• Donjuanme@lemmy.world
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    28 days ago

    I’m fine admitting the government that invaded Afghanistan was fucked and should be charged with war crimes. Same with Russia and Israel right now, same with desert storm.

    Strange how all those governments had the same ideological bend to them… But both sides are the same…

      • Chocrates@lemmy.world
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        28 days ago

        Has anyone graphed the data to see if it has been going down and what not? Any civilian death should be important and Obama doesn’t get a pass because he was a Democrat.

        I’m just curious how it changed through Bush to Obama to Trump to Biden. It also can’t be taken in a vacuum since the US changed the way they “waged war”, even though I disagree with being able to call it a war since “terror” is not a peer state.

        • gAlienLifeform@lemmy.world
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          28 days ago

          Obama doesn’t get a pass because he was a Democrat

          Yes, I feel very much the same way. The data (such as it is) should all be in there, but there’s likely still a bunch of these that we don’t know about, and (from the linked article)

          President Obama deserves credit for even acknowledging the existence of the targeted killing program (something his predecessor did not do), and for increasing transparency into the internal processes that purportedly guided the authorization of drone strikes.

          So the numbers between administrations might not be apples to apples comparable

          though I disagree with being able to call it a war since “terror” is not a peer state.

          I actually agree really strongly with this one too and don’t see it mentioned that often, but, yeah, terrorist organizations are really no different than organized crime operations (other than that they’re pursuing political objectives instead of money), and they should be handled the same way (e.g. by police, not militaries).

    • gAlienLifeform@lemmy.world
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      28 days ago

      Yes, about this in particular

      “We owned up to it, we investigated it, and we tried to learn from it to make changes,” Kirby said at Tuesday’s regular White House briefing.

      Meanwhile, in reality

      SIMON: The military is, I think I can fairly say, proud of all the checks that they have in place, aren’t they?

      KHAN: Yes. So, in fact, you know, anyone who reads this investigation can easily find the military responses to the questions that we asked. They weren’t able to answer everything in terms of, you know, incident-specific remarks. But they did reply to six questions overall. And what they said was that, you know, they take great care, that every single loss of life is something that is regretted and that they take cares that their enemies don’t. They also say that, you know, they would disagree with this as a system of impunity. They see this as a model of accountability. Whereas the reporting showed that when you look at these documents and the breakdowns of them, only in two instances in the documents do they show them interviewing survivors and eyewitnesses. And certainly, those lessons learned were never studied in aggregate like this. So it’s hard to look at this and to know that they have far more of an ability than I do, or that an organization like Human Rights Watch or Amnesty does, to go and visit these sites and investigate themselves.

      [Bolding added]

    • jmcs@discuss.tchncs.de
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      28 days ago

      If he’s using it to defend what Israel is doing, yes. Even he says that what the US made were mistakes and it’s trying to learn from them.

        • jmcs@discuss.tchncs.de
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          28 days ago

          Also there was no actual plan, so the Taliban won in Afghanistan and occupy even parts of the country they didn’t have before, and in Iraq it led to the creation of the Islamic State. And Israel itself already has a history of radicalizing Palestinians with their disproportionate responses to Hamas.

    • Rottcodd@lemmy.world
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      28 days ago

      I don’t think we can say, since it’s possible (likely?) that his premises aren’t even true.

      Israel has already trotted out all of the same “mistakes were made” rhetoric, and certainly if they haven’t already, they will state that they’ll try to learn from it to make changes. So there’s really no difference as far as that goes

      The biggest difference I see between the incidents is only relevant to Americans - then it was our government controlling the narrative at home, and now it’s a foreign government, failing to control the narrative abroad.

      I have little doubt that the narrative about Gaza that Israelis are being fed now is roughly the same as the narrative Americans were being fed about Iraq and Afghanistan, which at least leaves the possibility that the actual underlying realities were and are also roughly the same. And if so, what Kirby is actually doing is not comparing the incidents and responses in and of themselves, but essentially just playing off of the differences between the version the people at home get and the version outsiders get - depending on Americans actually believing the American rhetoric then, even as they don’t believe the Israeli rhetoric now. That’s really the only way you end up with the notion that America sincerely did regret it and admit to it and set about making changes, rather than just, as Israel is doing now (from an outside perspective) paying lip service to all of that.

      So what he’s actually possibly demonstrating, certainly inadvertently, is that the US was just as full of shit then as Israel is now.

    • jonne@infosec.pub
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      28 days ago

      Pretty bad to admit it outright if you’re supposed to lie about stuff like that.

  • TechNerdWizard42@lemmy.world
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    26 days ago

    I mean… Yes. Exactly. But the solution is to convict all of them, not allow it to happen. That’s what the international community has been asking for for decades.