| History does repeat itself | Afghanistan has periodically been invaded and occupied over the course of its history. Invaders and conquerors have historically been repelled out of the mountainous nation. The German high command studied the history of Afghan invasions when they examined the feasibility of invading Switzerland during WW2. They decided against invading Switzerland. It was a mountainous country with difficult terrain and armed men who had received military training living in almost every home. The high command could not justify the expected loss of German soldiers in a Swiss quagmire.
The German high command could justify invading France though where loss of soldiers was expected to be minimal. They seized gun registries from all police stations after the German invasion of France during WW2 and quickly discovered the addresses of armed citizens subsequently requiring them to surrender their weapons. The Soviet army disregarded military history when they invaded Afghanistan in 1980. They did not know who was armed, to what extent, their capabilities or where they lived.
They subsequently encountered the kind of quagmire that the German high command had predicted had Germany invaded Switzerland during WW2. The army of the former Soviet Union encountered an even bigger quagmire after Osama Bin Laden (with unknown covert American assistance) funneled weapons through Pakistan to assist Afghan freedom fighters in their resistance to the Soviet occupation. Several of the people who successfully fought the Soviet army are still alive today. History has shown that the only time a foreign power can install a head-of-state in another nation is after the population at large has been disarmed and after it has acquired the allegiance of the army. Germany did so in France during WW2 and the Soviet Union did so in Hungary in 1956. The foreign supported despots who governed Central and Latin American countries such as Guatemala, El Salvador, Nicaragua, Chile and Argentina applied the same formula.
The American occupation of Iraq defied history in that a foreign army invaded a nation of armed citizens, and did so without official records to indicate to what extent they were armed. A few British politicians, along with at least two American generals, have recently expressed the fear that civil war could erupt in Iraq. The occupation of Afghanistan by foreign UN troops also defies historical precedent in that a foreign army has invaded a nation of armed citizens, again without official records to indicate to what extent they are armed. |