This is worse than Saigon

I had the opportunity to work with a retired Navy officer who was the Captain of an LPD during the evacuation of Saigon. He told me of the discipline of his men, and the cooperation with the South Vietnamese, and how much effort everyone put into plucking as many Vietnamese from the water or their little boats as they could.

Granted it's a small sample size and I'm watching through the lens of the media, but this sounds a lot worse than his description did.
 

This is worse than Saigon

America’s humiliation in Afghanistan confirms that the woke West is utterly incapable of standing up for itself.
16 Aug 2021 ~~ By Brendan O'Neill
Everyone is saying it’s like Saigon in 1975. Helicopters evacuating an American embassy. Chaotic, distressing scenes at the local airport as American allies, or just plain fearful people, desperately try to flee the country. American officials convincing absolutely nobody with their unhinged claims that the ‘mission has been successful’ (in Anthony Blinken’s words). It’s clear for all to see, commentators insist: Kabul in 2021 is a replay of Saigon in 1975. America humiliated, its enemies ascendant.
Yet here’s the brutal truth: what is happening right now is worse than Saigon. Yes, America’s defeat in Vietnam was an epoch-shaping humiliation for the self-styled defenders of freedom in the Cold War clash with the ‘Evil Empire’ and its communist allies. But the routing of the US in Afghanistan, the alarmingly swift collapse of its allies in the Afghan government, the fall of Kabul like a house of cards, and the fact that Operation Enduring Freedom, launched in the aftermath of the 9/11 attacks, has ended with the endurance of the Taliban instead, with victory for the bad guys – all of this represents the most significant moment of geopolitical decline for the US in decades. Indeed, it raises questions not only about America’s global standing, but also about its very purpose and meaning as a nation.
The scale of the humiliation just suffered by the United States cannot be overstated. The most powerful military force on Earth and its incredibly well-funded allies in Kabul have been pushed aside by a regressive 12th-century movement that thinks adulterers should be stoned to death. The allies of the most technologically sophisticated army in the world have been sent packing by a ragtag Islamist army which set about painting over billboard posters for female beauty products the minute it arrived in Kabul. A nation founded in freedom – and which justified its international presence in the language of freedom for the entire postwar period – has been usurped by a movement so intolerant that it bans pop music, executes comedians who make fun of it, and beats women with canes if they are immodestly dressed.
The impact of America’s failure, of the slow, tragic journey from Operation Enduring Freedom to those images today of desperate Afghans clinging to the undercarriage of the last US military airplanes to leave Afghanistan, will be dire and long-lasting. Most immediately the US has shown itself to be an untrustworthy ally. Which nation or people in need of help would align with this supposedly freedom-loving superpower that abandons its allies to their fate when the enemy comes knocking? Who now will trust the US to assist in the building of new institutions given the rotten fruits of its multi-billion-dollar, 20-year ‘nation-building’ project in Afghanistan – a calamitously weak Potemkin government that capitulated instantly when the Taliban hit the streets of Kabul?
~Snip~
The Afghan humiliation is not only a military failure – it’s a political and moral one, too. Extraordinarily bad political decisions have been taken by the US, including its willingness to trust the Taliban and its belief that this brutal, misanthropic, misogynistic movement could be a player in the ‘international community’. Even now, Washington seems completely out of touch with events on the ground in Afghanistan. Its intelligence officers said the Taliban could take Kabul within 90 days. That was four days ago. They know nothing. One gets the impression of a confused, decaying empire looking with bamboozlement upon even those parts of the earth it rules.
Anyone who thinks the Taliban did not pick up on all of this, on the Potemkin nature not only of the Afghan government but also of Western civilization itself, is kidding themselves. The Taliban will have watched as the mighty American military became bogged down in discussions of critical race theory and the problem of ‘white rage’.
~Snip~
This is the truth: America and its Western allies are too consumed by wokeness to be able to pursue a moral or military struggle for their values. The past 20 years of this slow-burning Afghan humiliation have been a modern case of fiddling while Rome burns. An intolerant Islamist army gains in strength and plots its return to power while the American and British armies obsess over how to become more trans-inclusive, which gender pronouns to use (the Royal Air Force’s list includes ‘ze’, ‘per’ and ‘hir’), how to make training exercises more inclusive of ‘snowflakes’, and how to fight wars without offending the enemy. Who can forget when US navy men wrote ‘Hijack this, fags’ on a bomb destined for Afghanistan and all hell broke loose? Such ‘spontaneous acts of penmanship’ are completely unacceptable, said the then US rear admiral. The Taliban was fighting to the death for its theocratic vision – the West was squabbling over offensive words.
This is why the comparison with Saigon is an illegitimate one. Back then, the US was forced into retreat by powerful external forces – the Vietnamese, of course, and also the anti-war movement in the US, in which vast swathes of the youth and significant sections of the elite turned against the war. The Afghan humiliation, in contrast, is a product almost entirely of internal disarray – of the exhaustion of American politics, of Western geopolitical nous, and of the West’s belief in its own project and its own values. There is nothing positive whatsoever in how the Afghan War has ended. It is a disaster for the Afghan people, a devastating blow to the confidence of the United States, and another backward step for those of us who believe that the values of democracy and freedom are superior and are worth fighting for. The Afghan calamity will cast a long shadow, for a long time.


Comment:
Why would any nation ever agree to be a US ally in wartime? If an election goes south, our allies are screwed. We have seen that example in real life the passed seven months.
Yesterday Uzbekistan reported it shot down a military plane fleeing Afghanistan. Once that happens with a plane with civilians on board, the airport can’t be a good place for the hundreds of hostages who are desperate to flee. What then, Joey Xi?
Remember all those helicopters leaving, not shot down.
We are witnessing history repeat itself.
For anybody who voted Bai Dung and PMS/DSA Democrats, the clusterfuck we are witnessing now is YOUR fault!
America is being ransacked from within and nobody's pumping the brakes this out of control bus. Corruption, incompetence and treason are plainly from within is bringing us down in record time. We've met the enemy and they are us.
b-------b-b-but they wear flowers in their hair...
 
The great satans military superiority is only because of profit margins. Other than that ? It's a bad joke
If you went against a country with REAL weaponry...you'd be evaporated and all those BS carriers would be on the bottom of the ocean making coral reefs. I wonder if the meathead uniforms are bio-degradable ?
 
This is the truth: America and its Western allies are too consumed by wokeness to be able to pursue a moral or military struggle for their values. The past 20 years of this slow-burning Afghan humiliation have been a modern case of fiddling while Rome burns. An intolerant Islamist army gains in strength and plots its return to power while the American and British armies obsess over how to become more trans-inclusive, which
There are also some cold, hard economic realities that make our latest defeat much more difficult to come back from:

The Winner in Afghanistan: China

"Adding to the sense of crisis at the time, the loss of South Vietnam coincided with two more substantial blows to Washington’s international system and the clout that went with it.

"Just a few years before Saigon’s collapse, the German and Japanese export booms had so eroded America’s commanding global economic position that the Nixon administration had to end the automatic convertibility of the dollar to gold."

It has now been fifty years since Dick turned to a fiat currency, and since 2001 US capitalism has been on Federal Reserve life support:

9/11 Launched the First of the Unaccountable Bailouts by the Fed to Wall Street
 
The repercussions of the method Joey Xi Bai Dung used to withdraw will be with us for decades.
The first attack in America attributed to the Taliban, Al Qaeda and "ISIS -K" will come back to bite him dead or alive in the coming year(s).
 
The repercussions of the method Joey Xi Bai Dung used to withdraw will be with us for decades.
The first attack in America attributed to the Taliban, Al Qaeda and "ISIS -K" will come back to bite him dead or alive in the coming year(s).
Biden has exhibited a possibly unintentional dereliction of duty on a daily basis lately likely due to his sad condition of dementia. I think the framers well knew some people become confused with old age and put protection of the people in that amendment in case it becomes tragic for the American people to have a commander in chief who lead them into deadly situations which is exactly what happened to those 13 marines who lost their lives in the deadly situation the failure to keep our citizens out of harm's way. I believe fro. my sources the claim that there are only 100 Americans is believed to be more like 500 to a thousand left including family members of those whose lives and well being threatened by rogue talibanis. I pray for those who are still there and are quite unsafe.
 

This is worse than Saigon

America’s humiliation in Afghanistan confirms that the woke West is utterly incapable of standing up for itself.
16 Aug 2021 ~~ By Brendan O'Neill
Everyone is saying it’s like Saigon in 1975. Helicopters evacuating an American embassy. Chaotic, distressing scenes at the local airport as American allies, or just plain fearful people, desperately try to flee the country. American officials convincing absolutely nobody with their unhinged claims that the ‘mission has been successful’ (in Anthony Blinken’s words). It’s clear for all to see, commentators insist: Kabul in 2021 is a replay of Saigon in 1975. America humiliated, its enemies ascendant.
Yet here’s the brutal truth: what is happening right now is worse than Saigon. Yes, America’s defeat in Vietnam was an epoch-shaping humiliation for the self-styled defenders of freedom in the Cold War clash with the ‘Evil Empire’ and its communist allies. But the routing of the US in Afghanistan, the alarmingly swift collapse of its allies in the Afghan government, the fall of Kabul like a house of cards, and the fact that Operation Enduring Freedom, launched in the aftermath of the 9/11 attacks, has ended with the endurance of the Taliban instead, with victory for the bad guys – all of this represents the most significant moment of geopolitical decline for the US in decades. Indeed, it raises questions not only about America’s global standing, but also about its very purpose and meaning as a nation.
The scale of the humiliation just suffered by the United States cannot be overstated. The most powerful military force on Earth and its incredibly well-funded allies in Kabul have been pushed aside by a regressive 12th-century movement that thinks adulterers should be stoned to death. The allies of the most technologically sophisticated army in the world have been sent packing by a ragtag Islamist army which set about painting over billboard posters for female beauty products the minute it arrived in Kabul. A nation founded in freedom – and which justified its international presence in the language of freedom for the entire postwar period – has been usurped by a movement so intolerant that it bans pop music, executes comedians who make fun of it, and beats women with canes if they are immodestly dressed.
The impact of America’s failure, of the slow, tragic journey from Operation Enduring Freedom to those images today of desperate Afghans clinging to the undercarriage of the last US military airplanes to leave Afghanistan, will be dire and long-lasting. Most immediately the US has shown itself to be an untrustworthy ally. Which nation or people in need of help would align with this supposedly freedom-loving superpower that abandons its allies to their fate when the enemy comes knocking? Who now will trust the US to assist in the building of new institutions given the rotten fruits of its multi-billion-dollar, 20-year ‘nation-building’ project in Afghanistan – a calamitously weak Potemkin government that capitulated instantly when the Taliban hit the streets of Kabul?
~Snip~
The Afghan humiliation is not only a military failure – it’s a political and moral one, too. Extraordinarily bad political decisions have been taken by the US, including its willingness to trust the Taliban and its belief that this brutal, misanthropic, misogynistic movement could be a player in the ‘international community’. Even now, Washington seems completely out of touch with events on the ground in Afghanistan. Its intelligence officers said the Taliban could take Kabul within 90 days. That was four days ago. They know nothing. One gets the impression of a confused, decaying empire looking with bamboozlement upon even those parts of the earth it rules.
Anyone who thinks the Taliban did not pick up on all of this, on the Potemkin nature not only of the Afghan government but also of Western civilization itself, is kidding themselves. The Taliban will have watched as the mighty American military became bogged down in discussions of critical race theory and the problem of ‘white rage’.
~Snip~
This is the truth: America and its Western allies are too consumed by wokeness to be able to pursue a moral or military struggle for their values. The past 20 years of this slow-burning Afghan humiliation have been a modern case of fiddling while Rome burns. An intolerant Islamist army gains in strength and plots its return to power while the American and British armies obsess over how to become more trans-inclusive, which gender pronouns to use (the Royal Air Force’s list includes ‘ze’, ‘per’ and ‘hir’), how to make training exercises more inclusive of ‘snowflakes’, and how to fight wars without offending the enemy. Who can forget when US navy men wrote ‘Hijack this, fags’ on a bomb destined for Afghanistan and all hell broke loose? Such ‘spontaneous acts of penmanship’ are completely unacceptable, said the then US rear admiral. The Taliban was fighting to the death for its theocratic vision – the West was squabbling over offensive words.
This is why the comparison with Saigon is an illegitimate one. Back then, the US was forced into retreat by powerful external forces – the Vietnamese, of course, and also the anti-war movement in the US, in which vast swathes of the youth and significant sections of the elite turned against the war. The Afghan humiliation, in contrast, is a product almost entirely of internal disarray – of the exhaustion of American politics, of Western geopolitical nous, and of the West’s belief in its own project and its own values. There is nothing positive whatsoever in how the Afghan War has ended. It is a disaster for the Afghan people, a devastating blow to the confidence of the United States, and another backward step for those of us who believe that the values of democracy and freedom are superior and are worth fighting for. The Afghan calamity will cast a long shadow, for a long time.


Comment:
Why would any nation ever agree to be a US ally in wartime? If an election goes south, our allies are screwed. We have seen that example in real life the passed seven months.
Yesterday Uzbekistan reported it shot down a military plane fleeing Afghanistan. Once that happens with a plane with civilians on board, the airport can’t be a good place for the hundreds of hostages who are desperate to flee. What then, Joey Xi?
Remember all those helicopters leaving, not shot down.
We are witnessing history repeat itself.
For anybody who voted Bai Dung and PMS/DSA Democrats, the clusterfuck we are witnessing now is YOUR fault!
America is being ransacked from within and nobody's pumping the brakes this out of control bus. Corruption, incompetence and treason are plainly from within is bringing us down in record time. We've met the enemy and they are us.
What nonsense.

I'm actually old enough to remember the fall of Saigon as opposed to just reading about it.

The War in Vietnam ended for the USA in 1973. In 1975, the North Vietnamese started a campaign of aggression against the South Vietnamese Army, and the SVA turned tail and retreated en masse without putting up a fight of any kind. At that point, it wasn't a war of aggression. It was little more than a race to Saigon. The only thing the NVA had to worry about was not getting too far out in front of their supply lines and running out of fuel.

Afghanistan was not much different except for the fact that Trump signed the retreat, and we were still in country when the Taliban started marching on the cities. Again, both the Afghan Gov't and Afghan military folded like a broken card table despite all the training and weapons they had at their disposal

While I agree that serious questions need to be asked and answered as to how we couldn't better assess the readiness and willingness of Afghan soldiers to FIGHT as opposed to turn tail and run, it's not America's fault that they wouldn't stand up to the Taliban that they claimed to fear so much.

Another good question to ask that I haven't heard anyone mention is this: Who was funding the Taliban, and where were they getting all their weapons, ammunition, and supplies (including food and fuel) from.
 
What nonsense.

I'm actually old enough to remember the fall of Saigon as opposed to just reading about it.

The War in Vietnam ended for the USA in 1973. In 1975, the North Vietnamese started a campaign of aggression against the South Vietnamese Army, and the SVA turned tail and retreated en masse without putting up a fight of any kind. At that point, it wasn't a war of aggression. It was little more than a race to Saigon. The only thing the NVA had to worry about was not getting too far out in front of their supply lines and running out of fuel.

Afghanistan was not much different except for the fact that Trump signed the retreat, and we were still in country when the Taliban started marching on the cities. Again, both the Afghan Gov't and Afghan military folded like a broken card table despite all the training and weapons they had at their disposal

While I agree that serious questions need to be asked and answered as to how we couldn't better assess the readiness and willingness of Afghan soldiers to FIGHT as opposed to turn tail and run, it's not America's fault that they wouldn't stand up to the Taliban that they claimed to fear so much.

Another good question to ask that I haven't heard anyone mention is this: Who was funding the Taliban, and where were they getting all their weapons, ammunition, and supplies (including food and fuel) from.


~~~~~~
Unfortunately people like you living in deep dark holes under rocks need to learn a little about world above them...
If you've kept up, it was Pakistan and their intelligence Service SIS that supplied the Taliban with munitions food, medicine, doctors and rest areas.

**********​
 
What nonsense.

I'm actually old enough to remember the fall of Saigon as opposed to just reading about it.

The War in Vietnam ended for the USA in 1973. In 1975, the North Vietnamese started a campaign of aggression against the South Vietnamese Army, and the SVA turned tail and retreated en masse without putting up a fight of any kind. At that point, it wasn't a war of aggression. It was little more than a race to Saigon. The only thing the NVA had to worry about was not getting too far out in front of their supply lines and running out of fuel.

Afghanistan was not much different except for the fact that Trump signed the retreat, and we were still in country when the Taliban started marching on the cities. Again, both the Afghan Gov't and Afghan military folded like a broken card table despite all the training and weapons they had at their disposal

While I agree that serious questions need to be asked and answered as to how we couldn't better assess the readiness and willingness of Afghan soldiers to FIGHT as opposed to turn tail and run, it's not America's fault that they wouldn't stand up to the Taliban that they claimed to fear so much.

Another good question to ask that I haven't heard anyone mention is this: Who was funding the Taliban, and where were they getting all their weapons, ammunition, and supplies (including food and fuel) from.
Same place everyone does Murreeeka ! It's the only thing we produce !I just wish Zenith was still in business,
 

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