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Afghanistan

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Submitted By haboosh
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January 27, 2010
War on Afghanistan We are all humans, and as other creatures we are imperfect and full of sin. We might have wrong thoughts, unique beliefs, or even dour doctrines. However, all these features shouldn’t drag us to be authoritarians under any circumstance. These words precisely illustrate the situation that was ongoing in Afghanistan under the rule of Taliban government. I tended to think that killing cannot be justified in defense of the innocent against unjust attack, whether the victim deserves it or not. But that right is not absolute; someone can forfeit that right if they willfully threaten or taken the lives of innocent people. Therefore, the American involvement in Afghanistan was fair and justified in order to bring the Afghan’s sorrow, tyranny, and violation of rights to an end. Historically, the country of Afghanistan was devastated by the successive wars. The people were exhausted from the consecutive occupations and tyranny. As a result, it summed in an enormous human and economic toll. After the Soviet withdrawal, the government steadily lost ground to the extremist forces. In early 1992, Kabul was captured, and Al-Qaeda militia men set up a new government consisting of a 50-member ruling council. The new brutal government started imposing their extremist, strict beliefs on people. They used radio broadcasts to coerce residents into adhering to their strict edicts. The extremists spread fear and despair among the Afghans by their

brutal and merciless actions. They applied the provisions of the law in public to indirectly threat the citizens and implant seeds of fear in their souls. Kabul the capital city of Afghanistan was completely captured by the extremists, who turned it into a ghost city. On September 11th, 2001 our way of life was completely changed by a unique incident. The biggest representative of freedom was struck by a series of deliberate and deadly terrorist acts that killed thousands of innocent American citizens. The victims were in airplanes and in their offices; they were secretaries, businessmen and women, military and federal workers, moms and dads, and friends and neighbors. Thousands of lives were suddenly ended by evil, despicable acts of terror. The first phase of the war was the aftermath of the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001. The United States launched Operation Enduring Freedom to annihilate the safe haven to Al-Qaeda, and its use of the Afghan territory as a base of operations for terrorist activities. The international community seemed to accept it as a legitimate infringement of state sovereignty. That seemed clearly justified, since they had permitted Al-Qaeda to operate training camps for years. As a Christian, I believe that love is the only bond that can hold this world together. But, practically, in some cases I do understand countries’ intensions in waging wars against other nations or groups of extremists in order to annihilate their efforts in taking other people’s lives. The United States’ case is one of these. Somewhat, the US government’s strategic objectives were clear to everybody. Unlike the war in Iraq, the US involvement in Afghanistan is not a type of a beneficial war. They did not decide to make this step causelessly. It was an understandable

predictable response to the dreadful terrorist attack against the US economy’s core. The US main objective and goal in Afghanistan is to terminate the roots of all kinds of terrorism and bring back justice to people.
President Obama has previously acknowledged that he is sending additional troops to Afghanistan. The reactions on that decision were extremely negative and furious. But personally, I do agree that they are worthy of a commitment of the lives of the service men and women because someone has to sacrifice in order for others to live in peace happiness. These great soldiers have to endure and abide all the threats. Until the US government accomplishes its objectives in Afghanistan and establishes a solid foundation for the new Afghani government. A new fair and liberal government that can have the potentials to control the exhausted Afghanistan. A government that can build a new, peaceful, safe and independent Afghanistan, and afford the Afghans all the rights of living a stable life.
“Peace demands the most heroic labor and the most difficult sacrifice. It demands greater heroism than war. It demands greater fidelity to the truth and a much more perfect purity of conscience”, Thomas Merton. The US was exceedingly criticized about its 9-year-existence, and the increasing number of its troops in Afghanistan. But, rebuilding a new country and reviving a modern way of life needs some time and sacrifice. I am completely against war, but invading countries in such cases can be morally justified. The intentions behind the attack were prudent and morally permissible. Confidence should be placed in the US government to bring about

world peace and put an end to terrorism. It is the right time to defend the interest of the world's oppressed and exploited masses. It is a just war to bring the Afghans back to life, and ensure the World’s safe.

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