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(#21)
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| The Following User Says Thank You to asad71 For This Useful Post: | ||
ComradePashtun (07-23-2012) | ||
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(#22)
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| there is certain point that britian is establishing a officers academie , considering our history this a great insult !!! why was not taken turkey , italy or the usa to establish such a facility ???? besides to this ,we had our own military academy and system , though it was outdated and not so progressive , but to go our own way and establish our own doctrines. By sending caddetts to different foreign academies and taking the experience of the few left over saimanzaban , and incorparating their experiences combiend with the experiences of different countries and their approaches , would be the right way. not just copying british monkeys... |
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(#23)
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| i still find the idea of an afghan military based on the principles of the west, which have almost an unlimited supply of money, to be ridiculous. afghanistan does not and probably never will have the capability to wage a state sponsored conventional war, so this is all useless. id rather the afghan government find the best and brightest of the last 30 years of jihad to form a military academy. |
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badmash_khel (07-23-2012) | ||
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(#24)
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all strategical dicisions were made by western military advisors for the so called mujahedin . Quote:
in such envoirement it is obvious that without a state , there can be not defence forces . and unless , there is not a determined state which has got the peoples interesst on his mind , and not the interesst of mr, america or muslim muslim brother , we will continue to suffer . if pakistan could beg for somuch military aid and sell their selfes as a strategic partner . if today the americans attack iran , even if they do it from the arabian peninsula , you will see the iranians bomb afghanistan , because they know we can not hit back . same thing is happening now at the broder , pakis are firing rockets on us , because america cuts the cash for them . so a strong conventionall army in combination with a draft like in swiss , is the best soloution . but as i said before , the political will is much more important , because war is just politics with different tools . |
| The Following User Says Thank You to abassinafghan For This Useful Post: | ||
Tjanaparh (07-24-2012) | ||
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(#25)
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| 1.Another pertinent issue is the Afghan state's fundamental principles. Will these change with the end of Karzai Govt? An Afghan Corps of Military Officers will need to be developed/ molded keeping in mind the State Principles. 2. Like Muslim soldiers all over the world the Afghan soldier also derives his strength from Islam. His war cry is the same that a Bengladeshi soldier or any Muslim soldier yells in battle: "Allah O Akbar". Afghans are totally anti-secularist. These are all understood. But various questions remain and can be found in the vast differences between the fundamentals of IEA and Karzai's IRA. Afghans need to address these so that the Officer Corps is adequately equipped morally, spiritually and emerges with a character that the nation requires. |
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(#26)
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am i a secularist , because i dont belive the words of any donkey who has got his own agenda and use religion to hide his agenda ??? do i have to belive the words of some one just because he says 10 times wallah , even if i have proof that it is obvious that he lies `? do i have to judge the acts of people by the standart that they pray 5 times a day have a beard , and talk no and then about islam , even all their acts contradicts his claims ??? grow up people , sometimes i think i am just sourrounded by children in this board |
| The Following User Says Thank You to abassinafghan For This Useful Post: | ||
JattApache (07-24-2012) | ||
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(#27)
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| Since the discussions have veered into Indian military providing training to Afghans, this report is relevant. Indian army facing breakdown in ranks Indian army facing breakdown in ranks Indian army facing breakdown in ranks The Indian army is grappling with growing concerns a failure of leadership and a drop in the quality of officer recruits is behind a breakdown of discipline among key combat units. In the last three months, Army Chief General Bikram Singh has been quietly visiting army bases across the country, emphasising to India's 1 million-strong army the core values of a disciplined army and a renewed stress on officer-soldier relations. It follows three major incidents of troop discipline in the past eight month, all related to combat units. Founder of the Defence Planning Staff, Major General Ashok Mehta, has told Radio Australia's Connect Asia program, the issues relate to the relationship between officers and soldiers. "The visible manifestation of the problem might be not granting leave or otherwise," he said. "[However], the basic issue that comes out of any cases of collective indiscipline reflect the fact that the officer-man management - those relations have snapped." Earlier this month, there were reports of a stand-off between officers and men from 16 Cavalry located at Samba in Jammu and Kashmir, close to the border with Pakistan. In early May, there was a huge brawl at Nyoma, close to the Line of Actual Control in eastern Ladakh, when troops from an artillery unit clashed with officers, resulting in several hospitalisations from serious injuries. Army Headquarters described the clash - the worst of its kind since some units mutinied in 1984 - as "an incident of indiscipline," not a mutiny. There was yet another skirmish prior to this. Lieutenant General R.K. Sawhney, a former deputy army chief, says the clashes do not point to a complete breakdown of discipline. "The three cases have found out to be ultimately because of command failure, actually," he said. "That is being looked into, but this is not very alarming. Sure it is a pointer that the army has to be conscious about, but I won't say discipline has broken down." Strategic analyst Saurabh Joshi says much of the current concerns about discipline are due to the changed nature of both combat and the soldiers themselves, creating a more stressful environment. "Troops are more educated, they are more connected, they are more aware," he said "This is not the Indian army of 20 years back - the leadership of the army must recognize that and deal with that course correction because I fear this could happen again." "More problematically, the issue is that these incidents are not taking place in a peace station. They are taking place in sensitive locations - those deployments are very important." Indian army facing breakdown in ranks - Australia Network News - ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation) |
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(#28)
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your ana comment is a perfect example, its trying to be a conventional army when afghanistan has never had a large conventional army. they are following the failures of the commie governments of the 80s. in times of war against the british, the conventional army was dissolved and the fighting was left to the tribes. Quote:
fighting a conventional war takes a lot of money. afghanistan mobilizing its entire army on the western border of iran would probably drain its entire annual defense budget lol never mind the obvious technological deficiency. |
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