyone who paid any attention to Afghanistan
saw it coming—everyone, that is, except Biden and his insular circle of
advisors.

The United States went to war in Afghanistan following the 9/11
terrorist attacks for two main reasons: to punish those responsible and
to prevent any future attacks from being planned and organized from
Afghan soil. The two-decade war was costly, not least to our men and
women in uniform: 2,448 U.S. service members were killed and 20,752
service members were wounded during the war. Yet the U.S.-led effort
also helped sustain an Afghan government that, for all of its many
shortcomings, prevented the Taliban’s resurgence, countered al Qaeda and
the Islamic State, and afforded Afghans unprecedented freedoms for
nearly two decades.

Nobody wanted a “forever war” in Afghanistan—I certainly didn’t. That’s
why I supported then-U.S. President Donald Trump’s February 2020
agreement with the Taliban, which conditioned the withdrawal of U.S.
troops from Afghanistan on the Taliban’s implementation of wide-ranging
counterterrorism commitments. In the interim, Trump right-sized the U.S.
force posture, reducing troop levels from roughly 12,000 service members
in February 2020 to 2,500 service members (according to U.S. Defense
Department numbers) by the time he left office—a sufficient presence for
supporting the Afghan government’s security efforts and ensuring that
the Taliban kept their end of the bargain.

After taking office, Biden undertook a superficial review of our
Afghanistan policy—one that totally ignored the advice of his top
military advisor and his commanders on the ground. On April 14, 2021, he
reversed the Trump administration’s conditions-based drawdown policy and
announced that all U.S. forces would be withdrawn from Afghanistan by
Sept. 11 of that year, whether or not the Taliban had met its
commitments under the 2020 agreement.


The only thing that has been “decimated” in Afghanistan, to borrow
Biden’s term, is everything that U.S. service members sacrificed to build.

Eight days after Biden’s announcement, the commander of U.S. Central
Command, U.S. Marines Gen. Kenneth “Frank” McKenzie Jr., told the Senate
Armed Services Committee that he was concerned about the “ability of the
Afghan military to hold the ground that they’re on now without the
support that they have been used to for many years.” He also
acknowledged that counterterrorism strikes would be much harder without
a U.S. presence.

In May 2021, USA Today reported that Afghan translators, who had worked
alongside U.S. personnel for years, feared that the Taliban would take
over and kill them once U.S. troops departed. They begged the Biden
administration for help—and members of Congress, on both sides of the
aisle, echoed their pleas to start evacuating U.S. citizens and
partners. Meanwhile, the Taliban saw Biden’s unconditional withdrawal as
an invitation to ramp up their offensive. Afghan government forces stood
down because they saw no chance of winning without U.S. support.

Throughout this period, Biden refused to reexamine his policy. On July
8, 2021, even as the Taliban were on the march, he insisted that the
Taliban’s takeover of Afghanistan was not yet inevitable. Meanwhile, his
administration refused to expedite the evacuation of U.S. citizens and
Afghan partners because it feared this would signal a lack of confidence
in the Afghan government.

When the Taliban finally entered Kabul on Aug. 15, 2021, they took the
Afghan capital without a fight. Even with many thousands of U.S.
citizens and Afghan partners still in the country, the Biden
administration stuck to its new, self-imposed Aug. 31 deadline for
completing the withdrawal. The result was utter chaos: Thousands of U.S.
service members were suddenly deployed to Kabul’s international airport
to assist the evacuation effort and contend with masses of ordinary
Afghans desperate to escape Taliban rule.

Our service members rose to the occasion, as they always do, and helped
evacuate around 124,000 people under incredibly difficult circumstances.
But the Islamic State still found a way to exploit the havoc, killing 13
U.S. service members near an airport gate on Aug. 26, 2021. Nearly one
year later, the Biden administration has failed to hold the perpetrators
accountable because the withdrawal has severely diminished U.S.
counterterrorism capabilities in Afghanistan."


Now take your bullshit Trump hate and go fucking kill yourself, you
great whinging canuckleheaded gasbag!
He would have said
And a giant FUCK YOU TOO - you are NOT an oracle, nor are you possessed
of the slightest factual competence or authority - iow, a pseudo democrap.

Drop damned dead you pecksniff motherfucker!
De-Trois-Leaning
2024-11-15 17:06:41 UTC
Permalink
Tell me again how Trump was responsible for the clown show withdrawl
from Afghanistan. I love to laugh. DEI! DEI! DEI!
He did make a deal with the Taliban.  Seems he has a bit of
responsibility too.
Oh course he was. It was negotiated by his administration. If the
election had not been stolen from him, as he claims, the withdrawal
would have happened under his second regime.  He would have said it
was the best deal. He would have said the Americans never got a better
deal.
I double dog dare you to trash the White House lawn after
Trump moves in, Sargent Dave.
That doughy old cuntbag will just keep tossing canuckleheaded TDS water
balloons down our way from Niagara Falls, what a total piece of cowardly
shit he is!
De-Trois-Leaning
2024-11-16 15:15:49 UTC
Permalink
Tell me again how Trump was responsible for the clown show withdrawl
from Afghanistan. I love to laugh. DEI! DEI! DEI!
He did make a deal with the Taliban.  Seems he has a bit of
responsibility too.
Responsibility ... Trump ... Are you smoking  crack?
Admission of FAILURE...Demotards...here, smoke some reality:


https://www.heritage.org/heritage-national-security-experts-never-forget-bidens-botched-afghanistan-withdrawal-killed-13

“Three years after the disastrous withdrawal from Kabul where 13
Americans were killed at Abbey Gate, the Taliban paraded abandoned U.S.
military equipment reminding us of the steep costs of embarrassingly bad
decisions made by the Biden-Harris administration.
“The Biden-Harris administration has returned control of Afghanistan to
the Taliban—now the best equipped terrorist state in history. The 2,459
U.S. military personnel and 20,769 wounded in action in Afghanistan did
not serve for this end result.
“ISIS is rebuilding, Al-Qaeda is resurgent, the administration is
reportedly paying the Taliban $30-40 million a week, and we’ve not
conducted an “over the horizon” counterterrorism strike since the
withdrawal.”

https://foreignpolicy.com/2022/08/15/afghanistan-withdrawal-pullout-military-taliban-chaos-evacuation-biden-inhofe/

After taking office, Biden undertook a superficial review of our
Afghanistan policy—one that totally ignored the advice of his top
military advisor and his commanders on the ground. On April 14, 2021, he
reversed the Trump administration’s conditions-based drawdown policy and
announced that all U.S. forces would be withdrawn from Afghanistan by
Sept. 11 of that year, whether or not the Taliban had met its
commitments under the 2020 agreement.

Today is a deeply sad anniversary. One year ago, the Taliban seized
Kabul, the Afghan government collapsed, and U.S. President Joe Biden
ordered a hasty and chaotic evacuation from Afghanistan. When the crisis
ended two weeks later, 13 U.S. service members had been killed and
hundreds or more U.S. citizens had been left behind to fend for
themselves under the Taliban’s brutal rule.

Future historians will ask how a global superpower like the United
States seemed so unprepared for Afghanistan’s unraveling. Here’s what
they should know: Almost everyone who paid any attention to Afghanistan
saw it coming—everyone, that is, except Biden and his insular circle of
advisors.

The United States went to war in Afghanistan following the 9/11
terrorist attacks for two main reasons: to punish those responsible and
to prevent any future attacks from being planned and organized from
Afghan soil. The two-decade war was costly, not least to our men and
women in uniform: 2,448 U.S. service members were killed and 20,752
service members were wounded during the war. Yet the U.S.-led effort
also helped sustain an Afghan government that, for all of its many
shortcomings, prevented the Taliban’s resurgence, countered al Qaeda and
the Islamic State, and afforded Afghans unprecedented freedoms for
nearly two decades.

Nobody wanted a “forever war” in Afghanistan—I certainly didn’t. That’s
why I supported then-U.S. President Donald Trump’s February 2020
agreement with the Taliban, which conditioned the withdrawal of U.S.
troops from Afghanistan on the Taliban’s implementation of wide-ranging
counterterrorism commitments. In the interim, Trump right-sized the U.S.
force posture, reducing troop levels from roughly 12,000 service members
in February 2020 to 2,500 service members (according to U.S. Defense
Department numbers) by the time he left office—a sufficient presence for
supporting the Afghan government’s security efforts and ensuring that
the Taliban kept their end of the bargain.

After taking office, Biden undertook a superficial review of our
Afghanistan policy—one that totally ignored the advice of his top
military advisor and his commanders on the ground. On April 14, 2021, he
reversed the Trump administration’s conditions-based drawdown policy and
announced that all U.S. forces would be withdrawn from Afghanistan by
Sept. 11 of that year, whether or not the Taliban had met its
commitments under the 2020 agreement.


The only thing that has been “decimated” in Afghanistan, to borrow
Biden’s term, is everything that U.S. service members sacrificed to build.

Eight days after Biden’s announcement, the commander of U.S. Central
Command, U.S. Marines Gen. Kenneth “Frank” McKenzie Jr., told the Senate
Armed Services Committee that he was concerned about the “ability of the
Afghan military to hold the ground that they’re on now without the
support that they have been used to for many years.” He also
acknowledged that counterterrorism strikes would be much harder without
a U.S. presence.

In May 2021, USA Today reported that Afghan translators, who had worked
alongside U.S. personnel for years, feared that the Taliban would take
over and kill them once U.S. troops departed. They begged the Biden
administration for help—and members of Congress, on both sides of the
aisle, echoed their pleas to start evacuating U.S. citizens and
partners. Meanwhile, the Taliban saw Biden’s unconditional withdrawal as
an invitation to ramp up their offensive. Afghan government forces stood
down because they saw no chance of winning without U.S. support.

Throughout this period, Biden refused to reexamine his policy. On July
8, 2021, even as the Taliban were on the march, he insisted that the
Taliban’s takeover of Afghanistan was not yet inevitable. Meanwhile, his
administration refused to expedite the evacuation of U.S. citizens and
Afghan partners because it feared this would signal a lack of confidence
in the Afghan government.

When the Taliban finally entered Kabul on Aug. 15, 2021, they took the
Afghan capital without a fight. Even with many thousands of U.S.
citizens and Afghan partners still in the country, the Biden
administration stuck to its new, self-imposed Aug. 31 deadline for
completing the withdrawal. The result was utter chaos: Thousands of U.S.
service members were suddenly deployed to Kabul’s international airport
to assist the evacuation effort and contend with masses of ordinary
Afghans desperate to escape Taliban rule.

Our service members rose to the occasion, as they always do, and helped
evacuate around 124,000 people under incredibly difficult circumstances.
But the Islamic State still found a way to exploit the havoc, killing 13
U.S. service members near an airport gate on Aug. 26, 2021. Nearly one
year later, the Biden administration has failed to hold the perpetrators
accountable because the withdrawal has severely diminished U.S.
counterterrorism capabilities in Afghanistan."
De-Trois-Leaning
2024-11-18 17:44:15 UTC
Permalink
Why did over 60 million people vote for Kamala in 2024?
So China Joe could do this to the world:

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-14096437/Sweden-citizens-prepare-WAR-Pamphlets-stockpile-food-water-sent-five-million-households-growing-fears-NATO-Russia-conflict.html


Sweden is sending out five million pamphlets to residents urging them to
prepare for the possibility of war, with instructions on how to
stockpile food and even seek shelter during a nuclear attack, as fears
grow of a conflict between Russia and NATO.

Since the start of the war in Ukraine, Stockholm has repeatedly urged
Swedes to prepare both mentally and logistically for a possibile
conflict, citing the worsening security situation in its vicinity.

The booklet 'If Crisis or War Comes', sent out by the Swedish Civil
Contingencies Agency (MSB), contains information about how to prepare
for emergencies such as war, natural disasters, cyber attacks and terrorism.

'An insecure world requires preparedness. The military threat to Sweden
has increased and we must prepare for the worst - an armed attack,' its
new introduction states.

In one of the more worrying excerpts, which harks back to advice given
by governments during the darkest days of the Cold War, it informs
people of the risk of nuclear weapons.

'The global security situation increases the risks that nuclear weapons
could be used. In the event of an attack with nuclear, biological or
chemical weapons, take cover in the same way as in an air attack,' the
pamphlet instructs readers.

'Shelter provides the best protection. After a couple of days, the
radiation has decreased significantly,' it advises, adding that people
will be warned of attacks over the radio and should go to basements or
subways if there is no better option.

Another message, which has been brought forward from the middle of the
booklet in the updated version, reads: 'If Sweden is attacked by another
country, we will never give up. All information to the effect that
resistance is to cease is false.'

It comes as tensions between Moscow and Ukraine's western allies have
escalated to new heights, with the Biden administration yesterday giving
Kyiv the green light to blast targets inside Russia with US-supplied
long-range missiles.

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