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  • When I signed up for the Marine Corps,

  • I really believed in the mission.

  • I believed that it was bringing

  • something like democracy to Iraq and Afghanistan.

  • But now, I don' t see how you can be a killer

  • and be a nation builder at the same time.

  • There's a concept that if you kill the wrong person

  • you just create more insurgents.

  • How do I win the hearts and minds of the local populace

  • by walking around with a machine

  • gun in their neighborhood and shooting at people?

  • Democracy doesn't come in a box.

  • It's not something that fits every country.

  • And it's an ideal that America has never

  • been willing to let go.

  • The fact that we've gotten to this place now,

  • in 2019, where poll after poll has shown that nearly two-thirds

  • of Afghan and Iraq veterans have said,

  • quote, “The wars were not worth fighting,”

  • is remarkable, because that's a higher rate than

  • the American people at large who didn't serve.

  • The United States does not possess

  • the capability to ultimately alter the outcomes

  • meaningfully in Afghanistan.

  • I consider myself a conservative, a Republican.

  • In 2011, I had read that things were

  • on the way to getting better.

  • But when I was deployed to Afghanistan,

  • I can tell you, I saw violence was going up

  • the civilians were getting killed,

  • the Afghan military were not being effectively trained.

  • Our leadership had been lying to us.

  • You cannot accomplish with military power

  • a political outcome.

  • The bad news if we leave this place it'll

  • to go to shit in a year.”

  • Seriously?” “If we pull out, this place

  • will fall apart very, very quickly.”

  • In terms of our security, you need

  • to maintain some footprint or some guarantee

  • that Al Qaeda won't resurge in the area.”

  • There's this line of thinking that if we

  • withdraw from Afghanistan,

  • there will be a new civil war that's going to start.

  • O.K., there is a civil war going on in Afghanistan right now.

  • The Afghans were having a civil war in 2001

  • when we first went in there.

  • They had been fighting for years.

  • And our presence there does not stop it.

  • We're keeping our troops there indefinitely

  • because of this idea that if we leave there's

  • going to be this vacuum.

  • This idea really needs to be questioned.

  • It's really not an idea of safety.

  • It's really keep our troops on the ground

  • to control the Muslims and the brown people of Afghanistan.

  • I don't think the American people have actually

  • really refreshed their browser on the Afghan war since 2001 or two.

  • All the guys who are responsible for 9/11

  • are dead.

  • The primary enemy in Afghanistan is

  • the Taliban.

  • It's crucial for Americans to understand

  • that the Taliban is not Al Qaeda.

  • Whereas Al Qaeda is centered on going to war

  • with the United States,

  • the Taliban rejects that entire idea.

  • Their concern is not to make the world Islamic.

  • It's to make Afghanistan an Islamic emirate.

  • The fact is right now that tactically

  • on the ground in Afghanistan,

  • the Taliban are in a very strong position.

  • Southwest Afghanistan is just a free-fire zone.

  • Everybody is getting shot at regularly.

  • The Taliban own the area outside of us

  • and they would just bombard our towers all day

  • and we'd fight back and forth.

  • And then we'd have to go out on patrol, even

  • though patrolling was stupid because as soon

  • as you leave the walls you have no protection.

  • I remember hearing the first explosion when

  • the first Marine landed on an I.E.D.

  • and it seemed entirely meaningless to me.

  • There seemed to be no redemptive meaning

  • behind this death.

  • I was there when we had 140,000 troops on the ground.

  • And I can tell you there was vast areas of the country

  • that we didn't even have influence.

  • Now imagine the 14,000 troops

  • we have there right now. They're not protecting anything

  • back home.

  • We're creating war zones and we're creating refugees.

  • People are going to get mad.

  • They're going to get upset and they're

  • going to get tired of it.

  • They're going to want revenge and they're

  • going to figure it out.

  • It's a war that we've spent $1 trillion on now.

  • It's a war where thousands of people have died,

  • where children are growing up and all they've ever grown up in

  • is a war zone.

  • That's the big lesson we need to learn.

  • Diplomacy and targeted military deterrence

  • is what will keep you safe.

  • Whether we leave tomorrow or whether we leave 10 years from now,

  • the outcome is the same, which is a brutal civil war

  • and half the country is going to fall under Taliban rule

  • again and women are going to live in a medieval situation

  • until the Afghan people as a whole come up

  • with an Afghan solution to an Afghan problem.

  • It hurts like hell to say we should leave.

  • But the argument that we should stay there

  • because we are protecting women's rights

  • is not good enough anymore.

  • Whatever we do is never going to ensure

  • that the most disenfranchised people in Afghanistan

  • are going to be protected, that women are going to have

  • their rights protected.

  • That is a burden that America will have to bear on its soul.

  • I've seen firsthand men that I've

  • known that end up getting blown up

  • there, and I've questioned

  • what do they sacrifice themselves for.

  • But I'll tell you what I'm worried

  • about even war is that is the ones who haven't died yet.

  • Kids are joining the Army today --

  • today -- who were born after 9/11. Within six months,

  • they'll be in Afghanistan.

  • My dad was in the military.

  • My grandpa was in the Marine Corps and my daughter's

  • 4 now -- she's about to be 5.

  • And I want the war to be over.

  • Because 12 to 15 years from now,

  • I don't want my kid to die in the war that I went to.

When I signed up for the Marine Corps,

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退役軍人がアフガニスタン戦争の終結を求める理由|NYTオピニオン (Why These Veterans Are Demanding an End to War in Afghanistan | NYT Opinion)

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    林宜悉 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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