• Thanks for stopping by. Logging in to a registered account will remove all generic ads. Please reach out with any questions or concerns.

Africa in Crisis- The Merged Superthread

Getting goofy in Mali - again ....
... with these from a couple of weeks back:
 
FRA media: all that chlorine ain't just purifying water in Sudan ...
... with a touch of backstory/refresher on the whole civil war fracas
 
FRA media: all that chlorine ain't just purifying water in Sudan ...
... with a touch of backstory/refresher on the whole civil war fracas
I went to Sudan as part of the security detail for a documentary being made by an independent film-maker who had partnered with The Associated Press maybe 15-ish years ago now. (Time flies, but 15-ish sounds right-ish)

I'll see what I can find in terms of pics and stuff from that trip. (This was before high quality smart phone cameras were in everybody's pocket. I DID have some pretty nifty disposable cameras tho!)

...

South Sudan hadn't become an officially recognized country yet, but was about to - and there was A LOT of ethnic violence happening in that area immediately prior to South Sudan being recognized internationally as it's own country.

These days there is a UN Peacekeeping force there (quality of troops is pretty deplorable - pls correct me if I'm wrong) and things have calmed down

But the place was a total shit show then.

And while the ethnic violence seems to have simmered down since my time there, I can't imagine its a remotely nice place to live in or grow up in.

...

I was on TF-206 & TF-110 in Afghanistan, and took my training seriously before I deployed.

I even invested in some private courses prior to deployment along with some of the other guys - and I would confidently argue that our drills, right before and during deployment, were exceptionally better than the troops who didn't get the same opportunities.

(Edmonton Police Service's Tactical Unit were awesome guys & showed us A LOT of simple yet super useful tips)


Anyways I went to Sudan near the end of 2010, and I put that training to FAR BETTER use there than I ever did in Afghanistan. And saw more shit there than I ever did in the sandbox.

(Anybody who's had to "Go check if anybody's alive at Callsign-X after an IED blast hit a LAV-3 learns quickly that sometimes the occupants are banged up, maybe require hospitalization, but mostly "okay" (okay being fairly relative...) but you may also find your friends deceased - to put that as non-graphically as possible)

Sudan was a whole new level of violence

We saw people there in the same shape (or worse, believe it or not) who hadn't driven over an IED or stepped on a landmine, but were mutilated by their fellow humans with bare hands & machetes.

All because of some cultural or religious bullshit, although the battle for basic resources was starting to shape events there beyond the religious differences between tribes.

(Although there's plenty of one-legged people there who have stepped on landmines - so many it REALLY causes one to stop & think about a lot. I think the de-mining crews have since made the populated areas fairly safe now, they were pretty clear of landmines even when I was there. Don't go for any strolls off the roads or well walked pathways tho.)


...


Sketchy place is a massive understatement. There's almost like a constant evil in the air there. This chlorine attack sounds absolutely horrid in what it did to it's victims - it doesn't surprize me in the least tho

Honestly thought chlorine attacks had already been a thing there 🤷‍♂️
 
Sometimes failing states just need to fail.
But I'm not sure that today's UN is ready or able to hand out "mandates" to e.g. Australia, Bhutan, Canada, Denmark and Estonia to "rule" these places as, de facto, colonies for a century or so while necessary and durable socio-political institutions are built and can take root.
 
But I'm not sure that today's UN is ready or able to hand out "mandates" to e.g. Australia, Bhutan, Canada, Denmark and Estonia to "rule" these places as, de facto, colonies for a century or so while necessary and durable socio-political institutions are built and can take root.
The UN is worse than useless right now - its dangerous.

I would not trust the UN to run a hot dog stand. (The quote is a bastardization of one of RSM Roy Bruce's sayings. His actual quote was "Number One Guard you couldn't escort a hot dog stand" and yes I was in Number One Guard)
 
But I'm not sure that today's UN is ready or able to hand out "mandates" to e.g. Australia, Bhutan, Canada, Denmark and Estonia to "rule" these places as, de facto, colonies for a century or so while necessary and durable socio-political institutions are built and can take root.

Is it our responsibility to fix every failed state ? I appreciate the compassion and empathy some have for the less fortunate around the world. But the fact is we don't all get to make it. And truly, if these states want to be better and become functioning facets of a global community they have to clean up their yard themselves.
 
The UN is worse than useless right now - its dangerous.

I would not trust the UN to run a hot dog stand. (The quote is a bastardization of one of RSM Roy Bruce's sayings. His actual quote was "Number One Guard you couldn't escort a hot dog stand" and yes I was in Number One Guard)
The UN is useless intentionally. A lot more would be able to get done if those vetos were removed allowing the worst bad actors to be held to account.
 
And bring their refugees here?
The EU has discovered that it is cheaper to keep Ukraine a viable nation than it is to have to fight Russia on their own territory at a later date. By the same reasoning, it is probably cheaper and will cost fewer lives to assist where we can rather than combating dealing with the refugees and probable spill-over of war into our own backyards. Just look at what has happened in Africa with the spread of extreme Islam
 
Back
Top