Accurate reporting of After Action Reports has been a big problem throughout history. Most soldiers over report the number of enemies killed, the damage they did. The Germans in WW2 were famous for over reporting the number of tanks they knocked out, and that was for their internal numbers, not propaganda.
I really, really doubt the Taliban have an accurate means of reporting these numbers. They also have a lot of reasons to lie, just like the US.
I'm not really sure I buy this argument that they are a reliable source of info. I would trust an unaffiliated NGO the most.
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daveNYCWhy universe hate Waspinator?Registered Userregular
Theoretically, internal numbers tracking enemy activities [i[should[/i] be fairly accurate. There's plenty of reasons to fake some of the numbers (perhaps to influence resource allocation, maybe make the local forces look bad-ass for holding up under intense enemy action, or the always popular 'blame the other guy for the mass grave that you filled'), but generally the pressure will be to produce accurate data in order to be able to effectively prosecute the war. Internal numbers for your own actions have even more likelihood of being garbage (why report that you killed some rando farmer when you could call him an enemy combatant instead) and the first question that should be asked when being shown any numbers by any of these groups is 'What do they hope to gain by showing me these numbers?'
Shut up, Mr. Burton! You were not brought upon this world to get it!
The US is fairly reliable at refusing to give up it's war crime weapons. It's honestly amazing you ever officially deactivated the chemical weapon stockpiles.
The US is fairly reliable at refusing to give up it's war crime weapons. It's honestly amazing you ever officially deactivated the chemical weapon stockpiles.
It's only because the US has so many nukes. Any response to chemical/biological weapons will just be a nuke
The US is fairly reliable at refusing to give up it's war crime weapons. It's honestly amazing you ever officially deactivated the chemical weapon stockpiles.
It's only because the US has so many nukes. Any response to chemical/biological weapons will just be a nuke
Eh, Chem/Bio weapons are kind of ineffective in general - they don't tend to win tactical victories and invite strategic response. But the same is basically true of landmines - there's no real reason the US would ever want to use them, except I presume that it keeps deploying them into the DMZ maybe? But they're useless weapons if your tactical doctrine is manoeuver warfare since you deny yourself territory and space you already control.
The US has never signed anti-landmine treaties in the first place.
Well, we should have, but we also do not have to sign those treaties in order to not keep using them.
To quote from the Vox article linked:
Roughly four hours later, Biden weighed in as well. “The Trump administration’s reversal of years of considered decisions by Democratic and Republican presidents to curtail the use of landmines is another reckless act by a president ill-suited to serve as commander-in-chief,” he said in an email from his campaign. “It will put more civilians at risk of being injured by unexploded mines, and is unnecessary from a military perspective. As president, I will promptly roll back this deeply misguided decision.”
The US is fairly reliable at refusing to give up it's war crime weapons. It's honestly amazing you ever officially deactivated the chemical weapon stockpiles.
It's only because the US has so many nukes. Any response to chemical/biological weapons will just be a nuke
Eh, Chem/Bio weapons are kind of ineffective in general - they don't tend to win tactical victories and invite strategic response. But the same is basically true of landmines - there's no real reason the US would ever want to use them, except I presume that it keeps deploying them into the DMZ maybe? But they're useless weapons if your tactical doctrine is manoeuver warfare since you deny yourself territory and space you already control.
Landmines are a good fit for the DMZ, but the DMZ is a rather unique setting. Pretty much everywhere else they're bad and people using them should feel bad.
Shut up, Mr. Burton! You were not brought upon this world to get it!
The Taliban are not idiots but nor are they above lying
I wouldn't trust any numbers they voluntarily share because who trusts casualty counts shared by anyone? I certainly don't. Not the Taliban, not the US gov and not the Afghan gov. Maybe independent observers. But in Afghanistan they are very limited in access.
That said I don't doubt that they do actually have internal figures which they attempt to make as accurate as they can
The US had been making small, incremental steps towards acting more in-line with the 1997 treaty; the most recent being Obama's 2014 policy change that production and procurement of landmines would stop, and their continued use would be limited to the Korean penninsula. That Biden is opting to endorse Trump's policy change last year is concerning.
The treaty should have definitely been signed by the US during its original ratification, and their justification for not doing so hinging on their use in the DMZ is worthy of criticism and derision
Also, landmines aren't an effective tool for the kind of warfare the US engages in; they're effectively long term traps meant to make an area too dangerous to traverse for enemy forces and that's completely counter intuitive to the way the US has conducted warfare for the past 30 years with it's focus on seeking out the enemy and eliminating them.
"an era of strategic competition that requires our military to become more lethal" is a hell of a quote.
Lots o people gearing up for a naval war with China right now. And I guess also repelling a land invasion now too.
If Trump had still been in charge, I would have assumed the plan was to mine the oceans – with land mines.
I'm pretty sure his plan was to plant landmines on the southern border.
Also a moat
Didn't that fucking moron 100% seriously ask about stocking it with alligators too?
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RingoHe/Hima distinct lack of substanceRegistered Userregular
Somebody in the Pentagon thinks that having the option to mine Taiwan is a good idea
It's not
If we don't have air superiority in that potential fight China will take what they want eventually. And if we do have air superiority then landmines have little utility on top of being civilian murdering war crimes.
This is also some absolute bullshit from the Biden Administration, jfc
Also, landmines aren't an effective tool for the kind of warfare the US engages in; they're effectively long term traps meant to make an area too dangerous to traverse for enemy forces and that's completely counter intuitive to the way the US has conducted warfare for the past 30 years with it's focus on seeking out the enemy and eliminating them.
One major exception is forward operating bases.
Minefields can provide a passive defensive barrier that acts as a force multiplier and reduces the number of troops needed for security and can deter / prevent suicide bombers and VBIEDs.
They aren't useful in all contexts and their potential harm definitely offsets their benefit, but they aren't universally ineffective.
Also, landmines aren't an effective tool for the kind of warfare the US engages in; they're effectively long term traps meant to make an area too dangerous to traverse for enemy forces and that's completely counter intuitive to the way the US has conducted warfare for the past 30 years with it's focus on seeking out the enemy and eliminating them.
One major exception is forward operating bases.
Minefields can provide a passive defensive barrier that acts as a force multiplier and reduces the number of troops needed for security and can deter / prevent suicide bombers and VBIEDs.
They aren't useful in all contexts and their potential harm definitely offsets their benefit, but they aren't universally ineffective.
doesn't the US produce a huge amount of landmines and makes alot of money selling them off to other countries?
I think this was a large reason why they never signed the older anti-landmine agreements.
Also, landmines aren't an effective tool for the kind of warfare the US engages in; they're effectively long term traps meant to make an area too dangerous to traverse for enemy forces and that's completely counter intuitive to the way the US has conducted warfare for the past 30 years with it's focus on seeking out the enemy and eliminating them.
One major exception is forward operating bases.
Minefields can provide a passive defensive barrier that acts as a force multiplier and reduces the number of troops needed for security and can deter / prevent suicide bombers and VBIEDs.
They aren't useful in all contexts and their potential harm definitely offsets their benefit, but they aren't universally ineffective.
doesn't the US produce a huge amount of landmines and makes alot of money selling them off to other countries?
I think this was a large reason why they never signed the older anti-landmine agreements.
We did, until 2014 when Obama stopped it. We can do it again now though.
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jmcdonaldI voted, did you?DC(ish)Registered Userregular
It would make sense to keep and store them for like a total war scenario for a declared war. I guess? It wouldnt hurt anyone but landmine exporters to sign the treaty and just eat a violation of it if some very specific situation absolutely required it.
Land mines are one of the most horrific weapons ever invented and I really am disappointed this did not go through.
He's a shy overambitious dog-catcher on the wrong side of the law. She's an orphaned psychic mercenary with the power to bend men's minds. They fight crime!
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TraceGNU Terry Pratchett; GNU Gus; GNU Carrie Fisher; GNU Adam WeRegistered Userregular
On Sunday, the US released a photo that showed one of its guided-missile destroyers, the USS Mustin, shadowing the Liaoning group - a move that analysts said was designed to send a clear message to the Chinese.
The photo taken on Monday somewhere in the East China Sea showed the ship’s captain, Commander Robert J Briggs, and his deputy Commander Richard D Slye watching the Liaoning, which was just a few thousand metres away.
It's posturing to send a signal to China, nobody expects an actual war to break out. It's the same reason nobody's going to do the same to Russia. A big reason for the US to get China to back down is to show it, and its allies, are more than able to make a war less palatable is by physically showing fucking around isn't worth it. Then this goes back to soft power bullshit, which everyone prefers.
It's posturing to send a signal to China, nobody expects an actual war to break out. It's the same reason nobody's going to do the same to Russia. A big reason for the US to get China to back down is to show it, and its allies, are more than able to make a war less palatable is by physically showing fucking around isn't worth it. Then this goes back to soft power bullshit, which everyone prefers.
Also, is an unfortunate but needed answer to China's ridiculous territorial claims.
It's posturing to send a signal to China, nobody expects an actual war to break out. It's the same reason nobody's going to do the same to Russia. A big reason for the US to get China to back down is to show it, and its allies, are more than able to make a war less palatable is by physically showing fucking around isn't worth it. Then this goes back to soft power bullshit, which everyone prefers.
Only with countries who won't break the world in a conflict, that's what proxy wars with those countries are for when things get too hot. The US arms manufacturers would be ok with a war in Venezuela, not a land war in China or Russia for those reasons.
Edit: We know what the US would do against a country who is too strong on is own soil in wars, and its nukes. That's what the Cold War was about.
It's posturing to send a signal to China, nobody expects an actual war to break out. It's the same reason nobody's going to do the same to Russia. A big reason for the US to get China to back down is to show it, and its allies, are more than able to make a war less palatable is by physically showing fucking around isn't worth it. Then this goes back to soft power bullshit, which everyone prefers.
Also, is an unfortunate but needed answer to China's ridiculous territorial claims.
Why do we need anti personel mines to stop the Chinese from claiming a bunch of unoccupied atolls and sand bars?
It's posturing to send a signal to China, nobody expects an actual war to break out. It's the same reason nobody's going to do the same to Russia. A big reason for the US to get China to back down is to show it, and its allies, are more than able to make a war less palatable is by physically showing fucking around isn't worth it. Then this goes back to soft power bullshit, which everyone prefers.
Its so US arms manufacturers can make money Harry
It is true that US arms manufacturers will make money but that does not mean that it is done for the sake of US arms manufacturers making money.
"The only way to get rid of a temptation is to give into it." - Oscar Wilde
"We believe in the people and their 'wisdom' as if there was some special secret entrance to knowledge that barred to anyone who had ever learned anything." - Friedrich Nietzsche
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HenroidMexican kicked from Immigration ThreadCentrism is Racism :3Registered Userregular
Only with countries who won't break the world in a conflict, that's what proxy wars with those countries are for when things get too hot. The US arms manufacturers would be ok with a war in Venezuela, not a land war in China or Russia for those reasons.
Edit: We know what the US would do against a country who is too strong on is own soil in wars, and its nukes. That's what the Cold War was about.
Did you skip the entirety of 1900's US history? Because uh, the US hasn't given a shit who it sells weapons to and the results of those organizations being armed and what they did with being armed.
It's posturing to send a signal to China, nobody expects an actual war to break out. It's the same reason nobody's going to do the same to Russia. A big reason for the US to get China to back down is to show it, and its allies, are more than able to make a war less palatable is by physically showing fucking around isn't worth it. Then this goes back to soft power bullshit, which everyone prefers.
Also, is an unfortunate but needed answer to China's ridiculous territorial claims.
Why do we need anti personel mines to stop the Chinese from claiming a bunch of unoccupied atolls and sand bars?
Was thinking about the latest US Navy movement, not the land mine stuff. My bad if that didn't came through.
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HenroidMexican kicked from Immigration ThreadCentrism is Racism :3Registered Userregular
Like for example, Afghanistan and the LAND WAR they had with Russia, @Harry Dresden. US Arms backed that shit.
It's posturing to send a signal to China, nobody expects an actual war to break out. It's the same reason nobody's going to do the same to Russia. A big reason for the US to get China to back down is to show it, and its allies, are more than able to make a war less palatable is by physically showing fucking around isn't worth it. Then this goes back to soft power bullshit, which everyone prefers.
Its so US arms manufacturers can make money Harry
It is true that US arms manufacturers will make money but that does not mean that it is done for the sake of US arms manufacturers making money.
I mean they're internationally condemned weapons of marginal utility that maim and murder civilians for decades after deployment. Given how much of our arms production is driven by profit motives I think Im being as charitable as possible.
Posts
I really, really doubt the Taliban have an accurate means of reporting these numbers. They also have a lot of reasons to lie, just like the US.
I'm not really sure I buy this argument that they are a reliable source of info. I would trust an unaffiliated NGO the most.
Daily Beast reporter.
This is a broken campaign promise.
https://www.vox.com/2020/2/3/21120684/2020-presidential-election-foreign-policy-landmines
Lots o people gearing up for a naval war with China right now. And I guess also repelling a land invasion now too.
If Trump had still been in charge, I would have assumed the plan was to mine the oceans – with land mines.
It's only because the US has so many nukes. Any response to chemical/biological weapons will just be a nuke
Eh, Chem/Bio weapons are kind of ineffective in general - they don't tend to win tactical victories and invite strategic response. But the same is basically true of landmines - there's no real reason the US would ever want to use them, except I presume that it keeps deploying them into the DMZ maybe? But they're useless weapons if your tactical doctrine is manoeuver warfare since you deny yourself territory and space you already control.
Whole new theater of kids playing soccer to maim
Well, we should have, but we also do not have to sign those treaties in order to not keep using them.
To quote from the Vox article linked:
Rock Band DLC | GW:OttW - arrcd | WLD - Thortar
Landmines are a good fit for the DMZ, but the DMZ is a rather unique setting. Pretty much everywhere else they're bad and people using them should feel bad.
I wouldn't trust any numbers they voluntarily share because who trusts casualty counts shared by anyone? I certainly don't. Not the Taliban, not the US gov and not the Afghan gov. Maybe independent observers. But in Afghanistan they are very limited in access.
That said I don't doubt that they do actually have internal figures which they attempt to make as accurate as they can
The treaty should have definitely been signed by the US during its original ratification, and their justification for not doing so hinging on their use in the DMZ is worthy of criticism and derision
I'm guessing beach volleyball in this case actually.
Although I suppose people do also sometimes play soccer on the beach too.
I'm pretty sure his plan was to plant landmines on the southern border.
Also a moat
Didn't that fucking moron 100% seriously ask about stocking it with alligators too?
It's not
If we don't have air superiority in that potential fight China will take what they want eventually. And if we do have air superiority then landmines have little utility on top of being civilian murdering war crimes.
This is also some absolute bullshit from the Biden Administration, jfc
One major exception is forward operating bases.
Minefields can provide a passive defensive barrier that acts as a force multiplier and reduces the number of troops needed for security and can deter / prevent suicide bombers and VBIEDs.
They aren't useful in all contexts and their potential harm definitely offsets their benefit, but they aren't universally ineffective.
Sure did
doesn't the US produce a huge amount of landmines and makes alot of money selling them off to other countries?
I think this was a large reason why they never signed the older anti-landmine agreements.
http://steamcommunity.com/id/BretonBrawler
We did, until 2014 when Obama stopped it. We can do it again now though.
Looks like good conversation has taken place on the JCPOA per WaPo
Land mines are one of the most horrific weapons ever invented and I really am disappointed this did not go through.
Wow that's uh... really close.
It's posturing to send a signal to China, nobody expects an actual war to break out. It's the same reason nobody's going to do the same to Russia. A big reason for the US to get China to back down is to show it, and its allies, are more than able to make a war less palatable is by physically showing fucking around isn't worth it. Then this goes back to soft power bullshit, which everyone prefers.
Also, is an unfortunate but needed answer to China's ridiculous territorial claims.
Its so US arms manufacturers can make money Harry
Only with countries who won't break the world in a conflict, that's what proxy wars with those countries are for when things get too hot. The US arms manufacturers would be ok with a war in Venezuela, not a land war in China or Russia for those reasons.
Edit: We know what the US would do against a country who is too strong on is own soil in wars, and its nukes. That's what the Cold War was about.
Why do we need anti personel mines to stop the Chinese from claiming a bunch of unoccupied atolls and sand bars?
It is true that US arms manufacturers will make money but that does not mean that it is done for the sake of US arms manufacturers making money.
"We believe in the people and their 'wisdom' as if there was some special secret entrance to knowledge that barred to anyone who had ever learned anything." - Friedrich Nietzsche
Was thinking about the latest US Navy movement, not the land mine stuff. My bad if that didn't came through.
I mean they're internationally condemned weapons of marginal utility that maim and murder civilians for decades after deployment. Given how much of our arms production is driven by profit motives I think Im being as charitable as possible.