Unlike the invasion and subsequent defeat which cost very little?
My comparison was to if this had been done in a more managed manner over weeks and months instead.
Unlike the invasion and subsequent defeat which cost very little?
What really pees me off about Afghanistan and the people constantly referring to "Us" or "We" going in and causing or contributing to this mess is that NO-ONE WANTED THIS!
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Protests_against_the_war_in_Afghanistan
Public money used against our will and now we are left to pick up the pieces.
I'd be interested to know how the US and allies will evacuate their own soldiers. Unless you've literally got 20 planes full taking off at the same time, you'll be leaving the last bunch of soldiers vulnerable.
Presumably they'll also be reliant on the Taliban to secure the airport so that there's not a rush by Afghani's at the end to try and get on a plane.
I'm not sure if you're old enough to appreciate just how world altering the attacks on 9/11 were (combined with the subsequent Anthrax attacks on the US - often forgotten), but the overwhelming vast majority of the UK was fully behind the US/UK going into Afghanistan in October 2001 to "get Bin Laden" as shown by the tiny figure of just 20K-ish people involved in the UK protests (approx 0.02% of the UK pop).
After that initial "get Bin Laden" phase (6-12 months at most) we pivoted to "Nation Building" which, again, the overwhelming vast majority were behind but we were starting to show some wariness. It's only since 2003 and the shocking decision to "forget" about Afghanistan to concentrate on Iraq that the Taliban, who'd virtually left the entire of Afghanistan, started to come back leading to the 2004-5 with the increase in combat leading a change in public perception on what we were doing there.
I'm not sure if you're old enough to appreciate just how world altering the attacks on 9/11 were (combined with the subsequent Anthrax attacks on the US - often forgotten), but the overwhelming vast majority of the UK was fully behind the US/UK going into Afghanistan in October 2001 to "get Bin Laden" as shown by the tiny figure of just 20K-ish people involved in the UK protests (approx 0.02% of the UK pop).
After that initial "get Bin Laden" phase (6-12 months at most) we pivoted to "Nation Building" which, again, the overwhelming vast majority were behind but we were starting to show some wariness. It's only since 2003 and the shocking decision to "forget" about Afghanistan to concentrate on Iraq that the Taliban, who'd virtually left the entire of Afghanistan, started to come back leading to the 2004-5 with the increase in combat leading a change in public perception on what we were doing there.
If you frame it as a percentage of the population then of course It looks tiny. The fact of the matter is that the Stop the War protests were the largest in British history and had around 750'000 to 1'000'000 people.I'm not sure if you're old enough to appreciate just how world altering the attacks on 9/11 were (combined with the subsequent Anthrax attacks on the US - often forgotten), but the overwhelming vast majority of the UK was fully behind the US/UK going into Afghanistan in October 2001 to "get Bin Laden" as shown by the tiny figure of just 20K-ish people involved in the UK protests (approx 0.02% of the UK pop).
After that initial "get Bin Laden" phase (6-12 months at most) we pivoted to "Nation Building" which, again, the overwhelming vast majority were behind but we were starting to show some wariness. It's only since 2003 and the shocking decision to "forget" about Afghanistan to concentrate on Iraq that the Taliban, who'd virtually left the entire of Afghanistan, started to come back leading to the 2004-5 with the increase in combat leading a change in public perception on what we were doing there.
It's certainly true that the protests only grew in size. The 20'000 figure was from 2001 but the general sentiment even back then was one of hesitancy. It was the amazing disappearing WMDs that sparked the larger protests when it became apparent that we had been lied to.@Tefal & @Zatoichi.uK - Remember we are talking about the 2001 invasion of Afghanistan, not the absolutely huge anti-Iraq war protests of 2003 or the subsequent 2005+ anti-Afghanistan war protests.
It's certainly true that the protests only grew in size. The 20'000 figure was from 2001 but the general sentiment even back then was one of hesitancy. It was the amazing disappearing WMDs that sparked the larger protests when it became apparent that we had been lied to.
there was trepidation, when the taliban asked for evidence against bin laden, the USA had none, there was a lot of errrrr at the timeAgain, as I'm unsure of your age and therefore experience of 9/11, there wasn't a "general" hesitancy at all, there was virtually ZERO hesitancy in the Western world, never mind just the UK. Literally everyone was fully behind the US "getting Bin Laden". It was the Iraq war with with very dubious reasoning which sparked actual large scale protests, not Afghanistan.
there was trepidation, when the taliban asked for evidence against bin laden, the USA had none, there was a lot of errrrr at the time
Getting Bin Laden yes. A full scale invasion costing 2 Trillion Dollars, taking 20 years, and the total lives lost far exceeding that of the 9-11 attacks no. The appetite for war in that region has long since subsided.Again, as I'm unsure of your age and therefore experience of 9/11, there wasn't a "general" hesitancy at all, there was virtually ZERO hesitancy in the Western world, never mind just the UK. Literally everyone was fully behind the US "getting Bin Laden". It was the Iraq war with with very dubious reasoning which sparked actual large scale protests, not Afghanistan.
It always makes me laugh when religious fanatics ask for evidence
Getting Bin Laden yes. A full scale invasion costing 2 Trillion Dollars, taking 20 years, and the total lives lost far exceeding that of the 9-11 attacks no. The appetite for war in that region has long since subsided.
Doesn't matter who asks for it, no negotiations were attempted at all.
Also they are hardly brain dead zealots as is often parroted here. They have professors and experts in there rank.