titan said:
Eliminatus said:
titan said:
Eliminatus said:
agracer said:
A country has to want to be free in order to be free. You can't force it on them.
And IMO that was the biggest problem with both wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Their was no clear objective of when we were done (IE: Victory) when the war started, and really I don't see that there is one today either..
This is gospel in my eyes.
I worked with and around both Iraqis and Afghanis for years. I still cannot believe how naive we were towards them. We saw them harbor an enemy and we swooped in with solar panels, generators, and schools and thought all of these people would embrace us with open arms and convert to good democratic and capitalistic people!
My Lord we are such ****ing idiots .....
I'll say it again with conviction. We were never going to win those conflicts. Ever. We weren't allowed to.
True. Especially for Afghanistan.
However, Eliminatus, in your opinion and experience, was that really as true of the Iraqis? If they had had a true occupation government, the kind that presides over both reform and restructuring of everything in iron-fisted fashion like the post Europe occupation --- given the day of the `painted finger' voting --- could the Iraqis in a few decades have learned to run a modern state? How far was Saddam really from running such ---- was the potential not there, if we had been willing to actually do the restructuring with the forcefulness of earlier eras? Are the Iraqis not a somewhat modernized lot --- at least conceivably capable of being a Turkey?
Honest question.
Eliminatus,
Thanks for that excellent overview. Kind of what was looking for. So indeed, the impression that there was at least potential and hope for "the Iraqis undoubtedly had the biggest chance of being and doing what we wanted them to do" -- that they might be able to be a Turkey -- was correct. But you also describe what gets in the way of that --- and who knows, maybe is what makes the strong man so integral and seemingly necessary. A mafiosa comparison makes alot of sense.
Addendum to my earlier.
If Saddam has been a man of vision and forethought (and not quite as ruthless), he could have been amazing world leader. Alas, he wasn't.
This is one of the areas where I do have trouble separating what I know versus what I experienced. My anecdotal experiences color my macro level view of Iraq and Iraqis. I have a hard time not thinking of them as petty, self-serving, vindictive, devious to the nth degree, and serpentine in nature. Those are individualistic qualities in the main but it's how I see them. Obviously biased. But those experiences can't really be discounted either, especially when supported by historical events.
This will be unfair to some Iraqis of course, but on a macro level, I do see them as a people that have to be ruled by an iron fist. They have always done best under dictators ironically enough IMO. Looking at the past 100 years at least. They had their time and even had their Golden Age under the Abbasid Caliphate long ago. But fundamentalist Islam eventually compounded their tribalism and self serving nature and this is what we end up with today. Zero mystery in my eyes. The turmoils there in the past decade bear this out to me.
IOW, I don't think in the last generation or this current one, the Iraqis would ever be seen as what we would generally call a stable country due to their nature. Much less a stable western based country. It is disheartening to know we even tried looking back in hindsight. One of the greatest things that bothers me to this day. Iraq didn't stand a chance with us. I can separate myself to know that that is not 100% on them either. We on the ground level and most in Congress were so damn naive...