20 years and all we have to show for it is a mountain of corpses and trillions in debt

It looks like the corrupt puppet state that we've been propping up in Afghanistan for a generation may not even last to the end of the year.

The U.S. intelligence community concluded last week that the government of Afghanistan could collapse as soon as six months after the American military withdrawal from the country is completed, according to officials with knowledge of the new assessment.

American intelligence agencies revised their previously more optimistic estimates as the Taliban swept through northern Afghanistan last week, seizing dozens of districts and surrounding major cities. Afghan security forces frequently surrendered without a fight, leaving their Humvees and other American-supplied equipment to the insurgents.

The new assessment of the overall U.S. intelligence community, which hasn’t been previously reported, has now aligned more closely with the analysis that had been generated by the U.S. military. The military has already withdrawn more than half of its 3,500 troops and its equipment, with the rest due to be out by Sept. 11.

Fifty of Afghanistan's 370 districts have fallen to Taliban militants since May, and the pace of the collapse is increasing.
Now I realize that the obvious solution is to stay in Afghanistan permanently, but some of you may disagree with that. In fact, some of you might even irrationally believe that the people of Afghanistan should decide what sort of country they want, even if America strongly disapproves.

Well, the good news is that we managed to steal Iraq's oil, amirite?
It turns out, no, I'm not right.

News last week that U.K. oil super-major, BP, is working on a plan to spin off its operations in Iraq’s supergiant Rumaila oil field into a stand-alone company had an extremely familiar ring about it to those who have been in the oil markets business for a while. It was exceptionally reminiscent of the withdrawal of the U.K.-Dutch oil super-major, Royal Dutch Shell (Shell), from Iraq’s supergiant Majnoon oil field in 2017 and also of its withdrawal from Iraq’s supergiant West Qurna 1 oil field in 2018. Each of these announcements also bore a startling similarity to U.S. super-major ExxonMobil’s (Exxon) recent announcement that it too wants to get out of West Qurna 1 and to its withdrawal from the Iraq’s crucial Common Seawater Supply Project (CSSP) some time ago.

We sacrificed over 4,000 American soldiers to steal Iraq's oil and still Big Oil has had enough of Iraq. Why is that?
There's the corruption.

“First, although it was not clear exactly where these extra payments were going, there was nonetheless a risk that if they were found out to be ending up in the pockets of officials then there would be a huge reputational damage to the company involved, however unwittingly, and second, it meant that the compensation that companies were actually receiving was much less than they had signed up for, and their margins were already very tight,” he said.

Imagine that. Iraqi officials are demanding that we bribe them for our thievery of Iraq's resources.
But that isn't the only problem. It turns out that China got there even faster.

The other major factor is that China, especially, but also its partner in Middle East affairs, Russia, with the two countries already effectively in control of almost everything worth having in Iraq’s oil and gas sector and working on gaining power over everything that remains.

No wonder we hate Russia and China so much. They bought the things that we intended to steal. How rude!

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With no anti war hippies to blame losing the war on, we'll just have to blame it on Snoden, Assange and Manning.....and the Dixie Chicks!

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vtcc73's picture

1. List the country or countries who were liberated by or with the aid of the US through armed conflict and/or US inspired or lead coups ie. regime change.

2. List those in the list from #1 who remain in the sphere of influence and/or remain allies.

3. List those from the list in #2 who do not currently receive massive economic, military, and/or political aid. Which ones remain friends with the US?

4. Which ones from #3 are also free to plot and pursue their own destiny without US economic or military coercion or interference?

5. Looking at your list, explain the reasons we citizens continue to overwhelmingly support foreign policies that have brought us so much success.

Looking at the record of the world's remaining superpower from this perspective should be an eye opener. I'm absolutely positive that most will find a way to minimize the obvious conclusions offered to favor continuing to support massive failure upon massive failure.

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"Ah, but I was so much older then, I'm younger than that now..."

@vtcc73 make it to list 3?

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@vtcc73
Netherlands, Belgium Not sure they meet the other criteria.
Denmark is/was in NATO so I guess Denmark is disqualified.

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I've seen lots of changes. What doesn't change is people. Same old hairless apes.

The shares of the MIC are doing quite fine! /S

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Vietnam- We had to stop the domino effect where the entire region would go Communist. Well that was wrong and it cost 60,000 US lives and three million Vietnamese lives. They are our trading partners now and quite market driven, although they insist on one functional political party, whereas we insist on two dysfunctional political parties. It would have been much better to allow the UN mandated election and the unification of Vietnam under Ho Chi Min. There has never been a reconciliation for what the US did to Vietnam. But even before that, there was Korea, One people, one country united for 4 thousand years. Again it was the local insurgent Communists fighting the Japanese. We managed to mangle that up by installing a brutal dictator, Syngman Rhee, in the South. Again, better dead than red … for them. We bombed the hell out of them, leveling almost all buildings of any size and killing another 3 million people. We bomb the shit out of them and they still don't do what we want? They would have been much better if we had left them alone and by now they would have been a free market based, super successful united country, with no nukes to the North. The younger generation in Korea is beginning to realize this. Yes I heard this with my own ears from a very smart Korean. Whenever I can I refer to the country as "Korea", never with the North or South prefix.

Well, here we go again with Afghanistan, and really half of the ME. Just get the F out and let them determine the fates of their own countries. We, clearly, have no ability to do that. We also seem to have no ability to be a good ally. It's really all about the US dollar and the fantasy that the US leads some sort of world wide coalition. One can only ponder as to what would happen if the US economy were to collapse. Well, I think that the British would still bend the knee as they continue to live vicariously through US power, as Ghislaine Maxwell proved.

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Capitalism has always been the rule of the people by the oligarchs. You only have two choices, eliminate them or restrict their power.

@The Wizard

is one of the best I've read anywhere about anything in this subject area. Wow. I want a copy etched in gold.

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@The Wizard Fantastic comment.
you are a superb truth teller.

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"We'll know our disinformation program is complete when everything the American public believes is false." ---- William Casey, CIA Director, 1981

@The Wizard agree that not picking up where France left off would have been so much better for all, including Cambodia.

This is a half decent article: What Explains Vietnam's Current Covid-19 Struggles. It's the second part that purports to answer the question that may or may not be correct. Taiwan had even fewer cases and deaths than Vietnam through 2000 and like Vietnam (and many other countries) is experiencing a surge. Another reason for questioning the answer is that Canada has the highest vaccination rate in the world and it's also experiencing a surge in cases. A comparison of yesterday (one day): Canada new cases 707 (total cases 1,411,634) , deaths 16 (total deaths 26,191) , population 36 million -- Vietnam new cases 285 (total cases 14,232), deaths 2 (total deaths 72), population 98 million.

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