Hmmm...who to believe? Green Berets in the field, or the Defense Department...

Ooh-Rah

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Elite Army Green Berets are knocking the performance of the Afghan National Army, telling war tales of its soldiers hiding and quitting the fight.

The Green Beret criticisms, contained in a U.S. Central Command “friendly fire” investigative file, provide a window into the flaws of a national army more than a decade in the making.

The Special Forces soldiers gave poor marks to the institution that is supposed to keep Afghanistan’s democratically elected governments in power. The security force must rebuff an expected Taliban offensive, on its own, once all American troops leave after 2016

This may be my favorite passage in the article:
Gen. Campbell added: “The Afghan military is the most respected institution in Afghanistan. Every poll taken in the last two years, they’re at the very, very top.”

Well if the polls say so...

http://www.washingtontimes.com/news...an-national-army-soldiers/?page=all#pagebreak
 
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Tell me if I'm wrong.

2001:
Hey, these guys suck. They won't fight and if they do it is "Insh'allah" then spray and pray a magazine.
Excuse: They have suffered under the Taliban and without a professional army. We will fix that.
Solution: Found training academy in Kabul.

2004:
Hey, these guys still suck. They won't fight and if they do it is "Insh'allah" then spray and pray a magazine.
Excuse: We don't have enough trainers and have therefore failed to provide the nascent Afghan Army with the proper guidance or funding.
Solution: Hey you conventional Army guys, here's a pointee-talkee card. Go get your FID on.

2007:
Hey, these guys still suck. They won't fight and we're getting our asses shot off.
Excuse: The surprising resurgence of the Taliban has fostered conditions which are not conducive to producing a professional army.
Solution: ISAF, you need to fight harder.

2009:
Hey, these guys still suck.
Excuse: We have failed to create conditons in which our Partners in Peace can operate.
Solution: A surge with a pop-cap.

2012:
Hey, these guys still suck.
Excuse: Really? Impossible! We surged ALL of our troops to that country. Oh, look! Election year!
Solution: none

2014: Hey, these guys still suck.
Excuse: As Afghanistan moves forward with the inauguration of a new President and Operation Resolute Support commences, we are confident that...
Solution:

2016:
F*** it and good luck

Spring 2017:
Ethic cleansing is half-off.
Excuse: The blood and sweat of our soldiers will forever be remembered by the Afghan people as a sign of our combined resolve....
Solution: Godamnitsomuch #whatdifferencedoesitmake
 

The Special Forces soldiers gave poor marks to the institution that is supposed to keep [South Vietnam's] democratically elected governments in power. The [ARVN] must rebuff an expected [NVA] offensive, on its own, once all American troops leave after [1972]

The generals say what the politicians want to hear and the politicians have their disengagement timelines with one eye on the next election and nobody gives a fuck what the guys on the ground have to say. Now take 200mgs of zoloft and wake me the fuck up when the recurring nightmare ends.
 
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But look how well our former counterparts are doing in Iraq...oh, wait...Those are ISIS dudes driving those M1A1s...My mistake.

In 2011, President Obama had the option and the leverage available (i.e. cutting American aid) to pressure the Iraqis to permit us to keep advisory personnel, support units, SF and SOF detachments, air power assets etc in that country past the date when all US troops were supposed to unass OIF. It would have eased the transition...and it just might have made a crucial difference in the manner in which Iraqi forces met the threat from ISIS. It might have given them the fucking 'nads to hold some ground so they wouldn't be standing there now with only half a country and their peckers in their hands.

But POTUS didn't want any of it. He got everybody the fuck out. It was the politically popular thing to do. And it was wrong. SF advisors + some warplanes + terminal guidance could have saved thousands of innocent Iraqi lives, hundreds of square miles of Iraqi territory and saved us from having to try to kill these ISIS motherfuckers now.

The same goddam thing is going to happen in OEF. They're gonna lose half their country when we GTFO in 2016.

Santayana would say let's go back in time to the 1972 NVA Easter Offensive in Vietnam, when almost all conventional US ground troops had rotated home. But we still had support elements in place, fixed wing and rotor, arty, advisory teams, COVANs etc with their PRC-25s and they pulled the fuckin chain and rained steel down on those NVA bastards. John Ripley, the only Marine officer in the Ranger Hall of Fame, stopped the NVA tanks coming through the Hai Van Pass.

It doesn't take much. You can save the whole show with smart dudes and air power. It should have happened in Iraq, but didn't. It should happen in Afghanistan but probably won't.
 
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You can save the whole show with smart dudes and air power.

Agreed and well said; however given inter-service rivalries, unnecessary arguments about "who does what" or "who commands who," funding vs. authorizations vs. politics, it often ends up being one or the other, instead of both.

Smart dudes and Airpower...mutually dependent and necessary for success. Independently, they can only do so much.
 
Fuck Iraq too, they are getting what they voted for.


I agree with you. Fuck them. They don't want us there, let em burn. The point I'm trying to make is we could've prevented a lot of the current misery had we kept some high speed assets in-country for a few more years had we wanted to. At least I think we could have.

For purely personal reasons, and from purely personal experience, I like to see some gain from expenditure. I don't want to look at ghosts the rest of my life and tell them they died in vain. I want to tell them that we did everything we could for the cause they died for. Vietnam, Iraq, Afghanistan...what the fuck good is it if we never see the job through, if the thousands of kids we sacrifice for a specific goal die either without that goal ever being achieved, or having achieved it, seeing it brought to ruin a few years after we give up? I'm sick and fuckin tired of Lost Causes. If you want to go to war, you go to the knife and take the knife to the hilt. You finish the fuckin program. There's a very profound saying in counter-insurgency warfare: Victory is spelled S-T-A-L-E-M-A-T-E. At least fight until you achieve a stable environment. Politicians--and this is the crux of my opinion--will never ever commit to any conflict that lasts more than two presidential elections. So that being said, if you accept it as a working hypothesis--the Special Forces unit at the tip of the spear that actually knows what the problems are and knows what actions need to be taken to correct them, might as well be talking into the wind when they pass advice up the chain. Above a certain level, destiny is predetermined by political whim.
 
Agreed and well said; however given inter-service rivalries, unnecessary arguments about "who does what" or "who commands who," funding vs. authorizations vs. politics, it often ends up being one or the other, instead of both.

Smart dudes and Airpower...mutually dependent and necessary for success. Independently, they can only do so much.

Yet another argument for keeping the A-10 Warthog and transferring it to Army and Marine control... unless we can find a better CAS platform that works as well with troops on the ground.
 
Can't land out on a carrier.

Time to modify the carrier fleet, and the entire DOD thinking that takes the A-10 out of the air. Would not take much to get the A-10 on our flattops, but then I am a little too pro-military for existing DOD mindset. A little off topic, but I could not help myself.
 
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