Google
Web
This Site


News Feeds











This is our archive forum. It contains posts from 1999 to 2003. If you prefer, you may participate in our current COMBATSIM.COM Forum




  
my profile | register | search | faq | forum home
  next oldest topic   next newest topic
»  COMBATSIM.COM ARCHIVE FORUM   » Real Military Discussions   » Current   » Afghanistan (Page 1)

 
This topic is comprised of pages:  1  2  3  4  5  6 
 
Author Topic: Afghanistan
Lytiwheedle
Member
Member # 7275

posted 11-12-2000 04:05 AM     Profile for Lytiwheedle   Author's Homepage     Send New Private Message   Edit/Delete Post   Reply With Quote
I was wondering if anyone of you knows an english, french or german URL with news-coverage on Afghanistan.
The last I heard was, that the **** hit the fan as the Taliban launched a last offensive with aid by 9000 Pakistani regulars (who got a years "leave" by the army and let their beards grow). The Taliban captured Taloqan, an important supply-base for Massouds war effort. He can only be supplied by helicopter, and had to shorten his lines, and set up a new defensive perimeter behind a riwer (Pakistani bridging equipment seems to be on its way).
The Taliban are now poised for a last thrust to destroy Massouds Mujaheddin forces and take the entire country.
I got all this from the news section of "Raids" a french military mag.

Commander Massoud must be supported, help from Russia, the US or India is vital now!! (Airstrikes would take of a lot of heat of the Mujaheddin grunts.)

The Taliban fanatics should be destroyed, they are no islamists, they are a bunch of power-mad fanatics!


Posts: 19 | From: Luxemburg | Registered: Oct 2000  |  IP: Logged
mbaxter
Member
Member # 191

posted 11-12-2000 05:55 AM     Profile for mbaxter   Author's Homepage     Send New Private Message   Edit/Delete Post   Reply With Quote
Yes, the Afghan hordes must be stopped at all costs! Doesn't anyone see that if they aren't stopped now they'll march across Russia next and be in Paris before you know it, then it won't be long before we'll fighting them in the streets of Washington DC!

It's a good thing we already knocked out Iraq and Serbia before they could launch their plans for world domination!

Ok I'll stop being a smartass now. Actually I do agree the Taliban and their Pakistani masters are barbarians but no action is required from the US. All we need to do is stop interfering with India and Russia and they'll be happy to do all the work for us.


Posts: 1687 | From: USA | Registered: Sep 1999  |  IP: Logged
Lytiwheedle
Member
Member # 7275

posted 11-12-2000 12:30 PM     Profile for Lytiwheedle   Author's Homepage     Send New Private Message   Edit/Delete Post   Reply With Quote
Well I'm not sure that Russia is still able to do something, their airforce is grounded and ageing, their navy is either on the bottom of the sea or rusting in its docks, and their army is being mauled in Chechnya, which is a completely useless war.
India will not want to mess with Pakistan because they have nukes...

Posts: 19 | From: Luxemburg | Registered: Oct 2000  |  IP: Logged
Bob Wade
Member
Member # 1994

posted 11-12-2000 01:08 PM     Profile for Bob Wade   Author's Homepage     Send New Private Message   Edit/Delete Post   Reply With Quote
This forum has dropped into some propaganda sustained cack-broad.

Both Pakistan & Iran had a few months ago armed General Masood to fight the Taliban...Iran went as far as handing over planes!


Posts: 54 | From: London, UK | Registered: Jan 2000  |  IP: Logged
mbaxter
Member
Member # 191

posted 11-12-2000 02:10 PM     Profile for mbaxter   Author's Homepage     Send New Private Message   Edit/Delete Post   Reply With Quote
Bob Wade - you're only half right. Iran helps Masood & the other opposition to the Taliban, not because they think the Taliban are too extreme but because the Taliban are very anti-Shiite (being a radical Sunni movement). But as for Pakistan, everybody knows they arm and support the Taliban, in fact created the Taliban, and have contributed a lot of personell over the years, too. In fact much of the Taliban are actually Pakistani citizens who joined and began their indoctrination at religious schools in Pakistan itself.
Posts: 1687 | From: USA | Registered: Sep 1999  |  IP: Logged
Slider18
Member
Member # 2198

posted 11-12-2000 02:46 PM     Profile for Slider18   Author's Homepage     Send New Private Message   Edit/Delete Post   Reply With Quote
mbaxter, please stop repeating your propaganda. According to you Pakistan is the reason for all the evil in the world, while India is the most peace loving country around. Pakistan has never provided any support to the Taliban. If you have any proof in this regard, please provide it. Otherwise, stop spreading your agenda.

---
9000 Pakistani regulars
---

Lytiwheedle, where did you get this from?


Posts: 216 | From: Pakistan | Registered: Jan 2000  |  IP: Logged
Vympel
Member
Member # 3693

posted 11-12-2000 08:01 PM     Profile for Vympel   Author's Homepage     Send New Private Message   Edit/Delete Post   Reply With Quote
Lytiwheedle, if Russia were to do something in Afghanistan it would probably be with the airforce ... which is definitely not 'ageing and grounded' ... older aircraft are facing block obsolescence soon (I believe older build Su-24s, Su-25s, MiG-25s, MiG-27 and 23s) but the main component of the air force (Su-27, MiG-29 and MiG-31) are well within their operational lives ... some Su-24 and 25 airstrikes would go a long way in propping up the Northern Alliance.
Posts: 238 | From: | Registered: Mar 2000  |  IP: Logged
Skoonj
Member
Member # 80

posted 11-12-2000 09:02 PM     Profile for Skoonj   Author's Homepage     Send New Private Message   Edit/Delete Post   Reply With Quote
I don't know how keen the Russians would be on helping Massoud. He wasn't exactly nice to the Russians.

Skoonj

------------------
Excelsior, Fathead!
--Jean Shepherd



Posts: 541 | From: Naples, Florida, United States | Registered: Sep 1999  |  IP: Logged
Slider18
Member
Member # 2198

posted 11-12-2000 09:35 PM     Profile for Slider18   Author's Homepage     Send New Private Message   Edit/Delete Post   Reply With Quote
Exaclty, both Masoud and the Taliban are not angels, but the fact is that 90% of Afghanistan is under Taliban control.
Posts: 216 | From: Pakistan | Registered: Jan 2000  |  IP: Logged
SDavis
Member
Member # 7312

posted 11-12-2000 09:43 PM     Profile for SDavis   Author's Homepage     Send New Private Message   Edit/Delete Post   Reply With Quote
I don't know of many news sites dedicated to news from Afganistan. You can probably find some here: http://www.rawa.org/

A must 'primer' of Afganistan and its Pakistani borders is: http://www.theatlantic.com/issues/2000/09/kaplan.htm

And some more info on who is involved in this mess can be found here... http://www.ict.org.il/articles/articledet.cfm?articleid=85


Posts: 37 | From: Or., CA. | Registered: Oct 2000  |  IP: Logged
mbaxter
Member
Member # 191

posted 11-12-2000 10:46 PM     Profile for mbaxter   Author's Homepage     Send New Private Message   Edit/Delete Post   Reply With Quote
quote:
Originally posted by Slider18:
mbaxter, please stop repeating your propaganda. According to you Pakistan is the reason for all the evil in the world, while India is the most peace loving country around.

Uh....yeah.

By the way, if you are a Pakistani or if you support Osama bin Laden and other Islamic causes, don't be ashamed to just come out and admit it. Maybe you can come up with some valid arguments. By simply dismissing things I and others say as "propaganda" with nothing to elaborate that claim, you accomplish nothing.


Posts: 1687 | From: USA | Registered: Sep 1999  |  IP: Logged
Bob Wade
Member
Member # 1994

posted 11-13-2000 12:40 AM     Profile for Bob Wade   Author's Homepage     Send New Private Message   Edit/Delete Post   Reply With Quote
This is exactly the thype of propoganda bull i'm talking about. A few months back arms from Pakistan were given to Gen Masood. Call it a policy U-turn, but the Pakistani leadership said he was not a support of Islamic extremisum and he has (with regard to this) been true to his word. Why this should be the case is that it is my guess there HAS been internal US manouvering with regard to Pakistan, and this is why they have held to their 'wait and see approach'.

If this is a conversation about Kashmir, that is a totally different issue, and i would not expect to see any movement on that front as i would not over China & Taiwan...


Posts: 54 | From: London, UK | Registered: Jan 2000  |  IP: Logged
mbaxter
Member
Member # 191

posted 11-13-2000 02:29 AM     Profile for mbaxter   Author's Homepage     Send New Private Message   Edit/Delete Post   Reply With Quote
Pakistan doesn't back the Taliban? Who are you trying to sell that bull to? Pakistan is the Taliban. They created them, they armed them, supplied them, and their troops have commanded and fought alongside them. This is well documented by numerous different sources. I remember first reading about that years ago in The Economist, then hearing more about in various publications over the years like Newsweek, Washington Post, and others. This is so well know it's rediculous for anyone to claim otherwise.

As for Pakistan now being against the Taliban, that's rediculous. That would be a 360-degree policy shift and would be seen as a betrayal in Pakistan. Just out of curiosity I looked for that in the news and found no such report in any publication including Stratfor.

I did notice this recent report, though, from Pakistan's biggest news service, no less.

Taliban thank Pakistan for their support against US http://www.dawn.com/2000/10/30/top7.htm


Posts: 1687 | From: USA | Registered: Sep 1999  |  IP: Logged
Vympel
Member
Member # 3693

posted 11-13-2000 04:36 AM     Profile for Vympel   Author's Homepage     Send New Private Message   Edit/Delete Post   Reply With Quote
Russian help to the United Front/ Northern Alliance whatever

"October 25, 2000; In Tajikistan, the Russian defense minister met with Ahmed Shah Masood, the leader of the United Front. Russia has long supplied the United Front with weapons, ammunition and other aid. But with the loss of key towns on the Tajik border, it has become more difficult for the United Front to get the stuff from Tajikistan into Afghanistan."

from strategypage.com


Posts: 238 | From: | Registered: Mar 2000  |  IP: Logged
comedy_dave
Member
Member # 5654

posted 11-13-2000 11:20 AM     Profile for comedy_dave     Send New Private Message   Edit/Delete Post   Reply With Quote
quote:
"They created them, they armed them, supplied them, and their troops have commanded and fought alongside them."

actually I believe the US did, as the CIA set up their training camps to be self-sustaining so that once initial training of the Mujahadeen was complete they could take their personnel out to add 'plausible deniability'...I think the US should clean up its own **** !

[This message has been edited by comedy_dave (edited 11-13-2000).]


Posts: 5 | From: | Registered: Jul 2000  |  IP: Logged
Slider18
Member
Member # 2198

posted 11-13-2000 12:19 PM     Profile for Slider18   Author's Homepage     Send New Private Message   Edit/Delete Post   Reply With Quote
Mbaxter you are a joke. Can you please at least have some objectivity about the situation? And please stop repeating press statements from the Indian foreign ministry.

As for the dawn article, it just mentions that the Taliban thanked Pakistan for not allowing its airspace to be used for US attacks.

---
Foreign Minister Abdul Sattar told reporters in Karachi on Saturday "Pakistan has not allowed the use of its airspace (for US attacks) in the past nor will it allow (it) in the future."
---

Now tell me how that equals Pakistani military support for the Taliban!!! You have still not provided me with evidence that Pakistan provides direct military support to the Taliban.

Yes, we do diplomatically support them, and this is because they control 90% of Afghanistan and are friendly to Pakistan. I’ll agree with you that the Taliban have enacted some policies that are right out of the middle ages, but Massoud is also just another inept, corrupt warlord whose losing.

And comedy_dave speaks the truth, it was the CIA that really created the Mujahideen and then left Pakistan to deal with all the mess. Pakistan has had to deal with a lot of mess (2 million Afghan refugees still in Pak) because of the Afghan war, and the least we can get out of this is an Afghani government that’s friendly to Pakistan.

The Taliban is in our interest. I’m sure the US would have done the same thing in our position.

And we seem to be succeeding at this. BTW, what do you think India can do in Afghanistan? It can barely contain Kashmir.

And Incase you missed it, I am Pakistani, and I do not support OBL. Now, tell us Mbaxter, are your loyalties to India?

[This message has been edited by Slider18 (edited 11-13-2000).]


Posts: 216 | From: Pakistan | Registered: Jan 2000  |  IP: Logged
Paul Morrison
Member
Member # 7

posted 11-13-2000 02:02 PM     Profile for Paul Morrison   Author's Homepage     Send New Private Message   Edit/Delete Post   Reply With Quote
Do you support the lynching of Christians on trumped up counts of insulting mohammed?

How about the gang rape of Christian women by members of Lakshary Taiba?

How about the death penalty for a 14 year old illiterate Christian accused of writing defamatory statements on the wall of a mosque (there was no proof of the accusation, the wall was unmarked [islamist religious leaders claimed they removed it, because it was so vile] and the boy *IS* illiterate)?

Pakistan is a hotbed of religious violence, descrimination, persecution and intolerance.
http://www.persecution.com/country/index.cfm?action=overview&countryid=36&PrayerPointID=71
http://www.geocities.com/~iarf/pakreport.html


Posts: 1143 | From: Ontario | Registered: Sep 1999  |  IP: Logged
Skoonj
Member
Member # 80

posted 11-13-2000 02:11 PM     Profile for Skoonj   Author's Homepage     Send New Private Message   Edit/Delete Post   Reply With Quote
I'm with Mbaxter on this one. Pakistan supports Taliban, there's no doubt it. Just like Pakistani Intelligence supported Gulbaddin Hekmatyar during the war with the Soviets, despite Hekmatyar killing more mujahedin than Soviets. Pakistan and Hekmatyar tried to kill Masoud and failed.

Pakistan's government does not have similar interests to the west, especially the US, any longer. They haven't for many years. Pakistan has been coddling terrorists lately, as has Taliban.

I hope the next US president begins to develop closer ties with India. We were wrong to stop the delivery of F-16s to Pakistan a few years ago, but more recently it has been harder to justify close relations with Pakistan.

Skoonj

------------------
Excelsior, Fathead!
--Jean Shepherd



Posts: 541 | From: Naples, Florida, United States | Registered: Sep 1999  |  IP: Logged
Slider18
Member
Member # 2198

posted 11-13-2000 02:22 PM     Profile for Slider18   Author's Homepage     Send New Private Message   Edit/Delete Post   Reply With Quote
---
Do you support the lynching of Christians on trumped up counts of insulting mohammed?
How about the gang rape of Christian women by members of Lakshary Taiba?
How about the death penalty for a 14 year old illiterate Christian accused of writing defamatory statements on the wall of a mosque (there was no proof of the accusation, the wall was unmarked [islamist religious leaders claimed they removed it, because it was so vile] and the boy *IS* illiterate)?
Pakistan is a hotbed of religious violence, descrimination, persecution and intolerance.
---

Paul, I agree with you that the blasphemy law has been repeatedly misused in Pakistan by corrupt politicians to harass the opposition. This is not just a Christian vs. Muslims thing. It has also been used against Muslims. But this is the first time I’m hearing about the “gang rape of Christian women”.

But what does all this have to do with the Taliban or Afghanistan???

[any third world country] is a hotbed of religious violence, descrimination, persecution and intolerance.

And you can change Pakistan to any other country. Take India for example, where Hindu fanatics, burned an Australian missionary and his family to death inside his car, or where the Hindus raped a group of nuns. Now tell me how does this relate to the topic at hand: Afghanistan and the ruling Taliban?


Posts: 216 | From: Pakistan | Registered: Jan 2000  |  IP: Logged
Slider18
Member
Member # 2198

posted 11-13-2000 02:38 PM     Profile for Slider18   Author's Homepage     Send New Private Message   Edit/Delete Post   Reply With Quote
---
I'm with Mbaxter on this one. Pakistan supports Taliban, there's no doubt it. Just like Pakistani Intelligence supported Gulbaddin Hekmatyar during the war with the Soviets, despite Hekmatyar killing more mujahedin than Soviets. Pakistan and Hekmatyar tried to kill Masoud and failed.
Pakistan's government does not have similar interests to the west, especially the US, any longer. They haven't for many years. Pakistan has been coddling terrorists lately, as has Taliban.
I hope the next US president begins to develop closer ties with India. We were wrong to stop the delivery of F-16s to Pakistan a few years ago, but more recently it has been harder to justify close relations with Pakistan.
---


Skoonj, are you aware of Afghani history? If not, let me tell you a little bit from what I know.

Yes, Pakistan does diplomatically support the Taliban because they are currently the only unifying factor in Afghanistan. They may be less then perfect, put at least now there is some sort of security and safety insider Afghanistan. Did you know before the Taliban came to power, there was complete and total anarchy in Afghanistan? A generation had grown up seeing war and death and that is all they knew. Killings, rapes and lootings were rampant after the Soviets left leavening the warring factions of Mujahideens to themselves. There was no sanity in Afghanistan. You could not sleep at night without fearing that someone would chop your head off.

The Taliban through there strict laws have bought back some normality to the situation. Criminals are harshly punished and people are now safer. Yes, the Taliban rule very harshly, but that is exactly what the post-war Afghanistan needs right now. People tend to overlook that quite easily. I know that it’s easy to blame the Taliban for everything, but Massoud is worse then the Taliban.

And you are right that Pakistan’s government does not have similar interests to the US. And why should we? We have our own interests. Some of which include sending back the 2 million Afghan refugees back where they belong. The best prospect for this happening is when the Taliban is under control of the situation. The only US interest is to get OBL and overthrow the Taliban. Of course the US does not realize or care that this will create more problems for Afghanistan and Pakistan, then solve any.

But as they say, each county has it’s own interests, and Pakistan will stick to its own. We supported the US interests for twenty years and it got us 2 million refugees, drugs, guns and sanctions. We can’t keep supporting the refugees anymore; we have enough poor people to feed.

The US can develop closer ties with India if it wants. Just remember, India, like every other country also has it’s own interests to take care off.

Regards


Posts: 216 | From: Pakistan | Registered: Jan 2000  |  IP: Logged
Slider18
Member
Member # 2198

posted 11-13-2000 02:45 PM     Profile for Slider18   Author's Homepage     Send New Private Message   Edit/Delete Post   Reply With Quote
---
Pakistan has been coddling terrorists lately, as has Taliban.
---

Skoonj, what terrorists are we coddling? We let you guys take Kasi, the guy from the embassy bombings in Africa, the Jordanian guy who planned to blow up something during New Year, and many others who I don’t recall right now.

And remember OBL is NOT in Pakistan.


Posts: 216 | From: Pakistan | Registered: Jan 2000  |  IP: Logged
comedy_dave
Member
Member # 5654

posted 11-13-2000 03:54 PM     Profile for comedy_dave     Send New Private Message   Edit/Delete Post   Reply With Quote
As I see it if Pakistan was to suddenly remove support for the Afghanistan the huge number of Afghan refugees inside Pakistan would turn on them, and they cannot afford and do not want that. An internal war would not help them as the Indians would take advantage of this to capture Kashmir (don't know about the Chinese bit). What the Pakistanis have done is simple to move all of this refugees into Kashmir where if they can act as a buffer against India, and settle to hold the land. A smart move to answer the two problems of refugees (several of who are ex-Mujahadeen) and support in Kashmir. In all probability removal of support for Afghanistan who result in destabilising their internal politics.
Posts: 5 | From: | Registered: Jul 2000  |  IP: Logged
Slider18
Member
Member # 2198

posted 11-13-2000 04:58 PM     Profile for Slider18   Author's Homepage     Send New Private Message   Edit/Delete Post   Reply With Quote
Excellent point Dave! I'm glad somebody understands Pakistan's predicament. The US instead of helping us get out of the problem that it partly created, has put sanctions on us!
Posts: 216 | From: Pakistan | Registered: Jan 2000  |  IP: Logged
mbaxter
Member
Member # 191

posted 11-13-2000 05:46 PM     Profile for mbaxter   Author's Homepage     Send New Private Message   Edit/Delete Post   Reply With Quote
quote:
Originally posted by Slider18:
Skoonj, what terrorists are we coddling?

Please! Give it up dude. Despite vested interests in the US who have let Pakistan get away with terrorism that other nations have been blacklisted for, the truth is out my friend. The Pakistani government has sponsored terrorism for years. Heck even this January when the whole world was watching, Pakistan let those airline hijackers drive right out of Afghanistan and straight into Pakistan where they were allowed to walk free. Obviously the Pakistani authorities could've picked up those terrorists easily, they just drove right into Pakistan on a main highway, but they deliberately chose not to.

This is just one example. Even the US state department now acknowledges that Pakistan and Afghanistan have now become the main center of Islamic terrorist activity, replacing the Middle East as the main area of concern. It's only politics that keeps the US from adding Pakistan to the official US list of terrorist states. (They can't add Afghanistan because technically the Taliban aren't the gov't - US still recognizes the opposition as legitimate gov't of Aghanistan).

And by the way, I never quoted any Indian sources, in fact I quoted your own Paki newspapers. And please, give credit where it's due. Not only do I support India (evil Hindu kaffirs to use your lingo), I also support Isreal (bloodsucking Jew vermin), Russia (godless infidels), and the Western democracies (decadent worshippers of a great Satan). I'll favor these anytime over your Muslim authoritarian nations or governments like China & North Korea (your country's two closest chums, by the way). Yes, that does make me biased. Sorry, there's some things you just can't be objective about - freedom is one of those things.

Anyway, as for the claims of intervention, there is a great deal of info out there (not from Indian sources) detailing Pakistani intelligence (ISI) involvement in both Kashmir and Afghanistan. Here are just a few links, the bottom one from your own most prominent newspaper:
http://www.fas.org/irp/world/pakistan/ http://www.csmonitor.com/durable/1999/08/26/text/p7s1.html http://www.dawn.com/weekly/mazdak/20001028.htm

"...UN envoy Lakhdar Brahimi stated publicly this summer that he witnessed numerous Pakistani advisers and soldiers in Kabul."

"With Pakistani military help, including thousands of youth who came from the Islamic madrassas, or schools, in Pakistan, the Taliban soon controlled all but the Panjshir Valley."

Just last week, Masood (head of the anti-Taliban alliance) said "We told the Pakistanis, 'You are backing the Taliban, you send regulars to Afghanistan, you arm and train extremists, we don't believe in your mediation".

Heck Slider even the Paki newspapers openly admit the involvement in Afghanistan and Kashmir: "Across the world, we have been branded an exporter of fundamentalism and terrorism. Pakistanis are known to have taken part in large numbers on the side of the Taliban in battles in Afghanistan. The Russian government has accused us of sending fighters to Chechnya and there are reports of Pakistanis fighting as far away as in Bosnia."

Notice you never cited any sources at all, by the way.

You know, I actually have a good friend who is Pakistani, and rather than deny or try to somehow defend his country's fundamentalist activities, he says he wants to see a modern, secular Pakistan, modeled after Turkey. But he tells me that realistically he sees little hope for this outcome. It's a shame that only a minority of Pakistanis think like him. You may scoff but I think Pakistan is either going to run itself into the ground or end up getting the crap bombed out of it by an angry India (maybe Russia, too). To avoid that I think your countrymen should seek liberalization and progress rather than proxy wars and instability.


Posts: 1687 | From: USA | Registered: Sep 1999  |  IP: Logged
Slider18
Member
Member # 2198

posted 11-13-2000 06:21 PM     Profile for Slider18   Author's Homepage     Send New Private Message   Edit/Delete Post   Reply With Quote
Good job Mbaxter! You’ve completely missed the point of my post. I discuss with only civilized people, not racists like you. And why don’t you stop pretending that you have any Pakistani friends. Just admit your hatred for Pakistan and Islam in general.

Fact: Taliban controls 80%+ of Afghanistan.

Fact: You can't do anything about it.

Fiction: Pakistan is the root cause of evil.

Fact: Arrogant, narrow-minded people like you are the real cause.

Cheers

[This message has been edited by Slider18 (edited 11-13-2000).]


Posts: 216 | From: Pakistan | Registered: Jan 2000  |  IP: Logged
Rapier
Member
Member # 1640

posted 11-13-2000 07:04 PM     Profile for Rapier   Author's Homepage     Send New Private Message   Edit/Delete Post   Reply With Quote
I'm with Mbaxter too, Pakistan and the Taliban are a desease. With their brand of virulent fundamentalism they will eventually turn their attention to us here in the West, so I say we fight back. Help those who are holding the line against them ie Russia, India and Isreal, if they fall we are all in deep trouble.
Posts: 123 | From: Calgary, AB, Canada | Registered: Dec 1999  |  IP: Logged
mbaxter
Member
Member # 191

posted 11-13-2000 07:14 PM     Profile for mbaxter   Author's Homepage     Send New Private Message   Edit/Delete Post   Reply With Quote
Slider, I'm in the IT business and I do know a number of Pakistanis and Indians and have friends among both groups. Nobody who knows me would ever call me racist either.

Again, you deny the well-documented reality and hurl insults. You have no credibility. Anyway, it's rabid Islam that makes already bad situations in these third-world countries even worse. Liberalization in economic, political, and religious terms is the solution, not fundamentalism.


Posts: 1687 | From: USA | Registered: Sep 1999  |  IP: Logged
Slider18
Member
Member # 2198

posted 11-13-2000 07:23 PM     Profile for Slider18   Author's Homepage     Send New Private Message   Edit/Delete Post   Reply With Quote
<b>Taliban controls 80%+ of Afghanistan</b>

Deal with it!

Pakistan already is.

I have nothing more to say to arrogant people like you.


Posts: 216 | From: Pakistan | Registered: Jan 2000  |  IP: Logged
The Whistler
Member
Member # 4609

posted 11-13-2000 07:33 PM     Profile for The Whistler   Author's Homepage     Send New Private Message   Edit/Delete Post   Reply With Quote
I think id agree with mbaxter as well. If the US would just stop [deleted] around in other peoples business (but then they wouldn't have excuses to build F-22s and "Supercarriers"). Just let Israel, India, and Russia sort out their differences by themselves. Then all the terrorists would be attacking them (if there were any left).

P.S. Good ole Osama has training camps in Pakistan.

[This message has been edited by Admin (edited 11-28-2000).]


Posts: 1736 | From: Ottawa, Ontario, Canada sierrahotel69@icqmail.com | Registered: May 2000  |  IP: Logged
Vympel
Member
Member # 3693

posted 11-13-2000 07:34 PM     Profile for Vympel   Author's Homepage     Send New Private Message   Edit/Delete Post   Reply With Quote
I see nothing 'racist' in mbaxters posts, Slider ... and I don't think many people would say strict Islamic fundamentalist law is 'the answer' to Afghanistan's problems ... if what I hear is correct the Taliban makes most of its money for the continuous warring against the United Front from narcotics.

"Russian troops guarding the Afghan border in Tajikistan have begun to return fire against Taliban positions just across the border. Taliban forces, which drove United Front troops away from the border this Summer, have been firing into Tajikistan (as suspected United Front forces.)" (again from strategy page)

How does the Taliban fight its war against the United Front? Conventional assaults? How are their forces organized? Loosely or close-knit regular formations? (Trying to figure out how easily they could be crushed)

[This message has been edited by Vympel (edited 11-13-2000).]


Posts: 238 | From: | Registered: Mar 2000  |  IP: Logged
Slider18
Member
Member # 2198

posted 11-13-2000 08:12 PM     Profile for Slider18   Author's Homepage     Send New Private Message   Edit/Delete Post   Reply With Quote
I too hope that the US stays out of Pakistan's business and let the extremely competent nations of India and Russia deal with Afghanistan.


Posts: 216 | From: Pakistan | Registered: Jan 2000  |  IP: Logged
Slider18
Member
Member # 2198

posted 11-13-2000 08:15 PM     Profile for Slider18   Author's Homepage     Send New Private Message   Edit/Delete Post   Reply With Quote
Vympel, I agree the Taliban is not the best solution for Afghanistan's problems, but the only one for Pakistan's stability I'm afraid.

Posts: 216 | From: Pakistan | Registered: Jan 2000  |  IP: Logged
Slider18
Member
Member # 2198

posted 11-13-2000 08:20 PM     Profile for Slider18   Author's Homepage     Send New Private Message   Edit/Delete Post   Reply With Quote
---
P.S. Good ole Osama has training camps in Pakistan.
---

Ahhh...not really. Pakistan does have camps for Kashmiri militants. I wouldn't call them terrorists. India and you all might though.

But, I don't really care.


Posts: 216 | From: Pakistan | Registered: Jan 2000  |  IP: Logged
patriotSTORM
Member
Member # 1265

posted 11-13-2000 09:40 PM     Profile for patriotSTORM   Author's Homepage     Send New Private Message   Edit/Delete Post   Reply With Quote
You called mbaxter arrogant? Just to make sure we are talking in the same language:

ar·ro·gant (r-gnt)
adj.

Making or disposed to make claims to unwarranted importance or consideration out of overbearing pride.
Marked by or arising from arrogance: an arrogant contempt for the weak.

And from someone who quotes "But, I don't really care."?


Posts: 404 | From: New Zealand | Registered: Dec 1999  |  IP: Logged
SDavis
Member
Member # 7312

posted 11-13-2000 10:35 PM     Profile for SDavis   Author's Homepage     Send New Private Message   Edit/Delete Post   Reply With Quote
To the one defending the Talibani virtues; did you happen to check the RAWA site I had posted in my earlier message? ( http://www.rawa.org ).

As per Pakistan trying to wrying its hands clean of terrorism....you gotta be kidding me.

Is the Christian Science Monitor in cahoots with the Hindus? http://www.csmonitor.com/durable/2000/09/27/fp11s1-csm.shtml

Do you consider ABC to be a mouthpiece of the Indian government? http://more.abcnews.go.com/sections/world/dailynews/binladen000418.html

A very prosperous future for Pakistan indeed! Didn't this newspapers office get bombed recently? http://www.jang.com.pk/thenews/oct2000-daily/23-10-2000/main/main13.htm

Is this guy a Pakistani traitor for speaking out? Are his days numbered? Should the Dawn newspaper expect a bomb blast aswell? http://www.dawn.com/weekly/mazdak/20001028.htm

New York Times, well 'nuff said. http://www.nytimes.com/2000/11/05/world/05OSAM.html
http://freeman.io.com/m_online/bodansky/axis.htm

Try to look up some back issues of the Washington Times and the NYT for articles by Ben Barber and Jeff Goldberg...


Posts: 37 | From: Or., CA. | Registered: Oct 2000  |  IP: Logged
Slider18
Member
Member # 2198

posted 11-13-2000 11:09 PM     Profile for Slider18   Author's Homepage     Send New Private Message   Edit/Delete Post   Reply With Quote
I tend to become arrogant myself when I am dealing with other arrogant people. That's why the tone of my posts changed in the end.

The US cares about it's own interests in the world, right?

Well, so does Pakistan and every other country on this planet.

Get over it.

SDavis, I wish I could show you the images from pre-Taliban anarchist days. Relatively speaking they were worse. Now people can at least sleep peacefully at night

Of course the western press and Paki liberal papers will have anti-Taliban articles. It's NOT in there INTEREST to promote the Taliban.


Posts: 216 | From: Pakistan | Registered: Jan 2000  |  IP: Logged
Div
Member
Member # 5846

posted 11-13-2000 11:14 PM     Profile for Div   Author's Homepage     Send New Private Message   Edit/Delete Post   Reply With Quote
History lesson:
http://www.saag.org/papers/paper101.html

Posts: 75 | From: Canada | Registered: Jul 2000  |  IP: Logged
comedy_dave
Member
Member # 5654

posted 11-14-2000 01:13 AM     Profile for comedy_dave     Send New Private Message   Edit/Delete Post   Reply With Quote
One thing that most people seem to miss is that Pakistan is one unified nation...it is not. It is quad-polar. Politically bi-polar via the US and China and religiously bi-polar via Iran & Saudi-Arabia (who all fund their ends). With so many fingers in the pie is it any surprise that it turned out like it did? Where do the Pakistanis get their say?

Hence what mbaxter does is take the worst of the worst and post them up here. I know he has been to India but by his own word he had not been to Pakistan. I have and he REALLY, REALLY over exaggerates the issues. Yes, there are issues....but no really others than a third world country would face. The poor are easy targets to manipulate, be that via patriotic, religious or economic ground. The building up of these internal factions means that no uniformity or real control at present could be exerted by the powers that be if it where not to be turned into a police state and i do not believe that the numbers are possible.

I think over the recent months, mbaxter's 'agenda' has become very clear...no so much a solution, but a provocation. I would propose to him that if he has Pakistani friends (which reading above I am having difficulty to believe...colleges maybe) i propose he try positive engagement as if he believe his points truly then he of all people should be working towards a solution. He current actions would be interpreted in such a was that those friends that the US has in Pakistan would turn their backs after such damnation and as such US interests also.


Posts: 5 | From: | Registered: Jul 2000  |  IP: Logged
Skoonj
Member
Member # 80

posted 11-14-2000 05:47 AM     Profile for Skoonj   Author's Homepage     Send New Private Message   Edit/Delete Post   Reply With Quote
Slider, if you think the Islamic extremists are so great, why not forcibly convert Kafiristani's up in Chitral? If Islamic extremism is good for Pakistan's stability, surely they must be a destabalizing faction, right?

Skoonj

------------------
Excelsior, Fathead!
--Jean Shepherd



Posts: 541 | From: Naples, Florida, United States | Registered: Sep 1999  |  IP: Logged
Paul Morrison
Member
Member # 7

posted 11-14-2000 07:59 AM     Profile for Paul Morrison   Author's Homepage     Send New Private Message   Edit/Delete Post   Reply With Quote
>Take India for example, where Hindu
>fanatics, burned an Australian missionary
>and his family to death inside his car, or
>where the Hindus raped a group of nuns.

Uh-huh... But I was asking you about *YOUR* country, not about india. I have my own problems with india, but I find your blase attitude to religious violence in Pakistan offensive.

Your country funds and supports guerrilla operations in a neighbouring country (two, actually). You fund international terrorism. There are schools in your country where children are chained to their desks so that they have to study the Koran 24 hours a day. Why do you support a government and a nation that allows these atrocities?


Posts: 1143 | From: Ontario | Registered: Sep 1999  |  IP: Logged

All times are MST (US)
This topic is comprised of pages:  1  2  3  4  5  6 
 

   Close Topic    Move Topic    Delete Topic next oldest topic   next newest topic
Hop To:

Contact Us | COMBATSIM.COM Home

© COMBATSIM.COM, INC. All Rights Reserved.

Powered by Infopop Corporation
Ultimate Bulletin Board 6.04b



Home of the VMF-124 Death's Head Virtual Marine Squadron
Home of the VMF-124 Death's Head Squad