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The First Amphibious Landing
...by the Marines happened 231 years ago, in the Bahamas. Before they were the US Marines.
Posted by Rand Simberg at March 03, 2007 07:26 AM
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The Corps has been standing on the watchtowers of freedom for a long time...and they are always taken there by the US NAVY!
Robert
Posted by Robert G. Oler at March 3, 2007 07:30 AM
Not that Simberg ever considered joining the Marines.
Posted by anonymous at March 3, 2007 09:36 PM
Why is Anonymoron still allowed to crap all over this blog?
Posted by McGehee at March 4, 2007 06:29 AM
For many Afghans, sharia law is central. Others welcome freedom from torture, but not free media or freedom of religion; majority rule, but not minority rights; full employment, but not free-market reforms. “Warlords” retain considerable power. Millions believe that alcohol should be forbidden and apostates killed, that women should be allowed in public only in burqas. Many Pusthu clearly prefer the Taliban to foreign troops.
Yet, senior officials with long experience with Afghanistan often deny this reality. They insist that Taliban fighters have next to no local support and are purely Pakistani agents. The U.N. argues that “warlords” have little power and that the tribal areas can rapidly be brought under central control. The British defense secretary predicted last summer that British troops in Helmand Province could return “without a bullet fired.” Afghan cabinet ministers insist that narcotics growth and corruption can be ended and the economy can wean itself off foreign aid in five years. None of this is true. And most of them half-know it.
It is not only politicians who misrepresent the facts. Nonprofit groups endorse the fashionable jargon of state-building and civil society, partly to win grants. Military officers are reluctant to admit their mission is impossible. Journalists were initially surprisingly optimistic about transforming Afghanistan. No one wants to seem to endorse a status quo dominated by the Taliban and drugs. Humankind cannot bear very much reality, particularly in Afghanistan.
Posted by anonymous at March 4, 2007 07:48 AM
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