on โ11-02-2014 07:16 PM
Is the presence of the US and subsequently Australia in Afghanistan, by invitation or force?
on โ11-02-2014 07:19 PM
โ11-02-2014 07:26 PM - edited โ11-02-2014 07:29 PM
the Russians were not invited either
Afghanistan has a long history of uninvited guests
on โ11-02-2014 07:35 PM
@spotweldersfriend wrote:
Force.The taliban certainly didn't invite them
In which case, we must be in breach of International law, mustn't we?
Cos in 1945, the UN made a law saying it was illegal to invade a country by force.
Seems to me this was on the back of WWII, and that made me wonder if this is why there has not been a WWIII yet, but then I thought about the other smaller wars.
So, are we there illegally, or did someone invite us?
โ11-02-2014 07:39 PM - edited โ11-02-2014 07:40 PM
The Russians went in
The Taliban were the "good" guys
They were helped to power
the inevitable happened...
then the West went in to clear up the mess that started when the Taliban was helped to power...
the legalities of each step might be considered questionable, but it is like all wars
interests at play determine what happens
Politics, money, and then the legalities are a process of convincing the U.N. that other avenues are exhausted
on โ11-02-2014 07:41 PM
Isn't it a bit late for this discussion...the Australian troops have been withdrawn from Afganistan after 12 years?
โ11-02-2014 07:43 PM - edited โ11-02-2014 07:43 PM
That might be what triggered the question ๐
wars, the rights and wrongs, are talked about long after their conclusion
โ11-02-2014 07:46 PM - edited โ11-02-2014 07:50 PM
@amber-eyed-girl wrote:The Russians went in
The Taliban were the "good" guys
They were helped to power
the inevitable happened...
then the West went in to clear up the mess that started when the Taliban was helped to power...
the legalities of each step might be considered questionable, but it is like all wars
interests at play determine what happens
Politics, money, and then the legalities are a process of convincing the U.N. that other avenues are exhausted think you'll find that the Russians had their own Puppet Government which was opposed by the Us and when the Russians pulled out the Taliban took advantage of the vacuum.
I think you'll find the Russians actually indstalled their own puppet government in Afghanistan - which was opposed by the US. when russia pulled out the Taliban took advantage of the power vacuum.
on โ11-02-2014 07:54 PM
โ11-02-2014 07:59 PM - edited โ11-02-2014 08:03 PM
I did not mean the Russians helped the Taliban to power if that is what you were thinking.
Except indirectly.
the Taliban succeeded them, as you say.
which is how they were considered the better option, rather than a Russian-backed government.
it is worth having a look at how far back the U.S. May have been interested in Afghanistan, and how the Taliban was viewed at the time the Russians were in.