Saturday, March 28, 2009

The Afghan National Army

Below is a link to a clip I found on the Guardian.UK site which discusses some realities of the readiness and worth of the ANA. How long have we been there now?

You might have to start the video, let it jerk along for a minute then pause it for a minute or so to let it buffer and feed. Depends on the speed of your computer.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/video/2009/mar/27/obama-afghanistan-military

7 comments:

  1. Incredible, except it ain't. "Afghanization" will work even less than "Vietnamization" because the cultural differences are greater: Vietnam had been a French colony for about 100 years, while AFG has never been anything but itself.

    Don't know what gives Yanks - and us - the idea that they can - or have to - turn Afghans into carbon copies of Western soldiers, and that this is the way to secure Afghanistan. Afghans have been great fighters throughout their history, and suddenly their wusses?

    Forget helmets and the paraphernalia white troops must have, forget battalion and brigade training, give the Afghan soldier something to fight for, the basic weapons he needs to defend his village against incursion - that is what it supposedly is about - and let him carry on. Right now we are burdening them with equipment the enemy does not have and they do not need, we are teaching them procedures they do not understand (such as kit inspections) and tactics they will never have to apply, and then we wonder why they don't cut it.

    Having seen it all before, we just don't learn. But we expect them to learn from us!

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  2. Soros speaks!

    http://business.timesonline.co.uk/tol/business/industry_sectors/banking_and_finance/article5989746.ece

    And

    http://business.timesonline.co.uk/tol/business/economics/article5989378.ece

    Best kind of rebellion.

    Peace dudes.

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  3. Good for a chuckle:

    http://www.guardian.co.uk/politics/2009/mar/28/politicians-hubris-medical-condition

    h/t foottothefire

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  4. Don't know what you'll think of this one. Wondered into this article from Krugman's blog.

    http://seekingalpha.com/article/127942-canadian-energy-trusts-the-best-long-term-income-and-dollar-hedge?source=article_sb_popular

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  5. About the learning curve Herb. It's what drives me, I think.

    At the end of the day, it's all bullshit. That, which is created by the wealthy to serve the wealthy by means of manipulation. Financial manipulation being at the top of the list. Skills they have honed for millennium.

    There is no benevolence involved. That illusion is intended to gain the co-operation of as many as is possible. The trump cards lie with those who hold the debt, and those who understand and achieve a simple principle of finance that I was reminded of recently in my readings of the multitude of links provided by fellow seekers.

    Owe the bank 3 billion, and the bank owns you. Owe the bank 3 trillion, and you own the bank.

    My bro practiced that principle, only on a smaller scale. His goal was to own individual bank managers. Same game, different scale.

    Vietnam, and it's lessons are always with me. As time passes, I understand more, and I know there was no victory for common people.

    When Titans fight over their personally perceived territorial rights, common people die, are maimed and for many their lives are destroyed forever. I am reminded of these things on an ongoing basis, and it motivates me to try to explain that all that glitters, is not gold.

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  6. Of medical notes . . .
    ------
    When Ralph first noticed that his penis was growing larger and staying erect longer, he was delighted, as was his wife.

    But after several weeks, his penis had grown fifty centimeters.

    Ralph became quite concerned. He was having problems dressing, and even walking. So he and his wife went to see a prominent urologist.

    After an initial examination, the doctor explained to the couple that, though rare, Ralph's condition could be fixed through corrective surgery.

    "How long will Ralph be on crutches?" the wife asked anxiously.

    "Crutches? Why would he need crutches?" responded the surprised doctor.

    "Well," said the wife coldly, "you're gonna lengthen his legs, aren't you?
    ------
    Secondly (men, PAY ATTENTION!) . . . http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NVFjEPY4mls
    ------
    Author of this article is slightly underwhelmed by Alan Greenspan. -- http://tinyurl.com/dnd8lx
    ------
    If Russia is building hypersonic nukes, how far ahead is Uncle Sam in their development or production? -- http://tinyurl.com/d59zlc

    ". . . new hypersonic cruise missiles with increased range are designed to strike "aircraft carriers of the potential enemy if they pose a direct threat to Russia's security," . . .
    ------
    Is it possible for the NWO to control space? -- http://tinyurl.com/czbx5x

    "The NAS study released this January outlined the devastating impact it would have. For instance it could leave half of the US without power within 90 seconds, without coal after 30 days and would take the country a decade to recover."

    Throw this into the soup this planet is in, and we may al be on a level playing field!

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  7. Dee, Soro's and Rogers never miss an opportunity to slide the blade between ribs when it comes to the UK.

    As for the energy trusts, I would say that timing would be the major factor there like many other opportunities. The dividend concern would be something I would look at. No one is sure how fast energy investments will rise, or when but in the meantime if there are no dividends why bother with the risks? Right now, there are so many unknowns, and so many factors influencing markets that are based on little more than talk, I wouldn't think that anything beyond day trading is worth a great deal. Even that is like playing craps because the general public is a day or two or more behind the news that affects the market.

    ReplyDelete