←back to thread

350 points tepidandroid | 3 comments | | HN request time: 0.667s | source
Show context
gcatalfamo ◴[] No.21023650[source]
This is how you create terrorists. What do you think the children and friends feelings towards the US will be from now on? People get radicalized for much less than that.
replies(12): >>21023867 #>>21023882 #>>21024090 #>>21024098 #>>21024108 #>>21024127 #>>21024148 #>>21024258 #>>21024722 #>>21025214 #>>21025358 #>>21025914 #
newguy1234 ◴[] No.21023882[source]
Also stories like this will be passed down for generations to recruit new jihadists/terrorists. They use this stuff as proof that the USA is anti-muslim or to prove that there is a war against muslims going on. You simply cannot bomb your way out of resolving the terrorism issue. This will probably have the same effectiveness as the war on drugs: lots of money spent....little to no impact on drug smuggling/drug abuse etc.
replies(5): >>21024025 #>>21024161 #>>21024251 #>>21024435 #>>21024781 #
NeedMoreTea ◴[] No.21024161[source]
This seems to surprise everyone though, and I don't understand why.

I remember in the early days of our being in Afghanistan, there were a few media pieces reporting that they remembered the last time the British were there, 100 or 150 years ago. The tone was very much that it was somehow surprising the Afghans brought this up again.

Yet Britain and the US are built on national history, myths and memories. The US has a huge national story around independence and the push west into the frontier. The UK has our tales and myths of 1940 and 1066. Scots still remember "the 45" (that's 1745). Why wouldn't Afghanistan or Iraq?

replies(2): >>21024250 #>>21024325 #
drcross ◴[] No.21024325[source]
The British oppressed the Irish for 800 years with a systematic destruction of culture and contribution to genocide which halved the population and then recently had the audacity to assume Ireland would be allies during Brexit negotiations.
replies(2): >>21024484 #>>21026621 #
smcl ◴[] No.21024484[source]
The negotiations and the deal were extremely dumb in many ways (as is Brexit overall), but this is a really weird take on it. It does make sense that Britain would try to use the fact that Ireland has a substantial amount of trade with the UK and it is not inconceivable that Ireland might therefore in its own self-interest want some sort of deal.
replies(1): >>21025928 #
1. jacobush ◴[] No.21025928[source]
Weird or not, that's the take in many places, Ireland and Afghanistan alike. A modest proposal, eh?
replies(1): >>21027316 #
2. smcl ◴[] No.21027316[source]
You're mistaken if you think that even the more recent atrocities like the great famine or the violent oppression of the Irish home rule (and ultimately independence) movement have informed the Irish response to Brexit negotiations. It is to their credit that they're pragmatic people, since they could easily dish out a black-eye to the UK if they wanted to.
replies(1): >>21030861 #
3. jacobush ◴[] No.21030861[source]
If Éire had a few UK sponsored drone bombings I’d bet that would change real quick. Otherwise I take your point.