Man he can write.
Published on December 4, 2004 By greywar In Current Events

From Nation Review Online :

     Do we now remember the impassable peaks, the snowy haunts of the Taliban that were too high for us, or Kabul, the dreaded graveyard of all imperial expeditions? It was just a few months ago, it seems now, that we were admonished about the fury of retaliation to come for daring to fight during Ramadan, the impossibility of working with a nuclear and Islamic Pakistan, and the Wild West nature of Afghanistan's tribes so impossible to forge into the stuff of consensual government. And it was worse still than all that: the cries on the hard left of millions of refugees to come; the European warning about thousands of dead from indiscriminate American bombing; the need to adjudicate 9/11 by jurisprudence rather than arms; and the crazy conspiracy theories of pipelines, neo-cons, 'Jews,' Likuds, and CIA plots.

     Have we also already forgotten the controversies, the buzz, and the insider conventional wisdom that consumed us during the days of uncertainty over Mullah Omar's televised rants; Osama's promises of an American graveyard in the Hindu Kush; the diplomats' trial balloon of a proposed coalition government with the wretched Taliban; the panacea of an all-Islamic peace-keeping force; Johnny Walker Lindh's conflicted high-school years; and a thousand other crises of the hour that sent our statesmen into all-night emergency sessions, our generals into desperate improvisations, and, yes, Americans into battle and on occasion to their deaths?

     Do we remember all this and more when we talk nonchalantly now of elections in Afghanistan or the decency of the Karzai government? Is there a Frenchman or a German to be had at least to say in retrospect, "Yes, you were not the cowboys we slurred you as, but brought something good where there was only evil before"? Do we ponder if but for a second how improbable — indeed, how absolutely preposterous — it was at the time to even suggest that the Afghan people would soon stand in line hours to vote, freed from those who had so sorely oppressed them?

     Have we forgotten what foul and cowardly folk the Taliban were — thugs who lynched women, shot homosexuals, blew up civilization's icons, destroyed a century of culture in Afghanistan, promised us death and worse, and then ran out of town in the clothes of women with what plunder they could carry? Do any of us recall the brave Afghans and Americans, both the planners in Washington who were libeled and the soldiers in the field who routed these butcherers?

 

Read it all over here. Do yourself a favor and bookmark Victor's page while you are there.

Update : (Man I can't type!)

 

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Comments
on Dec 05, 2004
Thanks for the link, greywar. We need someone to remind us where we've been every once in awhile. The purveyors of gloom & doom are ascendant at JU lately.

Cheers,
Daiwa
on Dec 06, 2004
Daiwa - I agree, I think these folks are in total denial of reality here. These are the folks who said we would be slaughtered likethe Russians were in Afghanistan but had nothing to say when the Taliban folded like a house of cards.
on Dec 06, 2004
The purveyors of gloom & doom are ascendant at JU lately.


You can say that again.

Thanks for the link greywar! Very interesting and definitely necessary.
on Dec 06, 2004
It's good to see the warlords have finally been crushed, the Northern Alliance and Taliban disarmed and the president now controls more than the room he lives in after nightfall in Kabul. I hadn't heard of any of this happening but from the tone of that article I guess that's the only rational conclusion. Congratulations US military on an amazing victory! I hadn't expected to ever see Afghanistan become a peaceful nation again.
on Dec 07, 2004
I hadn't heard of any of this happening but from the tone of that article I guess that's the only rational conclusion.
Of course the MSM hasn't seen fit to air any of this. It doesn't fit with their worldview that the us is wrong about everything