Two More United States Deaths for Nothing in Afghanistan by Jacob G. Hornberger!
(2019-11-20 at 15:06:51 )

Two More United States Deaths for Nothing in Afghanistan by Jacob G. Hornberger

Two more United States soldiers have been killed during combat-support operations in Afghanistan.

This brings to 19 the number of United States soldiers killed so far this year in the United States governments forever war in that country.

A total of 2,400 United States soldiers have been killed in Afghanistan since the United States invaded the country in 2001.

It is unknown how many people United States forces have killed in Afghanistan because the United States governments policy is to not keep track of the number of foreigners who are killed.

An interesting question arises: What will United States officials tell the family members of those two dead soldiers?

Will they be told that they died for freedom?

If so, it will be a lie, just as it was a lie when United States officials told the families of 58,000 United States of American soldiers the same thing when their bodies were brought back from the long war in Vietnam.

United States of American soldiers killing and dying in Afghanistan are not defending the freedom of the American people because no one in Afghanistan is threatening the freedom of the American people.

In other words, the Taliban are not marshaling their forces in Afghanistan with the intent of invading the United States, conquering the nation, taking over the federal government and the Internal Revenue Service, and enslaving the American people.

They are not organizing hundreds of thousands of transport ships and planes, rounding up millions of invading forces, and establishing billion-dollar supply lines to cross the Atlantic with the aim of invading and occupying the United States.

They are simply vying for power in a civil war within their own country after being ousted from power by the United States government during its 2002 invasion.

The "harboring" rationale

United States officials might tell the family of those men that they died to prevent the Taliban from again "harboring" al Qaeda.

If so, that too will be a lie.

The United States government never had any evidence of Taliban complicity in the 9-11-01 attacks.

Simply because an accused terrorist is living in a certain country does not make the government of that country complicit in terrorist attacks carried out by people living within the country.

Moreover, one would think that if the United States officials use the harboring-terrorists rationale to justify the deaths of those two soldiers, their families might at some point wonder why terrorists need Afghanistan to plan anti-American terrorist attacks, given that there are hundreds of other countries around the world where such plans can be made.

Regime-change war and extradition

The reason that United States official decided to initiate a regime-change war against the Taliban regime is because the Taliban regime refused to comply with the unconditional extradition demand for al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden.

But under the law, the Taliban regime was not required to comply with that unconditional extradition demand because there was no extradition treaty between Afghanistan and the United States.

In any event, that is why the United States waged war against Afghanistan - not because the Taliban had knowingly "harbored" an accused terrorist but because it refused to comply with the United States governments unconditional extradition demand, which it was entitled to do under the law.

Thus, the war against the Taliban was about extradition, which is not the noblest or most glorious thing to die for.

Interventionism and perpetual war

There is something else to consider: Anti-American terrorism, including the 9-11-01 attacks, is rooted in United States interventionism abroad.

That is what makes the United States governments "war on terrorism" a perpetual war, which in turn ensures ever-increasing budgets for the military-industrial complex and also ensures the continued destruction of United States of American liberty.

United States soldiers kill people over there, and the family members and friends of the victims retaliate by killing United States soldiers or other Americans, which then causes United States forces to kill more people over there, and on and on.

The original reason for invading Afghanistan some 16 years ago was to get Osama bin Laden and bring him to justice for complicity in the 9-11-01 attacks.

It is worth mentioning that they killed bin Laden a long time ago and yet United States troops have been kept in Afghanistan, where they have been killing and dying for years thereafter.

An illegal war and ignoble deaths

There is another point worth mentioning.

The United States Constitution requires the president to secure a declaration of war from the United States Congress before he and his military can legally wage war against another nation-state.

That never happened, which means that for 18 long years United States forces have been killing and dying in a war that is illegal under our form of government.

Of course, United States officials could tell the families of those two dead soldiers that they died so that United States officials could arrive at some face-saving arrangement with the Taliban that would enable them to withdraw from Afghanistan with "victory."

My hunch, however, is that they are not going to tell family members that that is what their loved ones died for because that certainly would not strike most anyone as being a worthy thing to die for.

The United States government should tell the families of those two dead soldiers the truth: they died for nothing, just as 58,000 United States of American soldiers died for nothing in the Vietnam War.

The realization that ones loved ones died for nothing would be painful but at least it would be the truth.

Reprinted here with permission from Mr. Jacob G. Hornberger of The Future of Freedom Foundation!! Their Great Website!!