Author Topic: I Had Dinner With the Afghan Ambassador. What He Said About the Differences Between Trump, Obama Is Stunning  (Read 474 times)

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Online Right_in_Virginia

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I Had Dinner With the Afghan Ambassador. What He Said About the Differences Between Trump, Obama Is Stunning
Independent Journal Review, Mar 11, 2017, Benny Johnson

<snip>

Enter the current Afghan Ambassador to the United States, Dr. Hamdullah Mohib. Friday night, Mohib hosted a dinner at his residence for Gold Star wives, the wives of American soldiers who gave their lives fighting in his home country. This reporter was invited to attend and report on the events of the evening. The ambassador graciously received approximately one dozen Gold Star wives and members of the military community at his residence.

***
During this Q and A, the ambassador was asked about the current American administration and how the people of Afghanistan viewed President Trump. His answer stunned those listening, not only for its candor but also for its rare insight into how the president approaches foreign policy. His full response to the question:

Quote
"I've personally met with President Trump at Mar-a-Lago and the president has had two phone conversations with President Ghani [The president of Afghanistan]. One call was after he won the election and one after [Trump] became president. Before the calls, we were advised to keep conversations short because, we were told, Trump will not be interested in the details of the call and does not have a long attention span, so it would be pointless to have a long call.

However, we were pleasantly surprised at how much time President Trump spent asking very informed questions. The first time the presidents spoke, the questions Trump asked impressed us. “How can you win in this fight [against terrorism]?” he asked. “What do you need to become financially independent?” and “How can American business invest in Afghanistan? How can we develop businesses and mining in your country?”

Trump would listen intently after each question, often asking follow-ups. Trump's second call with our president was even longer than the first. Asking these types of questions for our country is something the Obama administration never did. The Obama administration was the most academic administration we have ever had to deal with but the Trump administration has been the most thoughtful and intelligent.

Trump continually asked “How can you win? What does Afghanistan need to win?” in reference to our fight with terrorism. Trump wants to win. Sincerely. All the Obama administration wanted to do was not lose.

The Obama administration was hesitant with us. The enemy could sense that. When the Obama administration announced its plans to pull troops out of the region, they announced the exact date they would do it. All our enemies had to do was wait [Obama] out. They knew the date they had to hang on until — which gave them the will to fight. They used that time to recruit and build up resources.

To bring real reform, we must be able to defeat enemies outside our country and inside. We must overthrow the Afghan warlords who are profiteering off the war. Every time we tried to remove one of them from power, [Secretary John] Kerry would say "no" because it would potentially make it unstable and require more troops be brought in. The entire Obama administration was too cautious, but Kerry was the most cautious. Perhaps the Obama administration was fatigued by the time we assumed power. [President Ghani assumed power in September of 2014.] But Trump is very different from Obama in this way.

This is good, for the future of Afghanistan."

The comments at the dinner were very well-received. Gold Star wives nodded their heads in agreement over their dessert tea being served. One wife directly followed the comments from the ambassador by saying Obama's actions in Afghanistan were an “insult” to her husband's legacy and what he fought for. The ambassador said he hoped to honor legacies of Americans and Afghans alike by creating a stable, free, democratic society in his country.

All left the dinner in good spirits.


More:  http://ijr.com/2017/03/822619-i-had-dinner-with-the-afghanistan-ambassador-what-he-said-about-the-differences-between-trump-obama-is-stunning/?utm_campaign=ods&utm_content=Politics&utm_medium=Owned&utm_source=Facebook&utm_term=ijamerica

Online Right_in_Virginia

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The Obama administration was the most academic administration we have ever had to deal with but the Trump administration has been the most thoughtful and intelligent.

This jumped out at me.   

Offline don-o

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Yeah,  This has been all over the news....

Wait. What?

Seriously, it's a great post. A breath of fresh air as the truth is told.

Offline EC

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http://edition.cnn.com/2015/09/30/opinions/mohib-afghanistan-future/

https://foreignpolicy.com/2011/06/27/a-grassroots-democracy-for-afghanistan/

Couple of articles the Ambassador has written, as background to him. Both of them well worth the time to read, he's a smart man.
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Offline truth_seeker

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Partisan politics aside, a keen student of true* history will conclude it is almost certainly futile, to expect Afghanistan to come into the 2oth century, let alone the 21st.

Our one and only objective should be preventing the nation from harboring terrorists.

I recommend reading "Caravans," by James A. Michener, 1963.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caravans_(novel)

*"true history," as distinguished from wishful thinking, nation building, etc.

"God must love the common man, he made so many of them.�  Abe Lincoln