Afghanistan

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    Should the U.S pull troops out of Afghanistan? As problems across the world progress, in the United States of America we will need to decide if we will deal with other countries dilemmas. There has been a major conflict in the USA about taking our troops of the military out of Afghanistan, and bringing them back to their home country. I strongly believe that they should take these troops out gradually because; if a problem happens there will be back up, if they take them out too fast it…

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    I would argue that during the cold war and after, the US goals and strategy were and still are neocolonial, but the purposes for being neocolonial changed. In the cold war, the plan was to prevent any nuclear detonation from either side and win by attrition of sorts. Not of troop numbers but by having a country more dedicated to its way of life and capable of sustaining itself long term, this was evident when the Soviet Union bankrupted itself and collapsed. Neocolonialism makes a lot of sense.…

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    Research Paper In 1979, the Soviet Union invaded Afghanistan supporting a newly elected communist government that was being threatened by traditional Islamic government officials. In 1981 Osama Bin Laden the son of a wealthy Saudi businessman crossed the border into Afghanistan to support the cause against the Soviet invasion. Bin Laden young member of the Islamic Brotherhood which believed in traditional Islam blended with 20th century government. In the beginning Bin Laden helped by raising…

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    Illegal Opium Markets

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    To fully investigate the impact of global relations the example of both illegal and legal opiates will be discussed. Throughout history, opium has been used for medicinal purposes making it a very tradeable commodity with a high net worth. This has led to the trade in both legal and illegal global markets. This essay will show how power, violence and harm together with global and local markets have been affected. It is important to understand the fundamental difference between legal and…

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    The Cuban Regime

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    Regime change highlights the negative, primal desires of the human conscious. Greed and apprehension are the driving factors behind today’s global instability. Economically, the US intervened in foreign land for the same reasons other global powers did throughout the course of human history. The target country has resources that the intervening country wants. Business interests and potential for profit were driving forces behind invasion. Moreover, the fear that communism would spread throughout…

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    December 24, 1979 the skies of Afghanistan were covered with the Soviets and its massive military airlift of around 280 transport aircraft and three divisions of almost 8,500 men each. That was the start of the invasion of Kabul, capital of Afghanistan (“Soviet Tanks Rolls into Afghanistan,” 2009). As the Soviets ground forces ventured out through the countryside they encountered resistance fighters, called mujahideen, who saw the atheist Soviets that controlled Afghanistan as a destruction of…

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    The Soviet-Vietnam War

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    In the late 1970’s there was a hot bed of political activity throughout the world, which fed into the Cold War. The Soviet-Afghanistan War was a battlefield in which the Cold War super powers never faced each other but fought each other through different avenues like many other conflicts. Years earlier, the American military fought a counterinsurgency in Vietnam in which the Soviets helped the North Vietnamese fight the Americans. Even though the Americans won the major battles within the war…

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    be perceived through the historical lens. The novel depicts the Soviet Union’s and the Taliban’s invasion of Afghanistan. In “The Kite Runner” the Soviet Union’s and the Taliban’s invasion of Afghanistan can be perceived through the historical lens. In 1979, the Soviet Union invades Afghanistan and “suddenly Afghanistan changed forever.” (pg 37) With death, struggle and poverty, Afghanistan is no longer considered a peaceful country. This is reflected by Hosseini in the novel, and helps to…

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    Introduction Set mostly in Afghanistan in the regime of Taliban, the book Kite Runner written by Khaled Hosseini has won many hearts from its reader. The book that first published in 2003 really deserves a title as The National Bestseller. Bringing the theme of friendship, betrayal, guilt, redemption and the uneasy love between fathers and sons this novel had me thrilled and moved, both at the same time. Hosseini successfully portrays the feeling of the characters and also the situational at…

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    Through the original aim of combating the Soviet occupying forces in Afghanistan, he shows how our support of the Mujaheddin militant groups sowed the first seeds that would lead to radical Islamism and the September 11th attacks. The novel contains thirty-two chapters but Coll asks the reader to consider it as three separate narratives each characterizing a different time period and agenda for our goals in Afghanistan and the Middle East. The first part of the book, titled “Blood Brothers”…

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