Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Pentagon admits Kabul drone strike that killed 10 civilians, including up to 7 children, was a 'tragic mistake'
US officials have apologised for killing innocent civilians in a drone strike near Kabul airport on 29 August, admitting they had mistakenly thought they were targeting a facilitator for ISIS-K.
By Alexa Phillips, news reporter
Saturday 18 September 2021
Excerpts.....
"Gen Mark Milley, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told reporters two days after the attack that it appeared to have been a "righteous" strike and that at least one of the people killed was a "facilitator" for ISIS-K - the Islamic State group's Afghanistan affiliate."
"Defence Secretary Lloyd Austin said: "We now know that there was no connection between Mr Ahmadi and ISIS-Khorasan, that his activities on that day were completely harmless and not at all related to the imminent threat we believed we faced."
"We apologise, and we will endeavour to learn from this horrible mistake."
"US President Joe Biden had touted the strike as a success and as proof that the US could carry out "over the horizon" strikes from outside Afghanistan."
https://news.sky.com/story/pentagon-admits-kabul-drone-strike-that-killed-10-civilians-including-up-to-7-children-was-a-tragic-mistake-12410757
Exactly, a mistake. As opposed to Trump and Hesgeth’s illegal murder order. Thanks for clarifying for this board.
Also we were at war with Afghanistan on the date of attack and are not at war with Venezuela
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Looks like Admiral Bradley will be the fall guy. NYT reporting that 5 US officials say that Hegseth ordered the lethal strike but not the killing of survivors. I wonder who these officials are.
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/12/01/us/hegseth-drug-boat-strike-order-venezuela.html?unlocked_article_code=1.5k8.-yHq.zVOjPTQjYJiI&smid=url-share
They’re going to blame him but he’s also guilty. He 110% knew it was an illegal order and he should have just resigned instead. His fault.
He’s no victim.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Looks like Admiral Bradley will be the fall guy. NYT reporting that 5 US officials say that Hegseth ordered the lethal strike but not the killing of survivors. I wonder who these officials are.
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/12/01/us/hegseth-drug-boat-strike-order-venezuela.html?unlocked_article_code=1.5k8.-yHq.zVOjPTQjYJiI&smid=url-share
They’re going to blame him but he’s also guilty. He 110% knew it was an illegal order and he should have just resigned instead. His fault.
He’s no victim.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If I was someone who was all into this country I would be having a cow. I mean what Trump has made this country into by the people he put into leadership positions... no words.
I'm someone that isn't a huge patriotic flag waving person but everyone who is - not sure how you sleep at night. I'd be taking that flag down from my house and feel not so proud of our country. To suggest differently is to legitimize what is currently happening to the state of the nation. It's a travesty in every way - foreign and domestic policy wise.
Your comment relies more on emotionally charged rhetoric than on a reasoned argument. You make broad generalizations about the country, its leadership, and anyone who considers themselves patriotic, and you frame disagreement as a moral failing. The shaming language (“not sure how you sleep at night”) and catastrophic claims (“a travesty in every way”) are meant to provoke guilt and outrage rather than offer evidence. You also create a false dilemma by suggesting that anyone who doesn’t share your exact view is “legitimizing” what you oppose, while dividing people into “flag-waving patriots” versus those who supposedly see the truth more clearly. Overall, the message relies on exaggeration, identity-based attacks, and emotional pressure instead of clear reasoning or constructive critique.
Nice AI analysis.
Analysis is a response to propaganda
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If I was someone who was all into this country I would be having a cow. I mean what Trump has made this country into by the people he put into leadership positions... no words.
I'm someone that isn't a huge patriotic flag waving person but everyone who is - not sure how you sleep at night. I'd be taking that flag down from my house and feel not so proud of our country. To suggest differently is to legitimize what is currently happening to the state of the nation. It's a travesty in every way - foreign and domestic policy wise.
Your comment relies more on emotionally charged rhetoric than on a reasoned argument. You make broad generalizations about the country, its leadership, and anyone who considers themselves patriotic, and you frame disagreement as a moral failing. The shaming language (“not sure how you sleep at night”) and catastrophic claims (“a travesty in every way”) are meant to provoke guilt and outrage rather than offer evidence. You also create a false dilemma by suggesting that anyone who doesn’t share your exact view is “legitimizing” what you oppose, while dividing people into “flag-waving patriots” versus those who supposedly see the truth more clearly. Overall, the message relies on exaggeration, identity-based attacks, and emotional pressure instead of clear reasoning or constructive critique.
ChatGPT entering the conversation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The White House is trying to throw the admiral under the bus. THIS is why you don't obey illegal orders.
Yep, using his name over and over and over. It’s just going to further tank Hesgeth’s reputation within the military. Follow his illegal orders and get thrown under the bus at the first sign of trouble.
The Admiral wanted that promotion. Trump made him an Admiral and then he was moved into this position in October when the other guy said, "deuces, I'm out. I am not following that order to shoot civilian boats out of the water". I mean what did this Admiral expect was going to happen - Trump would protect him. We will see.
Here is the thing. There is a piece of paper with admiral Frank M. Bradley signature showing he fully understands killing civilians and or ship wreck survivors is against US law. He is done. Hegseth will get a pardon but is still liable for damages. Accepting a pardon means legally you are guilty. The admiral and everyone else in the chain of command is f’ed- prison time, lose of benefits, reduction of rank, etc.
What you’re saying doesn’t really hold up because you’re jumping from a signed policy document straight to “this person is guilty” without showing any actual evidence that they broke the rule. Signing something that says you understand the law isn’t the same as proof you violated it. You’re also treating a pardon like it automatically means someone is legally guilty, which isn’t how that works. And saying everyone up the chain of command is “done” just because something happened is basically guilt by association, not a logical point. Predicting prison time, loss of benefits, or rank reductions as if they’re guaranteed skips over the entire legal process that would have to happen first.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If I was someone who was all into this country I would be having a cow. I mean what Trump has made this country into by the people he put into leadership positions... no words.
I'm someone that isn't a huge patriotic flag waving person but everyone who is - not sure how you sleep at night. I'd be taking that flag down from my house and feel not so proud of our country. To suggest differently is to legitimize what is currently happening to the state of the nation. It's a travesty in every way - foreign and domestic policy wise.
Your comment relies more on emotionally charged rhetoric than on a reasoned argument. You make broad generalizations about the country, its leadership, and anyone who considers themselves patriotic, and you frame disagreement as a moral failing. The shaming language (“not sure how you sleep at night”) and catastrophic claims (“a travesty in every way”) are meant to provoke guilt and outrage rather than offer evidence. You also create a false dilemma by suggesting that anyone who doesn’t share your exact view is “legitimizing” what you oppose, while dividing people into “flag-waving patriots” versus those who supposedly see the truth more clearly. Overall, the message relies on exaggeration, identity-based attacks, and emotional pressure instead of clear reasoning or constructive critique.
Anonymous wrote:The White House is trying to throw the admiral under the bus. THIS is why you don't obey illegal orders.