Any reflections written by a former solider, complicit in an intervention that became the world’s deadliest conflict, are sure to reek of privilege; not just white but American/global North. But as general rule, isn’t it better for these soldiers to reflect, rather than not?
-
-
Vastauksena käyttäjille @and_huh_what ja @mebtikar
...In spite of the self-indulgence of public self-reflection, I think it can have great public benefit coming from US veterans: reflective ones are more likely to tell their friends/neighbors (or write op-eds) that war was a mistake. Don’t do another.
1 vastaus 0 uudelleentwiittausta 2 tykkäystä -
Vastauksena käyttäjille @and_huh_what ja @mebtikar
Even granting criticism of author’s positionality (and I do!), today’s context is key: powerful US policymakers/ commentators are trying to gaslight the
#AfghanistanPapers, esp. military leaders. The op-ed is a rebuttal from their own “tribe.” I like to think/hope it will help.1 vastaus 0 uudelleentwiittausta 0 tykkäystä -
Vastauksena käyttäjälle @and_huh_what
Ok let's see, a) frankly I don’t see any reflection in her article whatsoever b) the timing of these “reflective” op-eds suggest that they come once everyone “realizes” facts about the world? where was her "honesty" all this time? it's been almost a decade c) these individuals
1 vastaus 0 uudelleentwiittausta 6 tykkäystä -
Vastauksena käyttäjille @mebtikar ja @and_huh_what
are knowingly complicit, their realizations and deep thoughts aren’t going to – to use your words – serve great public benefit. They need to give public apologies and be actively engaged in undoing the damages they’ve done.
1 vastaus 0 uudelleentwiittausta 3 tykkäystä -
Vastauksena käyttäjille @mebtikar ja @and_huh_what
This an important thread. Op eds like this make me want to tear my hair out. A lot of people knew, took the paychecks, took the promotions and now, by acknowledging their part in things, are taking bylines. Theirs is not the perspective I want to hear. It should not be privileged
1 vastaus 0 uudelleentwiittausta 3 tykkäystä -
We should be calling this out. And yet, in the isolated echo chamber of US policy, this is still a voice of dissent. Like
@and_huh_what says, there's a battle over the narrative of Afghanistan w/in the US. That narrative matters. As much as it makes me want to bang my head1 vastaus 0 uudelleentwiittausta 0 tykkäystä -
into a desk (you knew! couldn't you have taken a stand when it might have mattered most?) -- it still matters that they are speaking up. That might be the first step on a long road to actual accountability and acknowledgment, like
@mebtikar, is rightly calling for. But man the1 vastaus 0 uudelleentwiittausta 0 tykkäystä -
US is so far from that. If this is a baby step on the way to that reckoning, OK. I guess I have to here for it. I don't have to like it. But I have to acknowledge that, just maybe, this is part of how the US begins to understand the full horror of the past 18 yrs
1 vastaus 0 uudelleentwiittausta 0 tykkäystä -
(But I say all this as an American, and as an aid worker who was there and has had my own personal reckoning. And I know that the full horror of being an Afghan reading something like this is a wholly different thing. Which I can't even imagine)
1 vastaus 0 uudelleentwiittausta 1 tykkäys
And those voices -- those are the ones I want to hear more of. If only the US opinion pages had more of those...
-
-
So, you know, if I were an editor at
@washingtonpost@PostOpinions, and think balance and truth are important, I'd probably be asking@mebtikar or any Afghan who liked her tweet, to write a reaction piece. hint HINT0 vastausta 0 uudelleentwiittausta 2 tykkäystä -
Tämä twiitti ei ole saatavilla.
- Näytä vastaukset
Uusi keskustelu -
Lataaminen näyttää kestävän hetken.
Twitter saattaa olla ruuhkautunut tai ongelma on muuten hetkellinen. Yritä uudelleen tai käy Twitterin tilasivulla saadaksesi lisätietoja.