Hannibal wrote:
Remember kids, DE is the only man to have ever humped a ruck here.
Do you have anything useful to contribute, or are you just pissed off that you don't like what I'm saying and you can't think of a decent response?
Quote:
I'm aware of the possible international cosnequences. Let the Chinese spend more money increasing their arsenal. Other nations already deal with the fallout of war in their neighbors via refugees and increased crime. A few millirems of exposure for someone a few hundred miles downwind. I'm sure they would try to plead the UN to interfere but we can ignore paper just as we can veto it. It isn't the job of the US to worry about the conditions of the citizens in other nations - its the job of the US to protect the rights of citizens in the most efficient means necessary. Turning Kabul into a minature sun for a few seconds would have certainly sent a message if we did it a day after they refused to extradite Osama. It's not like there would be any innocents there anyway right?
I wouldn't rebuild the enemy.
That's more like it. Now you're trying to think through the larger implications and justify a course of action based on its cost-benefit ratio. It's also, quite frankly, a lot more practical to nuke Kabul and send a message that way (and I would have been in favor of it right after 9/11) as opposed to attempting to annhilate the entire population of Afghanistan, for a number of reasons, most of which I alluded to.
What you've stated above is one course of action. It's a very brief, oversimplified one, but that's ok; it could (and would if it were truely to be implemented) easily be fleshed out.
Now, where it could be improved is that you started with the goal of not rebuilding the enemy, but really your goal is "to defend the rights of citizens in the most efficient manner possible". Those two goals, while not exclusive, are not the same thing. You don't want to rebuild the enemy because it takes tax money and part of your goal is to keep taxes as low as possible based on various principles that you've espoused in the past.
The problem with this way of developing a course of action is that nuking Kabul is not necessarily the most cost-effective way of dealing with the problem. That's ok though. In reality, the most cost-effective way will never be truley known because there is no way to test multiple courses of action under actual conditions (simulations can give general ideas, and are good at eliminating courses of action with significant disadvantages, but they are, after all, simulations, and their ability to replicate what people actually do is limited at best)
Rather than say "Afghanistan has allowed Osama Bin Laden to attack the U.S. from its territory, what courses of action are feasible?" developing several and then comparing them dispassionately, you started with that plus "and I want to spend as little tax money as possible in the process because I want to conform to my political principles. I see a nuclear strike as being very efficient, and given the circumstances right after 9/11 I see the long-term political complications as being less costly than an occupation, all things considered."
Or, to put it another way, you've started with a course of action and looked for ways to justify it rather than start with a goal and pick the best course of action from several. That doesn't mean that your course of action is unworkable or bad. It may have, in the time right after 9/11, have been the best one. We just haven't compared it dispassionately to others to get a better sense of which one would be best (and even if we had, we're still making a best guess).
In fact, if we had several, you and I would probably disagree on which is best. That's fine because there are too many unquantifiables to make a completely objective comparison. It's quite normal on a staff completing the orders process for combat to have serious disagreements over what course of action is the best (and the commander must ultimately pick one to resolve that). For example the intelligence officer may be strongly in favor of one thing because of what he knows about the enemy while the supply officer may strongly favor another because it will make resupply more simple and efficient. These criteria will be weighted against each other and every attempt made to compare them dispassionately and objectively, but there will be a subjective element to it.
All things considered, however, your last post was still a vast improvement. Not onyl did you cite a course of action and some tangible advantages you think it would have, you did it in terms of things that would be meaningful to other people, not just in terms of your own political beliefs, which is, quite frankly, a very refreshing and impressive change.
Where I'm trying to get you to go is a bit like this: Some people love battleships. They come up with absurd justifications to ressurect the
Iowas yet again, and failing that will argue for new battleships/battlecruisers with nuclear power and armed with large batteries of the railguns being developed for naval ships. Often these justifications are based on wild, absurd assumptions and a poor understanding of what gunfire can and can't do.
You, in terms of this argument here, have moved past that stage to one of "Ok, how can we solve our naval problems using a nuclear-powered battlecruiser?" and then trying to come up with good reasons why it would work. (Essentially what you did above, you started out with "I want to use a nuclear strike on Kabul to deal with the problem of Afghan-based terrorists, what are good reasons to do that?") This is a HUGE improvement over one-line posts that make no attempt at analysis (although to be fair even in your earlier posts you avoided the rabid wanktardism that plagues battleship advocates).
The real question however isn't "I have a nucelar powered battlecruiser; what can I do with it" it's "what naval challanges are we likely to face and what is the most cost-effective way of dealing with them?" That may or may not include nuclear-powered battlecruisers; despite the idiocy of many amateur advocates there would be real advantages to such ships. There would also be real disadvantages. Whether and how many to build would be based on a dispassionate comparison of feaible courses of action, and in much the same way, a decision to make a nuclear demonstration on Kabul should be weighed dispassionately against other courses of action.
Still, like I said, your ideas above are a vast improvement. I'm actually quite impressed.