- Joined
- Sep 18, 2010
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But we won those, decisively.We've learned through the bombings of civilian population centers like Berlin, Tokyo...
But we won those, decisively.We've learned through the bombings of civilian population centers like Berlin, Tokyo...
The fucked up part is though...a few neighbors don't like you? Label you a collaborator? You my friend, are dog food.
I'd like to label some neighbors' dogs as collaborators.If you owe somebody money, you're debt free as soon as you can call him a collaborator.
I don't know...Japan and Germany effectively were pretty dang peaceful in comparison to Iraq post-hostilities. And then Afghanistan the war basically has not ended. I don't truly know what it will take, but based on those conflicts, for a country to actually be rebuilt it takes a significant portion of the population dying during the war and then a significant occupation force.Targeting the medical personnel and facilities of your enemy may be effective terror tactics in the short-term; but in the long run it will only give your enemy more incentive to hate and resist you.
We've learned through the bombings of civilian population centers like Berlin, Tokyo, London, Hanoi, that despite material destruction it cements unity and national will and increases defiance.
I don't know...Japan and Germany effectively were pretty dang peaceful in comparison to Iraq post-hostilities. And then Afghanistan the war basically has not ended. I don't truly know what it will take, but based on those conflicts, for a country to actually be rebuilt it takes a significant portion of the population dying during the war and then a significant occupation force.
It was an acceptable strategy then. It did work then, not sure where that puts us today though.
Japan and Germany were countries with a sense of identity and unity. Afghanistan and Iraq are just areas on the map with lines drawn around them.I don't know...Japan and Germany effectively were pretty dang peaceful in comparison to Iraq post-hostilities. And then Afghanistan the war basically has not ended. I don't truly know what it will take, but based on those conflicts, for a country to actually be rebuilt it takes a significant portion of the population dying during the war and then a significant occupation force.
It was an acceptable strategy then. It did work then, not sure where that puts us today though.
Japan and Germany were countries with a sense of identity and unity. Afghanistan and Iraq are just areas on the map with lines drawn around them.
There's both a German and Japanese language and ethnicity, that doesn't exist in Iraq or Afghanistan.
A quick Google search indicates that this is an Orthodox Sunni mosque, very interesting.Interestingly, one of the attacks was near the Prophet's Mosque (Al Masjid an-Nabwi)
If Saudi Arabia started to really hunt down financiers in their country
(CNN) — Secretary of Defense Ash Carter, who arrived in Baghdad Monday, announced the U.S. is sending 560 additional troops to Iraq as part of the stepped-up fight against the "cancer" of ISIS.
Airfield ops?Another 560 of those boots not on the ground are taking plane trips soon.
Ash Carter: U.S. sending more troops to Iraq - CNNPolitics.com
Damn that dude is still alive? :-/
Which one are we counting as the first stealth war?Airfield ops?
AF? Avn Bn?
Funny how we have no breakdown on force disposition, which services are on the ground etc.
Obama's 2nd stealth war and the media doesn't care?