BedellBrave
It's OVER 5,000!
Powerful, thoughtful interview no matter what your view might be.
The irony is that he wouldn't have his son back if it weren't for the imprisoned Taliban soldiers he wants freed.
Something definitely stinks about this whole thing. I guess I should give Obama the benefit of the doubt on this and hope he thinks the CIA can track these 5 ex prisoners or he truly believes they aren't a threat going forward.
I'm not going to call him a deserter until it's proven, so I'll leave that aside.
But I guess the media wants us to put away any and all questions about this and instead be mindlessly happy for the soldier and his Dad. But this may have been a case where the emotional political stance defeated the logical one. Will we ever know the truth behind this? Lots of questions that need to be answered here.
This also feels like an episode of Homeland.
Not sure if accurate, but the 5 released don't sound like angels.
Oh, here is the wacko Dad:
http://allenbwest.com/2014/06/bombs...ather-white-house-arabic/#TkaM7McBUv7Q80FA.01
And why exactly is the father a "wack job"?
Because he is likely a libertarian? Because he disagrees with neocon foreign policy? Because he's been studying all he can to help him in seeking the release of his son?
A white American inIdaho converting to Islam
To the political, and geopolitical points...
I have no desire to see the Taliban in power in Afghanistan. However, if you're remotely versed in the history of the region, you'll understand that there are going to be elements of that broadly-understood group who are going to be running big swathes of the country. Right now, they're the de-facto government in some areas. In the future, they'll probably be part of the actual government. For us to throw good money and good blood after bad to try to prevent that is foolish.
So, no one associated with our government is going to say it, but in negotiating that deal, we were ultimately negotiating with a quasi-government, not just "terrorists." They're fighting an asymmetrical, insurgent war against the US. There are any number of bad things that we could say about them. But to apply the term "terrorist," absent any context, is overly facile.
And that is the very sort of rush to judgment I am talking about.
I get that, but I'm still not sure what makes this a good deal for the US unless you make some assumptions or give the benefit of the doubt to a White House that maybe doesn't deserve it.