Talya wrote:
Diamondeye wrote:
We still had vastly more troops and money in Afghanistan than you did at any given time, and you guys weren't the only ones holding the fort. Not that Canada's troops weren't invaluable - they were, but you guys really got to fight on the cheap compared to us. There's nothing wrong with that; your population is way too small to support a military large enough to do what ours does, and no one with an ounce of common sense should think Canada gave anything other than a sincere maximum effort. Still, you like to tell me how financially sensible you are compared to us, and part of the reason you get to be that way is that you aren't us.
Oh, we weren't the only ones, but between 2004 through 2009, Operational Control of the majority regions in Afghanistan was handed over to the Canadian military, who led the allied forces occupying Afghanistan both strategically and tactically (including the massive Taliban hunt during the resurgence between 2006-2009.) It wasn't until Obama relocated 30,000 troops back into Afghanistan at the end of 2009 that Canada scaled back its role.
There's some truth in this, but also remember that it was always a U.S. commander for the overall operation, and from 2004 to 2009 U.S. troop levels were generally consistent in trending upwards, from 20,000 in 2004 to around 35,000 in 2009. In 2009 they started to spike. There were small dips in there, but the overall trend was always upwards. Obama didn't relocate those 30,000 troops "back to" Afghanistan, they were in addition to what was always there. The U.S shift in focus to Iraq never involved a mass shift of physical assets there (mainly because Rumsfeld, in his "do more with less" mania of running the DOD like it was a corporation, ran it on the cheap to begin with.)
By contrast, Canada has only 67,000 total active personnel in all branches of the Canadian Forces and only 21,000 active personnel in the army component of that, with a similar number of reservists.
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In an argument over who wasted the most time, money, and manpower in Iraq and Afghanistan, nobody is coming close to the United States except possibly Iraq and Afghanistan.
Repeating this mantra will never produce a satisfactory solution to the ISIS problem.