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War is a Drug: Washington's 30-Year High

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unhappycamper Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Jan-05-11 07:16 AM
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War is a Drug: Washington's 30-Year High



War is a Drug: Washington's 30-Year High
by Tom Engelhardt
Published on Tuesday, January 4, 2011 by TomDispatch.com

If, as 2011 begins, you want to peer into the future, enter my time machine, strap yourself in, and head for the past, that laboratory for all developments of our moment and beyond.

Just as 2010 ended, the American military's urge to surge resurfaced in a significant way. It seems that "leaders" in the Obama administration and "senior American military commanders" in Afghanistan were acting as a veritable WikiLeaks machine. They slipped information to New York Times reporters Mark Mazzetti and Dexter Filkins about secret planning to increase pressure in the Pakistani tribal borderlands, possibly on the tinderbox province of Baluchistan, and undoubtedly on the Pakistani government and military via cross-border raids by U.S. Special Operations forces in the new year.

In the front-page story those two reporters produced, you could practically slice with a dull knife American military frustration over a war going terribly wrong, over an enemy (shades of Vietnam!) with "sanctuaries" for rest, recuperation, and rearming just over an ill-marked, half-existent border. You could practically taste the chagrin of the military that their war against... well you name it: terrorists, guerrillas, former Islamic fundamentalist allies, Afghan and Pakistani nationalists, and god knows who else... wasn't proceeding exactly swimmingly. You could practically reach out and be seared by their anger at the Pakistanis for continuing to take American bucks by the billions while playing their own game, rather than an American one, in the region.

If you were of a certain age, you could practically feel (shades of Vietnam again!) that eerily hopeful sense that the next step in spreading the war, the next escalation, could be the decisive one. Admittedly, these days no one talks (as they did in the Vietnam and Iraq years) about turning "corners" or reaching "tipping points," but you can practically hear those phrases anyway, or at least the mingled hope and desperation that always lurked behind them.

Take this sentence, for instance: "Even with the risks, military commanders say that using American Special Operations troops could bring an intelligence windfall, if militants were captured, brought back across the border into Afghanistan and interrogated." Can't you catch the familiar conviction that, when things are going badly, the answer is never "less," always "more," that just another decisive step or two and you'll be around that fateful corner?
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RandomThoughts Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Jan-05-11 07:47 AM
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1. Their is a metaphor in there.
Edited on Wed Jan-05-11 07:50 AM by RandomThoughts
Mixed metaphors in the linkage of 'sides' in the metaphor in that comment makes it interesting.

To many mixed metaphors, feels like a bait comment on topics of control or concepts of trying to get someone to think what they do that is better is used for bad, or that they are bad and controlled to create a presentation of being under someones control like in topics of interrogation.

Thats it, there is a metaphor in there to try to get some people to feel like tools, or feel used.


Three clips explain that metaphor. Although not about Afghanistan.



Sunshine Superman.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X_4DsNFQS98


Scanners
http://movieclips.com/VEbm-scanners-movie-revok-scans-the-scanner/


And a favorite song :loveya:
Answer Sarah Mclachlan
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i8B1ai25lUo







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rfranklin Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Jan-05-11 08:15 AM
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2. Maybe if they expand the war into Cambodia or Laos...
they'll finally get control of this thing.
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