Submission Statement

Between 2001 and 2021, under four U.S. presidents, the United States spent approximately $2.3 trillion, with 2,459 American military fatalities and up to 360,000 estimated Afghan civilian deaths.

After the U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan in August 2021, approximately $7.12 billion worth of military equipment was left behind, according to a 2022 Department of Defense report. This equipment, transferred to the Afghan National Defense and Security Forces (ANDSF) from 2005 to 2021, included:

Weapons: Over 300,000 of 427,300 weapons, including rifles like M4s and M16s.  
Vehicles: More than 40,000 of 96,000 military vehicles, including 12,000 Humvees and 1,000 armored vehicles.  
Aircraft: 78 aircraft, valued at $923.3 million, left at Hamid Karzai International Airport, all demilitarized and rendered inoperable.  
Munitions: 9,524 air-to-ground munitions worth $6.54 million, mostly non-precision.  
Communications and Specialized Equipment: Nearly all communications gear (e.g., radios, encryption devices) and 42,000 pieces of night vision, surveillance, biometric, and positioning equipment.  

The total equipment provided to the ANDSF was valued at $18.6 billion, with the $7.12 billion figure representing what remained after the withdrawal. Much of this equipment is now under Taliban control, though its operational capability is limited due to the need for specialized maintenance and technical expertise.

The United States has provided at least $93.41 billion in total aid to Afghanistan since 2001. This includes:

Military Aid (2001–2020): Approximately $72.7 billion (in current dollars), primarily through the Afghanistan Security Forces Fund ($71.7 billion) and other programs like International Military Education and Training, Foreign Military Financing, and Peacekeeping Operations ($1 billion combined).  

Humanitarian and Reconstruction Aid (2001–2025): Around $20.71 billion, including $3 billion in humanitarian and development aid post-2021 and $3.5 billion in frozen Afghan assets transferred to the Afghan Fund in 2022. Pre-2021 reconstruction and humanitarian aid (e.g., $174 million in 2001 and $300 million pledged in 2002) adds to this, though exact figures for the full period are less clear.  
    • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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      17 hours ago

      Absolutely. The plan was to do in Afghanistan what we’d done in Saudi Arabia and Egypt and Argentina and the Philippines.

      We wanted a local aristocracy beholden to the US business interests with a police force willing to brutalize dissidents. Taliban wasn’t that thing, so they needed to be supplanted.

      Problem was, the Afghan aristocracy that the US aligned with were more vile than the Taliban and rejected by the public at large. So the US spent 23 years killing everyone who refused to submit to them.

        • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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          17 hours ago

          Michael Rubin is a resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute.

          I might take this with a large grain of salt. My man is a neocon’s neocon.

          If you dig into Afghanistan’s history, particularly with regard to the Soviet Union, there were a lot of parallels between the quasi-socialism of the Soviet occupation and the quasi-liberalism of the American occupation.

          In both cases, the occupying army tried to subvert self-determination of the Afghan people. Trying to claim The Taliban as a product of US policy against the Communists or a product of Islamist policy against the Christian Nationalists really misses this as an ongoing effort by Afghanis to secure their own brand of domestic nationalism.

          Get down to “Who is responsible?” Rubin doggedly insists that (a) US support for the Taliban in the '70s was worth the price, entirely to keep Communism out of Pakistan. And (b) we are the victims of imperfect policy rather than our own hubris.

          Both beliefs are ultimately misguided, even if his history is a fun read.

          • ᕙ(⇀‸↼‶)ᕗ@lemm.ee
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            16 hours ago

            but can we agree OPs title is useless? the reminder does neither help nor explain anything. no one won anything. there is no likeable party.

      • Bloomcole@lemmy.world
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        17 hours ago

        The Greatest US warrior of all

        The first was for himself. The second for his country. This time it’s to save his friend. 😉

      • AES_Enjoyer@reddthat.com
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        18 hours ago

        I think the text is doctored, in the OG film it’s not so explicit. Feel free to correct me though, I’m working off “I heard it somewhere”.

        • Glytch@lemmy.world
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          18 hours ago

          The movie is Rambo 3 and you are correct. The real dedication is to the “Gallant people of Afghanistan”.

        • Bloomcole@lemmy.world
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          15 hours ago

          There is some debate about who doctored it yes.
          Can’t mistake the message of the movie tho

  • finitebanjo@lemmy.world
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    20 hours ago

    TBF, withdrawing was a Trump era decision that Joe Biden simply didn’t stop. Trump also released 5,000+ Taliban Fighters just before. I feel like if we didn’t elect people like Donald fucking Trump then the outcome might have been different, it really seems like he was intentionally causing these problems.

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        17 hours ago

        At every stage, the US lost more and more territory. By Biden, they’d been hedged into Kabul like the US was backed into Saigon at the end of the Vietnam War.

        The idea that we could have just camped out and refused to leave was politically impractical and logistically incredibly difficult. And why would we have been there, except to periodically fling bombs into neighboring territory?

        We’d lost the war a decade earlier and simply refused to admit it. By Biden, it was a farce. We didn’t control the country in any meaningful way.

        • Bloomcole@lemmy.world
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          15 hours ago

          They never had control, they outsourced a lot of the fighting to the warlords they paid, without them they would have been thrown out a lot earlier

      • finitebanjo@lemmy.world
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        20 hours ago

        As long as it took. They had a democracy, they had international trade, they had human rights. You can’t put a pricetag on that. The USA was protecting something worth protecting for a change.

        • Vanilla_PuddinFudge@infosec.pub
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          20 hours ago

          They had a democracy, they had international trade, they had human rights. You can’t put a pricetag on that.

          Around $2.3 trillion.

        • RadioFreeArabia@lemmy.cafe
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          19 hours ago

          How hard is it for you to understand they didn’t want your racist violent military or your corrupt puppet regime ruling them?

          Afghanistan has international trade now, and not only that but they also manufacture solar panels and other stuff for local consumption or export.

          Your comment is a combination of racism, chauvinism and white saviour complex. Worse, you think you are doing good. Even worse, you are eager to do it all over again in another country against its people’s will.

          • finitebanjo@lemmy.world
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            19 hours ago

            I’m sorry that you’re on the faction opposing women in education, driving, or any form of authority. I’m sorry that you prefer an actual theocratic dictatorship. I’m at a loss that you didn’t notice the immediate tariffs, sanctions, and funds being frozen when they took over.

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              19 hours ago

              I’m on the faction of “it’s none of your business how Afghans govern themselves and you have no right to enforce your norms on them”. If the puppet regime had any real support it wouldn’t have collapsed in weeks.

              I’m at a loss that you didn’t notice the immediate tariffs, sanctions, and funds being frozen when they took over.

              Who placed the tariffs, sanctions and froze the funds? The US government and its allies being sore losers. You may want to take another look at this:

              Previously, Afghanistan’s trade volume did not exceed $850 million annually, but after the return of the Islamic Emirate, exports surged to $2 billion. In 2024, Afghanistan’s total trade reached $12.42 billion, with exports at $1.803 billion and imports at $10.619 billion. In comparison, in 2023, Afghanistan’s exports were $1.884 billion and imports were $7.71 billion. This shows a 4% decrease in exports and a 38% increase in imports in 2024 compared to the previous year.

              https://www.bakhtarnews.af/en/afghanistans-total-trade-achieves-12-42-billion-milestone-in-2024/

              • finitebanjo@lemmy.world
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                16 hours ago

                It became their business many times over the decades starting when it became a strategic territory in the proxy wars between the west and the east. Surrendering to authoritarianism might seem like a cool idea until you’ve given up everything and allowed everyone to suffer. Some fights are unavoidable.

              • Squizzy@lemmy.world
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                18 hours ago

                How other people govern themselves is everyone’s business. This isnt a difference of opinion it is brutal totalitarianism. People are killed and you hide behind it being a difference of culture. It isnt acceptable. That said the US are shitbags.

                • RadioFreeArabia@lemmy.cafe
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                  18 hours ago

                  I disagree with you on the former and it reeks of white-saviour-complex, but I agree with you on the latter. One out of two, isn’t bad.

                  Try to meddle in other countries’ business, try to force your norms on them, and you will be met with resistance. If your values are so much better and universal you wouldn’t need to force them on other nations through military and economic coercion.

                  Edit: I guess you are from the UK. You claim to care about people getting needlessly killed, but if UK troops do it it is okay?: Afghanistan: UK special forces ‘killed 9 people in their beds’

        • Bloomcole@lemmy.world
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          18 hours ago

          LOL
          When the first installed puppet got a bit of remorse when he saw the butchery of the US they replaced him with a literal American, Ghani.
          They pulled a reverse Jolani, they made him grow a beard and wear traditional clothes since the locals knew what he was and disliked him.
          https://thegrayzone.com/2021/09/02/afghanistan-ashraf-ghani-corrupt/

          And same as the US he stole all the money and gold he could get his paws on.
          This from a country left in ruins and misery after what the US did.
          Democracy my ass.
          https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2022/feb/16/afghanistan-money-biden-white-hosue-us

      • Alloi@lemmy.world
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        18 hours ago

        L take. please look up how the taliban treats their own people. they are a regressive ruling class and are extremely cruel to their own people. especially women and children.

        they didnt betray their country, they didnt want to live under an archaic group of power grabbing religious fanatics. there is a difference.

        • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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          17 hours ago

          please look up how the taliban treats their own people

          Okay, but then look at how the Heroin smugglers and child sex traffickers that ran Afghanistan under the US treated their own people.

        • Bloomcole@lemmy.world
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          16 hours ago

          I don’t need to do shit.

          Looks like you don’t know anything about it except what your propaganda fed you.
          They VOTED overwhelmingly for the Taliban in the first elections held under US invader occupation regime.
          OC that wasn’t to their liking so they annuled it and redid them without the Taliban.
          The american way of democracy.

      • frezik@midwest.social
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        18 hours ago

        Are people who leave the US now in the wake of the Trump Administration also traitors to their country?

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          17 hours ago

          Ridiculous comparison.
          Did a foreign army invade the US and those US citizens collaborated with them, helped them interrogate and torture Americans and plenty more?

          • frezik@midwest.social
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            16 hours ago

            As of 2022, there were about 195k Afghan immigrants in the US. The vast majority of them coming in after 2010. Did they all help torture people?

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              16 hours ago

              Can you count? You invaders and looters were there until 2021.
              Plenty of collaborators until the last minute.
              Did you forget when your regime goons shot dozens of them in a panic when the last planes left Kabul and a crowd of traitors wanted to join?

                • Bloomcole@lemmy.world
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                  16 hours ago

                  I’m saying I have enough of you propaganda trolls.
                  Your ‘are you saying’ and other transparent fallacy tactics are boring and lame.
                  You’ve been dealth with and you’re doinf a lousy job. Eglin should fire you.
                  Better luck somewhere else.

  • Bigfoot@lemm.ee
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    23 hours ago

    Is this text AI generated? The civilian death toll in the “submission statement” is about 6x higher than accepted numbers and about 100K higher than all total deaths in the entire conflict.

    IMO (AI or not) slop like this just “floods the zone with shit” while doing noting to help the progressive cause.

    • brukernavn@lemm.ee
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      20 hours ago

      This is in the first paragraph of what you linked:

      The Cost of War project estimated in 2015 that the number who have died through indirect causes related to the war may be as high as 360,000 additional people based on a ratio of indirect to direct deaths in contemporary conflicts.

      • Bigfoot@lemm.ee
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        20 hours ago

        I shouldn’t need to tell you that that is a completely different statistic. You don’t need to muddy the waters of truth to make the point.

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    14 hours ago

    In our defense, President Ghani abandoned his country and forces and allowed the taliban to take over. The ANA and ANP defected as well, which didn’t help matters any. He felt like he had no chance and didn’t want to add to the violence. Seeing the ana and the anp operate first hand, yes, they would have been obliterated.

    When I was there, the locals appeared to want us there, but also were supplying Intel to the enemy. They knew when the taliban was going to attack, and when we patrolled. I get it, they wanted to stay alive and all.

    I know people think we shouldn’t have been there but look at our exit, and how the locals clung to the planes after take off. They were afraid of retribution from the taliban but for 20 years, they had someone to watch over them.

    However, the taliban takeover was inevitable. We could have won that war, but we said fuck it and left. Why? Because it wasn’t worth it anymore. And the US population thought they knew better. It lost or never had their approvaI. met a lot of cool Afghani locals. Hope they’re alright.

    Just my 2 cents while I was over there for a year. And fuck the taliban. USA shouldn’t send any type of aid there. We left enough there as it is. They don’t call that area the “Graveyard of Empires” for nothing. If they want to live in the stone age, let them. They don’t need anymore outside influence.

  • conditional_soup@lemm.ee
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    21 hours ago

    This shit haunts me sometimes. I remember hearing somewhere that the Taliban actually offered to deliver OBL to the US if they would promise not to invade and we were like “get fucked, idiot”. How many people’s lives did we needlessly destroy, regardless of nationality, both in Iraq and Afghanistan? What else could have been bought besides misery with the nearly four trillion between those two wars?

    • Rekorse@sh.itjust.works
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      20 hours ago

      I didnt know about any of this. The article I read mentioned they offered to put him on trial prior to 9/11 too for his other crimes in the 90s. America is literally the idiot bully who yells over anything you say and then eventually punches you in the face while you are confused.

      • Bloomcole@lemmy.world
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        18 hours ago

        He also died of natural causes.
        Been invisible for a decade and wouldn’t you know it, a few months before the presidential elections “we got him”.
        Somehow they showed no footage of him being heroically killed by the brave GI Joe’s.
        They go trough all the trouble of taking his body during a dangerous raid in a hostile country, but somehow they decide all on their own to throw his body from the ship.
        LOL

  • RabbitBBQ@lemmy.world
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    13 hours ago

    Yeah but think how much money grifters made off of it. That $40 trillion in debt had to go somewhere.

  • Lovable Sidekick@lemmy.world
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    18 hours ago

    We learned that the Taliban can be right here in your own backyard, and the most important thing is the oil deals you make along the way.

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    2 days ago

    I mean yeah, all that, but did you even stop to consider how absolutely insanely wealthy we made like 7 people!?

    God you people are so selfish with your wah wah thousands upon thousands have died! Think of the rich people for once!

    :P

    • ZeffSyde@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      My goddamn brother in law, gung-ho air Force dude, is trying to get his Gen Z kids to enlist because it worked out so well for him. He enlisted during the magical late 90s so he wasn’t shipped anywhere. Hardest thing he had to do was pushups and whatever hazing the other soldiers put him through.

  • OBJECTION!@lemmy.ml
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    2 days ago

    And yet, I’ve seen people on here criticize the withdrawal. Like, how much longer did you wanna stay, dawg? Another 20 years so the proxy we set up would last another week?

    • Nalivai@discuss.tchncs.de
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      1 day ago

      People didn’t criticize the withdrawal itself (at least non-monsters didn’t). People criticized the fact that in so many years there was no robust infrastructure built. They broke whatever was there before them, fucked around for decades, achieved jack shit, and left leaving power vacuum.

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        21 hours ago

        People didn’t criticize the withdrawal itself (at least non-monsters didn’t).

        I mean, I’m not going to disagree with characterizing these .worlders for example as monsters, but it’s not as if it was a fringe position.

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      1 day ago

      This happened a lot around Afghanistan too.

      If there’s one thing both sides love in this country, it’s permanent warfare, provided they can get the poors to do all the fighting and dying.

    • Rivalarrival@lemmy.today
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      1 day ago

      We have 10,000 troops permanently stationed in the UK. Another 12,000 permanently stationed in Italy. Another 25,000 permanently stationed in Korea. 35,000 permanently stationed in Germany. 52,000 permanently stationed in Japan.

      We should have established a similar, permanent presence in Afghanistan. Come back to me in 80 years, after their economy looks like South Korea’s, and we can start to discuss a drawdown.

      • OBJECTION!@lemmy.ml
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        1 day ago

        Come back to me in 80 years

        On the one hand, props for putting a number to it, on the other, Jesus Fucking Christ.

        You realize that all the countries’ governments you listed have at least consented to us being there, whereas Afghanistan specifically said they wanted us gone?

        Just going full Genghis Khan over here. As if the brazen conquest wasn’t bad enough, you want to condemn our grandkids to the continued subjugation of their grandkids. Absolutely insane.

        • Damage@feddit.it
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          21 hours ago

          Ehhh kinda. For many of those countries, the troops were a leftover of occupation, it was a choice but kind of a forced one, you don’t want to upset your overlords.

          In the EU, with the increased independence as the organization grew, calls to send the American troops home became stronger and stronger.

          • OBJECTION!@lemmy.ml
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            18 hours ago

            I’m not trying defend those deployments, I hate the military as much as anyone. But the fascist I’m arguing with is trying to use those deployments as a justification for a hostile, century long occupation with the goal of forcibly erasing their culture through force. All I’m saying is, those are not the same thing.

        • Rivalarrival@lemmy.today
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          1 day ago

          Ask the women and girls of Afghanistan if they want us gone. The women and girls who are no longer allowed to attend school, and can look forward to generations of total subjugation.

          Why do you hold the opinions of their oppressors in such high regard?

          You say they asked us to leave. They dont have a government with sufficient legitimacy to even make such a request. They won’t have one until several generations of school kids have been raised to believe their mothers and sisters are actual people, not just some weird furniture.

          When the first generation of co-ed Afghani school kids are in nursing homes and hospice, we can start listening to Afghan opinions about our continued presence.

          Yes, permanent installations, influencing their economy and culture for decades. So that our grandkids see them grow into a nation more comparable to South Korea than North Korea.

          • Bloomcole@lemmy.world
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            18 hours ago

            I bet you don’t know the first elections after the invasion were already won by the Taliban after which the US decided they had to do it again without them participating.
            What people do and their customs are not your business.
            Why don’t you invade Saudi Arabia then?
            Where they hang people every day.

            • Rivalarrival@lemmy.today
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              17 hours ago

              What people do and their customs are not your business.

              I cast a mental vote on behalf of each and every woman in the country. Votes that they and you ignore.

              Theybare subjected to a government they did not choose. That pisses me right the fuck off.

              • Bloomcole@lemmy.world
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                16 hours ago

                You pretend to care about women’s rights to justify and whitewash your gigantic large scale warcrimes. You bomb women, men and children indiscriminately.
                Are you bombing the children of Iran and Palestine to promote womens rights too? I’m sure they’ll love you for it.
                Now piss off, you make me sick with your holier-than-thou BS.

          • OBJECTION!@lemmy.ml
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            1 day ago

            The only language you imperialist bastards will ever understand is force, thankfully, Afghans know how to speak it. May the message spread around the world.

              • OBJECTION!@lemmy.ml
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                19 hours ago

                If that were true, you’d have a lot in common with them. How many women were murdered by the occupation? I wonder, how long your country would have to occupied to stop people from thinking and acting like you? Because I think we should leave Afghanistan alone and start there.

                I hope that you find yourself on the receiving end of what you support.

          • boonhet@lemm.ee
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            23 hours ago

            These Afghan women married and gave birth to the men ruling over them. They’re at least somewhat complicit in this. They had 20 years to breed a more liberal generation of men, but they did not.

            Taliban had such an easy time taking back control because nobody gave a shit.

            • Rivalarrival@lemmy.today
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              21 hours ago

              Ah, yes. It is the slave’s fault that they do their master’s bidding. They are complicit. They could just overthrow the overseers. Instead, they provide them with the means of their own enslavement.

              That’s you. That’s what you sound like.

              • boonhet@lemm.ee
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                20 hours ago

                The slaves didn’t raise their own masters.

                The US backed Afghani government lasted less than one day because NOBODY wanted it. Only the Americans did. It’s not part of Afghani culture to send women to school and such. It’s like forcing Americans at gunpoint to eat salad instead of McDonald’s.

                • rumimevlevi@lemmings.world
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                  19 hours ago

                  It’s not part of Afghani culture to send women to school and such

                  What bunch of bs. Before taliban created by the united snake , women was stupying and working In the 1980s, about 40% of doctors and 60% of teachers in Kabul were women.

                  You are like the racists settlers who was calling Indigenous people savages. Shame on you