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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: RetiredNow who wrote (1085152)8/26/2018 2:29:06 PM
From: sylvester801 Recommendation

Recommended By
Mongo2116

  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 1576831
 
BOMBSHELL: THE WHOLE WORLD HATES CORRUPT LYING LIAR POS trump...
McCain's tributes aim veiled shots at Trump
By Nic Robertson, CNN
Updated 11:24 AM ET, Sun August 26, 2018
cnn.com

(CNN)In death, Senator John McCain has let loose an international outpouring of sympathy, respect and thinly veiled criticism of President Trump.

The tributes flooding in from world leaders seem to amplify McCain's principled stand against his President.
Britain's Prime Minister Theresa May, who was criticized publicly by Trump last month, said that, "John McCain was a great statesman, who embodied the idea of service over self."

It is hard to read those words and not hear frustration and understand the subtle subtext.




Remembering John McCain

Germany's Foreign Minister Heiko Mass -- whose country is at loggerheads with Trump, in particular over NATO -- was less delicate: "John McCain was a convinced advocate of a strong and reliable transatlantic partnership, especially in difficult times. He believed in our shared values and principles."

Maas leaves little doubt whom he'd have rather seen in the White House.
The list goes on.
Europeans are clearly troubled by Trump's apparent willingness to give new friends like Vladimir Putin -- whom McCain strongly campaigned against -- preferential treatment over the US's traditional allies.




The political world reacts to Sen. John McCain's death

In those countries formerly under the Soviet Union's iron grip, tributes show a longing for the kind of constancy in US relations that McCain championed.
Slovakia's President Andrej Kiska lauded McCain as "a man of courage, of strong principles and tireless fighter for the values we share on both banks of the Atlantic."
Estonia's Prime Minister Juri Ratas said "he was a courageous and determined man, showing a remarkable understanding of global affairs. His contributions into the security of the Baltic states will never be forgotten."
Lithuania's President Dalia Grybauskaite described McCain's passing as "a big loss not only to our region but also to the whole world."
And Latvia's President Raimonds Vejonis, completing the triumvirate of Baltic leaders who have been rattled by Trump's apparent ambivalence to their concerns about Russian aggression, added that McCain was "a true defender of democracy and freedom, and a great friend of Latvia."



Sen. McCain listens as former FBI Director James Comey testifies in front of the Senate Russia hearing.

Friend of many people
To imply McCain has garnered such glowing tributes simply to sound off frustration about Trump would be wrong though.
He was respected for who and what he was. He traveled the world as a tireless advocate for the United States, and made many friends along the way.
I remember meeting him in Afghanistan -- at that time one of the wildest and more dangerous places a US Senator could go -- he was relentless in finding out the facts for himself, whatever potential harm that may have put him in.




The life and character of John McCain in his own words

Afghan President Ashraf Ghani on Sunday paid him high praise: "Senator McCain served his country honorably in uniform and his service in the Senate is truly exemplary. We will remember his dedication and support towards rebuilding Afghanistan."
Where McCain had in the very real sense of the word been in harm's way -- a prisoner of war for five and half years in Vietnam, from 1967 to 1973 -- he was remembered by Vietnamese and Americans alike with flowers and tributes.
One American visiting the monument near Truc Bach Lake outside Hanoi, where McCain's bomber jet crashed 51 years ago, told Reuters news agency that McCain "was the last guy I ever voted for as President."



John McCain is examined by a Vietnamese doctor in 1967 after being captured in Hanoi.

Today's world leaders, who have no vote in US Presidential elections, seemed to give a nod towards a man they'd pick over the present incumbent.
They have done this not collectively in a carefully choreographed joint statement, but individually picking what's important for them and their countries in what amounts to a fusillade of criticism aimed at Trump.
Australia's new Prime Minister Scott Morrison said that "Senator John McCain was a true friend of Australia who was committed to strengthening the alliance between our two nations."
President Trump had a disastrous relationship with Morrison's predecessor Malcolm Turnbull, abruptly ending their first phone call days into office over a disagreement about refugees.
Of course, any of these tributes can be explained away for simply what they are -- well-intentioned condolence.
It is after all the skill of any accomplished politician to find phrases that appeal to all. What I hear may not be what everyone takes away.
However, it would feel to me naive not to grasp that, at the very least, what has been said in tribute to McCain -- either intentionally or unintentionally -- amounts to the broadest sounding so far of global disquiet among America's allies with Trump.
In that alone, Senator John McCain has been paid the highest accolade of all.



To: RetiredNow who wrote (1085152)8/26/2018 2:46:08 PM
From: sylvester80  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1576831
 
trump LOSING: It's Trump's war ... and it's not going well
By Peter Bergen, CNN National Security Analyst
Updated 12:15 PM ET, Mon August 20, 2018
cnn.com

(CNN)One year ago, President Donald Trump announced what he said was his new strategy for the Afghan war.

He said he had become convinced that the only thing worse than staying in Afghanistan was pulling out.
In a rare admission that he had changed his mind, Trump said: "My original instinct was to pull out, and historically, I like following my instincts. But all my life I've heard that decisions are much different when you sit behind the desk in the Oval Office."

Trump said he was making an indefinite commitment to remain in Afghanistan, and would not replicate what he said was the Obama administration's mistake in prematurely pulling out of Iraq at the end of 2011, which helped create a vacuum that led to the rise of ISIS.

Trump also said he would not do what Obama had done in announcing withdrawal dates even as he surged troops into Afghanistan. "Conditions on the ground, not arbitrary timetables, will guide our strategy from now on," Trump said.

Are U.S. troops caught in never-ending Afghanistan war? 04:09

This was the right call, but now the Afghan war is truly Trump's war. It is not going well.
The US Special Investigator General for Afghanistan Reconstruction found that in early 2018 the Afghan government controlled more than half of the districts in the country, while the Taliban controlled around 15%.

The remaining third of Afghanistan was contested between government forces and the Taliban.
After 17 years of war, the fact that the Taliban controls or contests almost half of the districts in the country is sobering. This month the Taliban launched a large-scale attack on the strategically important city of Ghazni and held it for five days. Ghazni sits on the Kabul-to-Kandahar road, the most important highway in the country.

ISIS has also established itself in Afghanistan, and now routinely attacks the Shia minority, like the attack on a Shia educational facility in Kabul that killed 34 students on Wednesday.
A year ago Trump promised a tougher line against Pakistan, Afghanistan's neighbor, which has long supported elements of the Taliban. He said, "No partnership can survive a country's harboring of militants and terrorists who target US service members and officials."

According to Shamila Chaudhary, a fellow at the think tank New America who worked as director for Pakistan on the National Security Council during the Obama administration, "The primary action Trump has taken in his effort to get tougher on Pakistan was to cut most US security assistance to Pakistan earlier this year. That being said, the levels of security assistance were going down anyway since the Obama administration."

So far there hasn't been much evidence that the US is really going to get tough on Pakistan, which would involve sanctioning specific Pakistani officials or even designating it as a state sponsor of terrorism.
The reason is pretty simple: Afghanistan is a landlocked country surrounded by countries that are not well-disposed to the US such as Iran, and some former Soviet republics that remain aligned with Russia, and China.

That leaves only Pakistan as a somewhat reliable ally, which means that resupplying the 15,000 American soldiers in Afghanistan requires Pakistani roads and airspace. If the American presence remains substantial in Afghanistan, Pakistan will always be a necessary partner. Michael Kugelman, a Pakistan expert at the Wilson Center, observes, "The main U.S. fear has been that Pakistan could shut down the NATO supply routes on its soil."

The United States has sent some of its most capable military leaders to oversee the Afghan war, such as the generals Stanley McChrystal and David Petraeus. The commander of Joint Special Operation Command who oversees US commando operations, Lt. General Scott Miller, will soon take the helm in Afghanistan, replacing the equally capable John "Mick" Nicholson, who has arguably spent more time in Afghanistan than any other US military officer.

The Afghan war is unlikely to be won on the battlefield. The Taliban haven't been defeated in 17 years despite enormous pressure, including Obama's "surge" of troops into Afghanistan during his first term. There were around 100,000 US troops in the country in the early years of Obama first term and they didn't defeat the Taliban. Today, there are some 15,000 troops.

As of July, the Trump administration is reportedly talking to the Taliban directly, seemingly because there is an understanding that decisive battlefield success will continue to be elusive. These talks happened without Afghan government representation, which has long been a Taliban demand: To speak directly with the American government.

There is little to lose by such talks; even if they yield nothing they allow the US to gather intelligence on the Taliban and perhaps even create splits in the movement between potential doves and hawks.
That said, expectations for these talks should be low; the Taliban are hardly going to put down their arms when they are doing relatively well on the battlefield, nor have they articulated a concrete vision of what they really want for Afghanistan, beyond the expulsion of foreign troops.

On Sunday Afghan President Ashraf Ghani announced a ceasefire to mark the Eid al-Adha Muslim holiday, a several-day truce that the Taliban have provisionally agreed to. The Ghani government hopes that the ceasefire might run for as long as three months.

Which brings us to politics. In 2019 there will be another Afghan presidential election. The past two such elections were fiascos with innumerable, credible accounts of fraud by all sides. This must not happen again, as a badly flawed presidential election damages the credibility of all Afghan institutions.
The Trump administration should be clear with all the key political players in Afghanistan that it will not tolerate another botched presidential election and such a result might end any American support to Afghanistan.

At the same time the US government and its NATO allies in Afghanistan must invest enormous effort in ensuring that the elections are free enough and fair enough to ensure a credible Afghan government emerges in 2019.
Without that, everything else that the US does in Afghanistan is mostly a waste of time.