Even the German Green Party is upset with Korea’s handling of the Afghan hostage crisis. Meanwhile, the Taliban seem quite pleased with themselves, and are promising more kidnappings.
German Greens Criticize Hostage Deal
This entry was written by Robert Koehler, posted on August 31, 2007 at 5:35 am, filed under Asides, Korea in the War on Terror. Bookmark the permalink. Follow any comments here with the RSS feed for this post.
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10 Comments
Well, I can’t say it’s a surprise.
The current administration faces an uphill battle in the upcoming election, and last thing they want to do is piss off the stupid masses. They couldn’t care less about the world opinion, or the future safety of other foreigners operating in dangerous regions. They just don’t want to have to explain to the uneducated public why it was in the national long-term interest to give the Taliban the finger.
After all, this is the same administration that spent the last 5 years bending over backwards to the brothers in the north. With all the news coverages of interracial romances recently, it’s just natural they’d just take it up the a$$ from the Talibans as well.
This sh1t would have never gone down like this if Lee Myoung Bak were president. This is just f**king embarassing.
You know what would be a cool way for the administration to regain face in the international community? Increase their troop commitments to Afghanistan by about 100 times the current amount.
#2 -
Now, there’s wisdom from our friend! 19 hostages out, a division of ROK Marines or Special Forces in.
Fat chance. When pigs fly. Korea should be proud of what it’s becoming. Supporter of North Koreans, and now the Talibans. Give these enemies of civilization, arms, food, and money. Koreans safe this time, but next time, we’ll see. And damn the foreigners, Afghans and NATO troops in Afghanistan who are now endangered because of Korea.
Korea is simply not a responsible international player. Most things this government does on the international stage are foolish and counterproductive (poking the eye of the only security guarantor this country has ever had that didn’t have designs on or extract tribute from the place, perpetual whinging over the Liancourt Rocks and Japan in general, bending over and grabbing socks for Little Elvis, preemptively surrendering to any Chinese demand, especially not granting a visa to the Dalai Lama for a fricken’ Nobel Peace Prize reunion, ad naseum).
bottom line, no deal should have been made. However, cooperation or giving in with the terrorists has been practiced not just by South Korea.
Spain caved in after the commuter rail bomb.
Italy caved in, too. Italy paid a $2 million ransom for a journalist.
Lee Myung Bak?
Sadly, he would have done the same thing.
Only the United States of America has documented spine in this matter.
The United States of America does not negotiate with terrorists or criminals.
But, it does bring up an interesting discussion when that terrorists or criminals are a real state!
eg) Iran, North Korea, Russia, China
strictly, making a deal was the wrong thing to do.
no deal should have been made. But, personally, if that was my family, and in a larger sense they are, I would have wired all my money, borrowed money, and stole money to deposit into their Taliban accounts. I would have probably been prosecuted for doing it under current laws, though. And the current laws is the right law.
I’m so thankful for Bush’s Patriot Act. The FBI should be knocking down doors on anyone, anyone feeding money into the Taliban.
The CIA and the FBI have been fantastic under George W. Bush.
He will be remembered, like Churchill.
Mark those words.
And remember my initials wjk, when history proves it so.
… in fact, I think that the ROK government owes it to the Afghan government, its sovereign nation friends and allies to NOT honor a deal made with a terrorist organization inside Afghan territory.
Treating the Taliban with the same respect as a national government shouldn’t sit well with that nation’s government.
They recognized it for what it was - a complete sellout of your supposed allies.
The Taliban cannot be made to look like the primary beneficiary here.
The Korean government should honor the agreement, but should also replace the engineering unit with a sizable combat unit as well as a hospital and/or construction unit and increase foreign aid funding to the Karzai government.
I also note the NY Times article that summarizes the aftereffects as well:
article.
The only sympathy noted was from one of the anti-war (pro-NK) groups and:
Overall, the Roh Administration placed internal politics over international concerns. These people can not win for losing it seems. If Roh had a grenade, he would pull the fuse pin and throw the pin as far from him as he could.