Westminster Traitors Vote to Prolong Afghanistan War as Another Hero Dies Amidst Total Failure of Military Mission
The traitor parties in Westminster have voted overwhelmingly in favour of continuing the illegal war in Afghanistan as another British soldier has died and aid agencies have confirmed the total failure of the military mission.
In the very first vote ever on the war, MPs voted 310 to 14 on Friday to keep sending British soldiers into Afghanistan as cannon fodder for the illegal war started by Labour.
That war was backed at the time by the Tories, and the new vote has now dragged the Liberal Democrats into culpability for that conflict as well.
More than 10,000 British troops have been committed to that war and 335 have been killed, with the latest causality identified as Darren Deady, from 2nd Battalion, The Duke of Lancaster's Regiment, who died in hospital from wounds sustained in the field.
The traitor MPs lined up one after another to endorse the conflict which took Darren Deady’s life, with the utterly disgraceful Tory MP James Arbuthnot, chairman of the Commons defence select committee, saying it was a “mistake” to describe the conflict as a “war.”
In comments during the debate which typify the staggering ignorance and arrogance which permeates the Westminster parties, Mr Arbuthnot said he believed “that our presence in Afghanistan should be seen as part of a wider global security mission in the Middle East region as a whole.”
This view was endorsed by Tory Defence Secretary Liam Fox who rambled on about the war being about preventing threats to Britain’s security, repeating the obvious lies first spouted by his Labour Party twins and long since utterly refuted by all intelligence agencies.
The complete failure of the military mission to provide any sort of “security” either for Britain or even for Afghanistan was detailed in a series of reports from aid agencies.
The number of insurgent attacks has increased significantly according to the Afghan NGO Safety Office, an independent organisation financed by Western governments and agencies to monitor safety for aid workers.
In August 2009, insurgents carried out 630 attacks. This August, they initiated at least 1,353. Four years ago, the insurgents were active in only four provinces. Now they are active in 33 of 34, the aid organisations say.
Large parts of the country that were once completely safe, like most of the northern provinces, now have a substantial Taliban presence, even in areas where there are few Pashtuns, who previously were the Taliban's only supporters, the report continued.
Unarmed government employees can no longer travel safely in 30 percent of the country's 368 districts, according to published U.N. estimates, and there are districts deemed too dangerous to visit in all but one of the country's 34 provinces.
The Afghan NGO Safety Office says that by any system of measurement, “Afghanistan is more dangerous now than at any time since 2001.”
The collapse in security has caused all aid agencies to stop using the country's principal highway, the Grand Trunk Road connecting Kabul, the capital, to Peshawar in Pakistan.
The threat to government workers is just as severe. Last month, Afghan police and army officials asked the Independent Election Commission to cancel 938 of its proposed 6,835 polling centres, almost 14 percent, because it could not guarantee security for those areas. Polling places in 25 provinces were affected.
Last week, the election commission said it would cancel 81 other polling sites, nearly a fifth of the polling places in eastern Nangarhar province, which was relatively safe during last year's presidential election.
The decreased security has shown up the Westminster parties’ claims of “securing Afghanistan” to be yet another lie in the long litany of deceit which has been the hallmark of this criminal adventure.
The truth is beautiful, whover says it! The Angry Cheese.