Biden really goes all in at proving himself wrong, almost like it is intentional.
@freemo Wasn't foreign policy one of the things Trump was supposedly so terrible at?
@swiley Not sure what Trump has to do with anything. But while I wouldnt be singing Trump's praises on foreign policy or anything else for that matter. But he did seem marginally better than democrats, at least he was willing to engage in peace talks at all with some people.
@freemo Sure but there's a wide gulf between "we can take on the US government with these weapons" and "we can raid villages and hide until the Americans get bored and go home". In particular, the militia types who think they constitute any sort of an effective check on the government can't feasibly pursue the latter strategy, because the military's already operating on its home turf. If you transplant the Taliban from the mountains of Kandahar to those of Colorado, there's no way they aren't completely overrun just as fast as they took power this week.
I think the militia might have a role to play in a hypothetical civil war scenario, if the army splits so nearly down the middle that they can tip the balance one way or the other, but then they're fighting alongside F-15s and nukes anyway.
Except that gulf doesnt actually exist here as you imply. In the event of a civil war is really no different. The people with guns raid villages and other attainable targets ont he other side, not large military bases. Its called a "war of attrition". Over time you weaken the spirit and will to fight of the other side and eventually win by having them give up or defect.
There is no reason to think that the same tactic used by the taliban in an american civil war lasting a decade or more wouldnt have the same effect, an inability to defeat the side with just guns and no F-15s and eventually needing to surrender or go on fighting forever.
Weve seen sides with no or little air superiority or missiles win wars (or stalemate them) so many times it amazes me people still use that old debunk trope that you need f-15s. The american revolutionary war, Vietnam, pretty much every USA backed conflict in africa.. in all cases our F-15s made little to no difference vs a few gorilla fighters with guns.
@freemo Were the Americans strongarmed into signing the agreement though? My understanding was they wanted out because an isolationist administration was in power, and they just wanted the Taliban to stop doing terrorism long enough that the army could leave without being accused of abandoning the civilians to the terrorists. @swiley