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Trump’s ‘America First’ Base Unhappy with Flip-Flop Afghanistan Speech
Breitbart ^
| Aug 21st
| Adam Shaw
Posted on 08/22/2017 8:21:40 AM PDT by The Numbers
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To: jersey117
Fleeing indeed. If Fox and Drudge get marginalized and we support true conservative news entities’adverts, we can make a difference.
Pass the word.
21
posted on
08/22/2017 8:46:47 AM PDT
by
amihow
To: The Numbers
No flip flop at all. President Trump campaigned on defeating ISIS. He campaigned against “radical Islam” and that is part of the border wall campaign. Hey Breitbart, remember MAKE AMERICA SAFE AGAIN during the campaign rallys.
To: Hojczyk
We have not won a war since WWIIGiven that there are entire groups of people whose sole purpose in life is to exterminate with prejudice as many Americans as they possibly can, What would be the reasons for those non winnings, and how would one attempt to reverse it?
23
posted on
08/22/2017 8:49:26 AM PDT
by
going hot
(Happiness is a Momma Deuce)
To: Hojczyk
We have not won a war since WWII. It's not a coincidence that we haven't fought a real war since WW2, either. When was the last time Congress issued a formal declaration of war?
24
posted on
08/22/2017 8:49:29 AM PDT
by
Alberta's Child
("I was elected to represent the citizens of Pittsburgh, not Paris." -- President Trump, 6/1/2017)
To: The Numbers
Can’t wait for Trump to label it #FakeNews.
To: The Numbers
Look at the Breitbart homepage lol.
“Lindsey Graham: I Am Very Pleased With Afghanistan Plan If Congress Votes It Down, Theyll Own the Next 9/11”
-and-
“Paul Ryan: Im Pleased With Trumps Afghanistan Decision I Think I Heard a New Trump Strategy”
26
posted on
08/22/2017 8:50:21 AM PDT
by
corlorde
To: RummyChick
PSHAW!
A Trump supporter here; no one has asked how this individual feels about the President’s decision. If he deems this necessary to keep US safe, he is to be saluted. His efforts, we are assured, will be far more effective than the limp wristed WON, or 2 (two) who managed to extend this fight with their feeble attempts at winning.
See NIKE! JUST DO IT.
27
posted on
08/22/2017 8:50:26 AM PDT
by
V K Lee
(DJT: "Sometimes by losing a battle you find a new way to win the war. ")
To: DoughtyOne
“...If we want him to be able to accomplish things for us, we need to support him....”
Yes, he needs his supporters to speak out clearly that Trump is our one chance to set this nation back on course. If we fail with him expect the worst - a nose dive into the land of third world countries. It is now or never. Knock off the petty stuff and look at the big picture.
28
posted on
08/22/2017 8:51:30 AM PDT
by
elpadre
(AfganistaMr Obama said the goal was to "disrupt, dismantle and defeat al-hereQaeda" and its allies.)
To: The Numbers
We're 0-5 since WW2 and spilled the blood of our best countrymen all over this planet for 5 decades. You'd think,after 60 yrs, that someone would get a clue.
Other than possibly some changes to the ROEs that the state department will quash,it's the same old stupid shiite wrapped in a shiny new wrapper.
29
posted on
08/22/2017 8:53:40 AM PDT
by
SanchoP
To: pgkdan
“well Im an America First Trump supporter and Im not one bit disappointed. Just sayin...”
Oh I quite agree Breitbart is way off the mark in its assessment of the reaction of Trump’s base. It’s the reason they’re off the mark that I find noteworthy.
Seems to me that Bannon’s parting remark that he was going to ‘go to war for President Trump’ should actually be read as him going to war for what he thinks the President’s agenda should be, and that he’s even willing to go to war with the President over that agenda.
He doesn’t seem like much of a team player here.
30
posted on
08/22/2017 8:59:28 AM PDT
by
The Numbers
(God, Family and Country is Right.)
To: The Numbers
I'm not that unhappy - Trump cut off the graft flowing to Pock-eee-stan crooks... and he dropped the idiotic ‘nation building... AND he's setting us up to kill terrorists before they organize to come here to the United States.
I suspect as soon as President Trump's cleaned out enough of their nests he'll pull out of the hellholes.
31
posted on
08/22/2017 9:00:36 AM PDT
by
GOPJ
(ISIS & Taliban feel Buddha Statues express hatred toward Islam - therefore they can be destroyed.)
To: mass55th
Everyone knows this is a flip flop by Trump but you...now you know
32
posted on
08/22/2017 9:01:12 AM PDT
by
DAVEY CROCKETT
(Thank you Free Republic. Thank you President Donald J Trump)
To: Parley Baer
Regardless of Trump’s old tweets from years ago, as a presidential candidate he 100 percent supported staying in Afghanistan and continuing to fight. I started a thread earlier with a link to the transcript and the video of a Bill O’ Reilly interview from April 29, 2016 where candidate Donald Trump specially mentions this policy plan if elected president.
We can discuss whether or not it’s a good plan, but people need to stop LYING and attacking POTUS as some McMaster puppet and for “flip flopping” on Afghanistan, because as a candidate Trump stated his position on Afghanistan, and it has not changed as POTUS.
To: The Numbers
While the president appears to have flip-flopped, he really just reconsidered his position after having deliberated with many experts over the course of months. This decision must have been a very weighty one for him, as he is a man who works hard to keep his word.
If he had not revised his position after learning more, he would have been called hard-headed and inflexible. He’s darned if he does and darned if he doesn’t, so he needs to do what he thinks will best serve the country.
I think the fact that he will unleash the military to fight a war the way a war should be fought, rather than a mamby pamby pc war like Obama conducted, puts things in a whole new light. Go in, kill who needs to be killed, destroy what needs to be destroyed, and get out. Done.
To: Hojczyk
We haven’t FOUGHT a war since WWII. Trump said we’re going to fight to win this time.
35
posted on
08/22/2017 9:04:11 AM PDT
by
Terry Mross
(Liver spots And blood thinners.)
To: The Numbers
Is it all of Breitbard or just Shaw who seems at least to be consistent.
36
posted on
08/22/2017 9:05:06 AM PDT
by
EDINVA
To: DAVEY CROCKETT
Actually, it’s not a flip-flop
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/3579592/posts
DONALD TRUMP (R), PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE: I would stay in Afghanistan. It’s probably the one place we should have gone in the Middle East because it’s adjacent and right next to Pakistan which has nuclear weapons. So I think you have to stay and do the best you can, not that it’s ever going to be great but I don’t think we have much of a choice. That’s one place, frankly, instead of going to Iraq we probably should have gone there first. I would say in Afghanistan and only, again, because of its location next to Pakistan.
O’REILLY: All right. So you would keep the 10,000 troops there. And fight a war of attrition against the Taliban? You know, Pakistan —
TRUMP: I hate doing it, I hate doing it so much. But, again, you have nuclear weapons in Pakistan so I would do it.
.
And now YOU know. :)
Spare some tweets from five years ago..as a presidential candidate DJT ran on staying and continuing to fight in Afghanistan.
To: The Numbers
I see Trump as a true leader. He stated his personal position on Afghanistan during the election: He wants us out. However, after being the President and getting advice about political and military leaders’ concerns in Afghanistan, he has chosen this route to take. That’s a leader.
A fool rarely changes their mind, a wise man often does.
38
posted on
08/22/2017 9:06:29 AM PDT
by
CodeToad
(Victorious warriors WIN first, then go to war! Go TRUMP!!!)
To: The Numbers
A very familiar pattern is emerging as President Trump turns his attention toward solving the ongoing issues within Afghanistan. A very uniquely Trumpian geopolitical strategy based on assigned ownership, economics and self-interest.
Last night as President Trump addressed the nation to discuss the ongoing conflict within Afghanistan he took the first step: Trump assigned strategic ownership to Pakistan:
[…] “The next pillar of our new strategy is to change the approach in how to deal with Pakistan. We can no longer be silent about Pakistan’s safe havens for terrorist organizations, the Taliban, and other groups that pose a threat to the region and beyond.
“Pakistan has much to gain from partnering with our effort in Afghanistan. It has much to lose by continuing to harbor criminals and terrorists. In the past, Pakistan has been a valued partner. Our militaries have worked together against common enemies.
“The Pakistani people have suffered greatly from terrorism and extremism. We recognize those contributions and those sacrifices, but Pakistan has also sheltered the same organizations that try every single day to kill our people. We have been paying Pakistan billions and billions of dollars, at the same time they are housing the same terrorists that we are fighting. But that will have to change. And that will change immediately.
“No partnership can survive a country’s harboring of militants and terrorists who target U.S. service members and officials. It is time for Pakistan to demonstrate its commitment to civilization, order, and to peace. (transcript link)
If anything President Trump stated was not the brutal reality the placement of strategic ownership would not work. However, the entire international community knows that Pakistan, including their intelligence service ISI, has a great deal of hidden sympathy toward Islamic extremists within Afghanistan.
Never was that reality more stark than when the international community realized that 9/11 terrorist Osama Bin Laden held refuge inside Pakistan for almost a decade. Within the governing systems inside Pakistan there is a large contingent of Taliban sympathy. This reality has been the 800lb gorilla amid public discussions of international national security for several years.
Last night President Trump called it out, publicly.
This is where those who follow Trump closely will note a familiar pattern emerging.
The Taliban in Afghanistan are to Pakistan, as the DPRK is to China.
Remember, the solution to the threat that is Kim Jong-un was to assign direct responsibility toward Beijing. In a similar approach, the solution toward eliminating the threat of extremist violence from the Taliban is to assign direct responsibility toward Pakistan. President Trump began that process last night.
However, those who have followed closely will note there’s additional references.
♦When the threat is Sunni Extremism, the problem was/is the Muslim Brotherhood and the enabling of Qatar. Trump assigned responsibility for solving that issue to Saudi Arabia and the Gulf Cooperation Council. It is the GCC who are confronting Qatar, not the United States.
♦When the threat is Syria’s chemical weapon, the problem was/is the Assad regime and ISIS. Trump assigned responsibility for solving that issue to Russia; Russia initially refused to solve it, so Trump bombed the shit out of Assad – Russia/Assad took ownership, the chemical weapon use stopped; further action was not needed by the United States.
♦When the threat is DPRK’s nuclear weapons, the problem was/is Kim Jong-un and the enabling China. Trump assigned responsibility for solving that immediate threat to China. It was Beijing who told Kim Jong-un to stand down. Not the United States.
See the pattern? In each example President Trump assigns responsibility. However, the important element is the underlying ownership must be based entirely on truth. In each of the examples the truth was/is that Gulf States/Qatar, Assad/Russia, and China/Beijing were manipulating and enabling the problem behavior. By calling out that truth, each enabler was forced to take ownership and corrective action.
The same approach extends here with Afghanistan. However, the solution is not Pakistan eliminating the Taliban per se’; the solution lies in leveraging Pakistan to force the Taliban into negotiations with the legitimate Afghan government. Like the previous examples of Saudi Arabia and China, Trump has now assigned ownership of this objective to Pakistan.
The U.S. Military can/will engage the Taliban and Pakistan is on notice it better not act to enable the extremists. Cliff Notes:
Additionally, this approach only works if there’s leverage to cajole Pakistan to act. Fortunately creating “leverage” is almost a uniquely Trumpian life-skill. Throughout Trump’s business career he’s been a master at leverage. Now with control of the largest economy and market in the world, he’s got massive economic leverage to generate beneficial national security outcomes.
Saudi Arabia was leveraged by U.S. economics and our commitments to their national security. China was/is being leveraged by U.S. economics and their need to keep access to our markets. So what approach will POTUS Trump use for Pakistan, yep – economics. It’s right there:
[…] “We have been paying Pakistan billions and billions of dollars, at the same time they are housing the same terrorists that we are fighting.”…
Who is Pakistan’s biggest regional adversary? India.
[…] “Another critical part of the South Asia strategy or America is to further develop its strategic partnership with India, the world’s largest democracy and a key security and economic harbor of the United States.
“We appreciate India’s important contributions to stability in Afghanistan, but India makes billions of dollars in trade with the United States, and we want them to help us more with Afghanistan, especially in the area of economic assistance and development.” (transcript)
President Trump is smartly focusing on alliances with open democracies in regions where the greatest mutual economic benefits are possible.
♦For the North Korean problem, Japan, South-Korea and India are all economically leveraged against China by President Trump via favorable trade and market access opportunities.
[Note that “bilateral” trade deals are essential in these efforts.]
♦For the Afghanistan problem, India again becomes the economic leverage against Pakistan. China has a great deal of investment in Pakistan, and China also views India as an economic threat to their one-road/one-belt plans.
For those who are worried about expansive military endeavors that will result in death and quagmire I would advise to put your mind at ease. The military is needed as the visible alternative to economic leverage, see North Korea. It is a reference; but military engagement unto itself is not the central tenet or fulcrum upon which the economic leverage is dependent.
The U.S. military is not the leverage, the military helps creates leverage. The leverage itself is economic. Financial interests are always the best leverage to use because inherent within the fundamental principles of economics is ‘self-interest’. Actions taken generate financial benefits; those benefits are direct and immediate to the interests of those generating the results.
From the policy and outlook of trade and U.S. economic engagement, obviously India’s Prime Minister Modi is a much more preferred ally. Both China and Pakistan fully understand the dynamics of this mutually beneficial Trump/Modi relationship and what it can mean for their own economic self-interests.
Finally Afghanistan’s government appears fully aware of the approach.
(LINK)
So what can we anticipate as next steps? Well if the familiar pattern repeats:
- Look for Pakistan to attempt to avoid ownership.
- Look for President Trump and Secretary Tillerson to keep pulling Pakistan into each discussion point when referencing Afghanistan.
- Look for President Trump tweets aimed at creating and affirming the U.S. expectations of Pakistan. Each time this happens the ownership gets stronger.
- Look for our diplomatic team to talk about Pakistan helping to solve the problem.
- Look for any affirming U.S. signals of warmth and friendship toward India.
These will all be indications of the ongoing strategy. So far, this economic geopolitical approach has worked well with Syria/Russia, Qatar/Saudi Arabia and DPRK/China. No reason not to be optimistic about Afghanistan (Taliban)/Pakistan.
39
posted on
08/22/2017 9:06:46 AM PDT
by
Bratch
("The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing." - Edmund Burke)
To: The Numbers
Trump said he’d stay in Afghanistan during the campaign. I am growing to dislike Briebart more and more these days.
40
posted on
08/22/2017 9:08:30 AM PDT
by
nikos1121
(Let's get Newt in there to help...)
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