Re: shahnawaz will start crying over this LOL
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Originally Posted by MossadConspiracy
No I said that the Taliban would never again rule Afghanistan, and nobody can read the future but it seems just as unlikely today as last year. They've been reduced to a gang of killers who put ball bearings through the heads of children and deal heroin, but the amount of control they exert has not increased over any part of Afghanistan and has only diminished. And the most ruthless killer among them Dadullah 1 got toasted. In fact, the famed "spring offensive" that they always claim to be preparing didnt even materialize last spring. Maybe they were taking the year off preparing for a super duper mega spring offensive this spring 
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For crying out loud! You my friend are all but delusional. Is this the way you comfort your silly self when faced with the harsh realities on the ground? LOOOL!
Well you're about to lose a whole lot more sleep, you coward. Because your lies are about to be exposed! Admit that you know nothing about these issues, or that you are hiding the facts! One or the other, clown!
Regarding your claim that the Taliban are hated and the US being loved, heres what the Afghans say:
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Reporting on the deteriorating security environment in Afghanistan, Chris Sands of The Independent quoted ordinary Afghans, saying, “The difference between when the Taliban were in government and now is the same as the difference between land and sky. Now we are sick of life and if we are sick of life, how can we enjoy it? What is the meaning of life for us? At that time it had meaning, now it is nothing.’” (May 10, 2007).
Another Afghan compared the present state of affairs in Afghanistan with the Taliban era in these words: “’Yes, we want the Taliban back,’ said Haji Abdul Rahman, a tribal elder. ‘OK, they had some negative points, but they had a lot more positive points than the Karzai government. If Mullah Omar once said, ‘Stop cultivating poppies,’ no one would do it all over Afghanistan. Forget about Karzai — even if his grandfather and father came back from the grave and came together with all the coalition forces, they could not stop poppies being grown.’” (Chris Sands, April 1, 2007).
Yet another Afghan says: “I can only talk about Kandahar city. I think life under the Taliban was very good. If we did not have a full stomach, we could at least get some food and go to sleep. If we went out somewhere, there were no problems. How about now? If we go out, we don’t know if we will arrive home or not. If there is an explosion and the Americans are passing, they will just open fire on everyone.”
These reports simply vindicate those Muslim writers who reported in late 1990s that the law and order situation in Afghanistan was at its best in the past 25 years.
Interestingly Afghans are more fearful of the US and NATO forces today than they were of the Taliban five years ago. Note the opening lines of Chris Sands April 8, 2007 report: “Faiz Mohammed Karigar, a father of two, fled Kandahar when the Taliban held power in Afghanistan because he was against their restrictions on education. Now he wants the fundamentalists back.
‘When the Taliban were here, I escaped to the border with Iran, but I was never worried about my family,’ he said. ‘Every single minute of the last three years I have been very worried. Maybe tonight the Americans will come to my house, molest my wife and children and arrest me.’”
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Independent
And your obviously in denyal if don't accept the fact that the Taliban control majority of Southern Afghanistan:
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"The Taliban frontline now cuts halfway through the country, encompassing all of the southern provinces," the Senlis Council report says. The Senlis Council is an international policy think tank with offices in Kabul, London, Paris and Brussels.
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The tide has turned: Taliban have retaken control of southern Afghanistan – Support from local population for Central government and international military presence has been lost
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this is 2006
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WASHINGTON, Sept 5: Afghanistan is “falling back into the hands of the Taliban” and US-backed troops are fighting in a lawless land, says a report released on Tuesday.
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here is 2007:
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When I lived in Kabul a couple of years ago, it seemed unimaginable that the Taliban could return. The regime was considered a spent force and generally disliked by Afghans. Mullah Omar gathered his associates, told them they were on their own and fled on his motorcycle.
Today there are reports of Taliban attacks as close as two hours from the capital. Nato's forces are getting hammered in the south by an astonishingly strong insurgency. Suicide bombs, utterly alien to the Afghan fighting culture, are now common.
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try and deny this, fool!
or this:
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2007 has been the deadliest for the U.S. military here since the 2001 invasion.
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ANd regarding the nonesense that comes out of the mouths of Neo-CON clowns about Taliban being drug peddlers, then everyone knows how stupid this claim is:
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The Taleban's fight against opium production in Afghanistan was the "most effective" drug control policy of modern times, research suggests.
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BBC
There, fool. Not much of this is my own words, rather they are facts given to us by the people on the ground. So there's no need for Munafiqeen like yourself to give your "opinions" on these issues, as we know they are far from balanced, to say the least!
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I am considering two promises. One is the promise of God, the other is that of Bush. The promise of God is that my land is vast. If you start a journey on God's path, you can reside anywhere on this earth and will be protected... The promise of Bush is that there is no place on earth where you can hide that I cannot find you. We will see which one of these two promises is fulfilled. Mullah Muhammad 'Umar
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