Wednesday, November 16, 2011

Afghanistan 1843

In 1843, the British army chaplain Rev G.H. Gleig wrote a memoir of the disastrous (First) Anglo-Afghan War, of which he was one of the very few survivors.

He wrote that it was  

"a war begun for no wise purpose, carried on with a strange mixture of rashness and timidity, brought to a close after suffering and disaster, without much glory attached either to the government which directed, or the great body of troops which waged it. Not one benefit, political or military, was acquired with this war. Our eventual evacuation of the country resembled the retreat of an army defeated”
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Important note- Britain won the second Afghanistan war, and imposed full control of the country. This is the inspiration for the USA's current Afghanistan adventure with rather more mixed results. The USA is not an empire, and its imperial designs emanate not from a defensive encroachment but from the singular and unholy preoccupations of its military industrial congressional complex.
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