Sunday, July 11, 2010

More War Forevermore

The military slips and tells the truth about our wars in the Middle East.
The United States may still be in the Afghanistan and Iraq region for another ten years, according to Gen. George Casey.


“The types of conflict that we are fighting in Iraq and Afghanistan, and I think are likely to be fighting here for a decade or so, are focused on the people,” Casey, the army's Chief of Staff, said Friday night at the Aspen Institute's Ideas Festival.

“We are not going to succeed in either place by military means alone. You are only going to succeed when the people perceive there is a government represented by their interests, when there is an economy that can give them a job to support their families, when there are educational systems that can educate their family. All those things are essential to the long term success of the military operation.”


Regarding the larger war against “a global extremist network,” Casey also said America has another "decade or so of persistent conflict."

“States, non-states and individual actors who are increasingly willing to use violence” are not going away in the short-term. Casey added, “We believe this is a long term ideological struggle.”
Nine years down in Afghanistan, almost.  Another ten to go.  One has to ask themselves where our country would be without these costly, deadly wars.  If we couldn't solve the problem after 9 years of bombs and guns, what's another ten years going to accomplish?

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