stilicho
Trurl's Electronic Bard
- Joined
- Feb 6, 2007
- Messages
- 4,757
Did you read the artile I linked to?
If you had you would realize that the practice of rounding up enemy combatants, incarcerating them, treating them inhumanely and torturing them is FUELING this particular conflict and providing the necessary ammo for indoctrination of many a muslim into terrorism.
I actually read that article a while ago. Let me put it this way. If the same guy was writing as a member of al-Qaeda in Iraq, he'd have explained that unrestricted terrorism of the Sunnis there would create a powerful enemy that would eventually destroy them. The difference here is that al-Qaeda has proved themselves to be incapable of change whereas the US has employed flexibility to the point of now considering releasing or changing the conditions of the detainees. (There is much more than this, of course, and Bob Woodward's last book on the Bush presidency explains some of the changes in the military strategy, too.)
So, on one side, you have the adaptability of military and political strategy and, on the other side, you have rigid doctrine applied indiscriminately. While I personally disagree with the forthcoming American policy on Gitmo, it reveals a flexibility of approach unheard of in the terrorist camp.
I would like to see critics of the American approach at least spend equal time considering the other side of the coin. Has US policy really strengthened al-Qaeda? Has al-Qaeda's policy really strengthened the US and its* enemies in Iraq? You know my opinion on both of these and I would be interested to see what the interrogator thought about the second question.
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*al-Qaeda's enemies, that is.
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