- August 16th, 2021, 9:23 am
#630149
thepostman wrote: ↑August 16th, 2021, 6:06 am This is 20 years in the making. If you're putting the blame on just one politician then you're just missing it.Its hitting hard with me as well. I agree that one administration cannot be blamed in general. Bush 43 had no long term plan whatsoever, Obama kicked the can, Trump wanted us out and never really resolved a solid plan on how to remove resources, and Biden...I have no idea what he was thinking. We did our job in the military, and all the efforts were admirable and "not in vain". However, the process of HOW we withdrew was unprecedented and without any consideration for allies or native peoples there. The vacuum that has evolved so quickly is in large part due to that withdraw "strategy". A term I use very loosely. I joined the Marines in 1989 and never have seen a withdraw or repurpose of forces like this...and THAT falls squarely on who is in office right now. From Bush all the way to Biden....this and Iraq is the crap that happens when politicians try to play soldier and don't yield to the experts. And our faithful kids in uniform bear the brunt of cleaning up the disaster....often with great sacrifice. So here we are, once again, putting our young men and women in harms way to try and fix another politically inspired s**tshow. I fear we have not yet seen the loss of American lives that will ultimately result.
There were a ton of failures there and a lot of reasons this was never going to be a success but "woke generals" has ZEEO to do with it. Turn off Tucker and show just a little respect to veterans who are really processing a ton of stuff the past week or so. I have friends who died there. I have friends who lost friends and family members there. But sure. It is "wokeness" in the ranks destroying it all. It is your boogeyman after all.
A friend of mine that spent several deployments there shared this yesterday.
Alleviating suffering is never in vain, even if the final outcome isn’t permanent. I know a young lady from Afghanistan who recently attended the same boarding school I went to in Europe, and is now about to graduate from college here in the States. This is because she was able to get an education while a child in Afghanistan, which she would not have been able to do without the sacrifice of you and your brothers and sisters. I know a family of refugees down the road who were able to start a new life here 7 years ago. They also would not have had that opportunity without the work of our service members who served in Afghanistan. These are just two examples out of millions. There are countless success stories of young women getting an education, becoming successful and thriving. The mission for a permanent peace may have failed, it may have been unrealistic and impossible, but striving towards that mission helped a lot of people over the past 20 years, and that should not be forgotten.This is obviously hitting hard with me and many within the military community. One can be critical of Afghanistan without crapping all over the service of many great leaders.
A lot of mistakes were made in our campaign there. But I don’t want a service member to think that their service and sacrifice there was in vain. If a doctor treats a cancer patient and gets it into remission for 20 years, only for the patient to succumb after that, it doesn’t mean the doctor’s work didn’t matter. You and your brothers and sisters held back this cancer for 20 years. That at least should be remembered.
lynchburgwildcats, LU 57 liked this




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