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July 6, 2021 - Ron Paul Liberty Report
04:18
Weekly Update --- It’s Saigon in Afghanistan

The end of the 20-year US war on Afghanistan was predictable...

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Time Text
20-Year War's End 00:04:14
Hello everybody and thank you for tuning in to the weekly report.
It's Saigon in Afghanistan.
The end of the 20-year U.S. war on Afghanistan was predictable.
No one has conquered Afghanistan and Washington was as foolish as Moscow in the 1970s for trying.
Now, U.S. troops are rushing out of the country as fast as they can, having just evacuated the symbol of the U.S. occupation of Afghanistan, Bagram Air Base.
While perhaps not as dramatic as the fall of Saigon in 1975, where the U.S. military helicopters scrambled to evacuate personnel from the rooftops of the U.S. Embassy, the lesson remains the same and remains unlearned, attempting to occupy, control, and remake a foreign country into Washington's image of the United States will never work.
This is true no matter how much money is spent and how many lives are snuffed out.
In Afghanistan, no sooner are U.S. troops vacating in an area than Taliban fighters swoop in and take over.
The Afghan army seems to be more or less melting away.
This weekend, the Taliban took control of a key district in the Kandahar province as Afghan soldiers disappeared after some fighting.
The U.S. is estimated to have spent $100 billion training the Afghan army and police force.
The real number is likely several times higher.
For all that money and 20 years of training, the Afghan Army cannot do its job.
That's either quite a statement about the quality of the training, the quality of the Afghan army, or some combination of the two.
Whatever the case, I am sure I am not the only American wondering whether we can get a refund.
The product is clearly faulty.
Speaking of money wasted, in April, Brown University's cost of war project calculated the total cost of the Afghanistan war at more than $2 trillion.
That means millions of Americans have been made poorer for a predictably failed project.
It also means that thousands of the well-connected contractors and companies that lurk around the U.S. Capitol Beltway pushing war have become much, much richer.
That's U.S. foreign policy in a nutshell.
Taking money from the middle-class Americans and transferring it to the elites of the U.S. military and foreign policy establishment.
It's welfare for the rich.
Meanwhile, the cost of the war project also estimated that the war took more than a quarter of a million lives.
The Biden administration may believe it is saving faiths by installing a military command of nearly 1,000 troops inside the U.S. Embassy in Kabul, but this is foolish and dangerous.
Such a move establishes the U.S. Embassy as a legitimate military target rather than a diplomatic outpost for the Taliban or any other fighters.
It paints a target on the embassy.
Has anyone at the Pentagon or the State Department thought this through?
Plans to occupy the airport at Kabul are also unlikely to work.
Does anyone think that having come this far, an emboldened and victorious Taliban are going to sit by as U.S. or allied military occupy the Kabul airport?
Trillions of dollars wasted and millions either killed or displaced from their homes for nothing.
The lessons of Afghanistan are simple: bring all U.S. troops home.
Defend the United States as necessary, and leave the rest of the world to its own business.
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