Wildcat has been toying with you, but since you haven't clued in yet, let me tell you what's going on.
I did clue in and stopped responding. I don't profess to be perfect or know everything and am happy to admit errors if someone provides a valid explanation, but having a stranger pour vitriol claiming I am anti-semitic is neither a rational discussion nor a person I would ever wish to learn from.
The US never funded the Taliban.
I realise they didn't fund them directly. My point is that US money and weapons ended up being used by terrorists in the Taliban. As you say, this is because we 'dropped the ball', we didn't support the people in Afghanistan for long enough to achieve stability. I realise this is easy to see with hindsight, but that doesn't invalidate the fact that the Taliban benefitted from the US.
We funded the Mujahideen, a loose collection of guerilla fighters in Afghanistan. During this period, the Taliban did not exist. After the Soviets left, we stopped funding them. The Taliban were founded some time after the Soviets left, and after US funding stopped. And we never funded them, Pakistan did. There's a lot to criticize about how we dropped the ball after the Soviets left, and even some moral ambiguity about our funding of the Mujahideen, but we never funded the Taliban. Anyone who claims we did is either a liar or a fool.
I spoke up because I believe 'the west' has a very patchy record intervening in the Middle East and picking who we support and who we fight. We often underestimate how our intervention will be perceived and just how much damage we can do. Of course some of our actions have been good, but that doesn't mean we shouldn't analyse the long term implications of our actions and be prepared to stand by them until we can leave a stable country behind us.
Coming back to the topic of George Galloway and Gaza, I think there would be a lot more condemnation of Palestinian agression if the west insisted the Israeli illegal settlements were removed. At the moment
both sides are wrong and we should be condemning
both sides, but we don't seem to be doing that.
Several years ago I went to Jerusalem with an Egyptian, he was on edge during our visit as he felt at risk from both sides. From Jewish people because he was an Arab muslim and from the Palestinians because he was Egyptian and Egypt had officially recognised Israel. That's a difficult situation to have with your neighbours. The West supported Mubarak, which created ill feeling in Egypt, then supported the rebels, which has resulted in the rise of the Muslim Brotherhood. The Jewish press currently seems optimistic that things won't change and the Brotherhood have said they won't break the treaty with Israel and there are trade talks happening, but we don't know what the future holds. They said they wouldn't put us a candidate for the presidency but they now have. Whether you believe Galloway is right or wrong we should put pressure on,
and be seen to put pressure on,
all sides to resolve the Israel/Palestine issue urgently, before things get even worse, but we have to tread carefully while we do it.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/wor...acking-for-rebel-leaders-behind-uprising.html
http://af.reuters.com/article/egyptNews/idAFL6E8F340F20120403
http://www.jpost.com/Headlines/Article.aspx?id=264619
http://english.ahram.org.eg/NewsCon...elegation-visits-Israel-to-discuss-trade.aspx