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KnowsHerOnions t1_itybxwt wrote

Without googling….guess the rest of the bottom 5. I’ll start:

Somalia Venezuela Brazil Yemen

79

briefnuditty t1_ityckba wrote

No way Canada isn't on the list... they said secure and seeing as how Canada is so nice they will not only let you in the country but bring you home and give you poutine.. yup Canada for sure is in the bottom 5

−22

MavsGod t1_itydpam wrote

I have an incredibly hard time believing that Afghanistan is less secure than the DRC.

20

DefaultRedditBlows t1_ityehxk wrote

America did its best to export our austerity to Afghanistan. Hell we tried so hard we still have millions of dollars of Afghan money we seized.

−9

Lapachoochoo t1_ityemia wrote

This is 100% bullshit. Im from afghanistan and people feel way more safe going out at night under the taliban rule. Under the previous regime (which was run by corrupt criminals in all levels), no one dared to go out past 10pm unless it was necessary. Criminals were roaming the streets at night and you'd always here stories of people being kidnapped,raped or murdered. The taliban regime definitely has many flaws but security for the citizens definitely isn't one of them. Criminals fear the taliban because they can't bribe their way out if they are caught and if a murderer,rapist or kidnapper was found guilty then they are executed immediately. This article is just BS propaganda written by someone who doesn't know the reality of what's going on in my country.

−29

rangeo t1_ityeowf wrote

There's a joke in here about Canada vying for attention and feeling insecure about being next door to the US.

−5

rezurrected22 t1_ityft6t wrote

The Taliban controls the heroine trade. It’s okay for them to traffic the poppies to finance their agenda but if you get caught using we will hang you. Their hypocrisy knows no bounds.

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motojoe333 t1_ityfubr wrote

R u daft? Since when was that a safe country?

1

EducatingYouForFree t1_ityg4wx wrote

It always is when it comes to these very broadly subjective lists like which country is "most free" or "least corrupted". They are always without an exception propaganda.

This one is quite obvious, the angle is clearly that they are trying to give the impression that the US being overcome and forced to leave its brutal 20 year long occupation was somehow bad for Afghanistan.

The US is a criminal state, currently illegally holding Afghan assets for several billions. There really is no limit to these imperialists greed.

−1

Lapachoochoo t1_itygcgf wrote

Being involved in the drug trade in any country is dangerous business. The taliban definitely still are involved in the heroin trade but they have given many poppy farmers a certain time frame to stop cultivation and transition to something more productive for society. You have to remember the only reason they were involved in the drug trade in the first place was to fund their insurgency. Also the drug lords in Afghanistan aren't "taliban" per se but rather powerful drug lords who side with the taliban because it benefits them.

−9

Albertsongman t1_itygd8y wrote

It’s difficult to build up a country so fragile. The U.S. I believe held interest there for decades as a habit and optics to the rest of that region. … Ukraine was seen as the next domino. … Democracy is threatened.

−1

goonsquad4357 t1_itygozn wrote

Regime-held territory (Aleppo Damascus, latakia) at least has functioning rule of law and governance. Can think of a half-dozen other countries not listed above to put above Syria (Libya, Niger, DRC, etc.)

27

LeCat73 t1_ityhvj8 wrote

Mission accomplished! - US military leadership

6

AlanParsonsProject11 t1_ityj8j2 wrote

Who negotiated the peace deal with the Taliban that left out the afghan government? Who released over 5000 taliban fighters in the waning months of his term?

Biden followed trumps plan, the only change he made was to delay the withdrawal by three months

6

No_Drama_6233 t1_ityjise wrote

Afghanistan has been ranked as the "least secure" country in the world, according to a survey.

The survey evaluated around 120 countries based on the safety and security of the country's citizens.

This report comes after Afghanistan retained its position in the Global Peace Index for five years as the world's "least peaceful" country, Khaama Press reported.

However, Singapore was rated as the most secure, with a score of 96 in the survey report, according to Khaama Press.

Acts of terror, killings, blasts and attacks have become a regular affair with unabated human rights violations involving ceaseless murder of civilians, destroying mosques and temples, assaulting women, and fueling terror in the region.

1

Pavaroy t1_ityks3p wrote

You know initially i wouldnt think north korea would have a lot of crime bc its so repressive and people generally dont have access to guns etc so i looked it up and was fairly surprised

North Koreas murder rate per a million people is 150.88 which ranks them 45th in the world

Meanwhile the US is 42 murders per million which ranks them 43rd in the world

Honduras takes the cake in this category with 900+ murders per million.

The rest of the top 50 are majority located in south america and africa

https://www.nationmaster.com/country-info/compare/North-Korea/United-States/Crime

1

christian4tal t1_ityof6g wrote

Yes always the US fault, 20 million Afghans have no influence on their own destiny. The vacuum of leadership has bred so many attempts at peaceful development in the country in all regions. So many great leaders have stepped up. The raging religious fanatics have kept themselves in check. Industry leaders have built numerous sustainable large-employment organisations, and conscientious civil servants have built well functioning governance in medical care and the juidicial system, and built solid and well-maintained infrastructure. Agriculture has developed so much beyond opium and was able to sustain the population.

Then the US and NATO came and destroyed it all.

−4

BKGPrints t1_ityov1o wrote

Who could have possibly seen that coming?

1

sns2017 t1_itype4i wrote

How do they rank 120 countries within score range of 51-96?

1

Mewmute t1_ityqps6 wrote

Comparing youtubers videos from Afghanistan (backpacker ben, bald and bankrupt, britannica politica) to Haiti (indigo traveler) it seems like Haiti is way more unsafe than Afghanistan

10

WikiSummarizerBot t1_ityvq57 wrote

[Global Peace Index](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Global_Peace_Index#:~:text=The updated index is released,to be the least peaceful.)

>Global Peace Index (GPI) is a report produced by the Institute for Economics & Peace (IEP) which measures the relative position of nations' and regions' peacefulness. The GPI ranks 163 independent states and territories (collectively accounting for 99. 7 per cent of the world's population) according to their levels of peacefulness. In the past decade, the GPI has presented trends of increased global violence and less peacefulness.

^([ )^(F.A.Q)^( | )^(Opt Out)^( | )^(Opt Out Of Subreddit)^( | )^(GitHub)^( ] Downvote to remove | v1.5)

3

Trav3lingman t1_ityxuvr wrote

Afghanistan is not a country. It's a bunch of random tribal religious fanatics. Let em live how they want if they will leave the rest of us out of it.

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isawagoose t1_ityxw6y wrote

No, I'm saying that many politicians had financial stakes in the industry, which was a large contributing factor to starting and prolonging the war. Did you already forget about Dick Cheney? It hasn't been that long.

21

torridesttube69 t1_ityyacd wrote

Seems like it would be a lot easier to just invest in certain stocks and then give the company government subsidies or something like that.

I am not American, I am just saying what I think seems most logical - don't know what Dick Cheney has done.

−10

isawagoose t1_ityywmw wrote

They do that, too. But when the country is amped up for a war of revenge, and you and your buddies are corrupt and in a position to start that war and profit immensely from it, you start that war.

2

progrethth t1_ityz2qo wrote

There was no other option really. This was fucked up by Bush and Obama, and arguably Trump too with his release of pirsoners. Biden was just the one who had the mess created by three previous presidents finally explode in his face.

0

particular-potatoe t1_itz1lna wrote

What’s often overlooked about the War in Afghanistan is that Bush was offered peace by the Taliban leader with a clear exit strategy after the US invaded. He instead decided to remain in Afghanistan to nation build. Part of that decision was to enrich contractors (the use of which exploded during the Afghan/Iraq wars). Dick Cheney and other Bush-era politicians were shareholders in military contracting firms. They went on to launch the wholly unjustified war in Iraq for the same reason.

5

Vendetta4Avril t1_itz1y7m wrote

Dick Chaney was CEO of Halliburton Oil until 2000, then he became Vice President for George W Bush. He’s considered the most powerful VP in US history.

9/11 happens in 2001, and Cheney was a huge proponent for invading Iraq, claiming they were hosting WMDs and Al-Qaeda. Neither claim had any solid evidence, but the US invaded Iraq, nonetheless.

Halliburton and Chaney make a shit ton of money from the oil reserves in Iraq. US terrorizes the Middle East for 20 year without cause. Chaney pays no consequences.

12

SomnAmbalamps t1_itz7aee wrote

The Afghan people were given 20 years and infinitely more resources to do what Ukraine has done to a larger, superior force in under a year with a fraction of one percent what Afghanistan had. The afghans threw down their weapons without a single shot fired. Fuck em. That’s not the US fault.

The US military was never once repulsed from Afghanistan and it left of its own accord by its own schedule with not a consideration at all to whatever the hell the Taliban thought it was doing. This was a failure, but not of the US military.

20

fuzzy9691 t1_itz90es wrote

Self-reporting data is always corrupt.

Ask a thousand people to ‘rate their pain out of ten’ when experiencing similar levels of pain (injury); and you’ll get ten thousand different answers.

1

sac666 t1_itzduiw wrote

What about Burma? Looks worse right now

2

ooopsmymistake t1_itzgd0a wrote

>Self-reporting data is always corrupt. > >Ask a thousand people to ‘rate their pain out of ten’ when experiencing similar levels of pain (injury); and you’ll get ten thousand different answers.

There are statistical tools to get rid of a lot of the problems self-reporting data faces.

Also your example would probably be normally distributed.

4

Nothing_ t1_itzh7p9 wrote

Libertarian utopia.

−1

Stock_Ad_8145 t1_itzmyjv wrote

The US and its allies lost the moment they chose nation building in Afghanistan. We spent more in Helmand Province than we did in the Marshall Plan. It became about creating a state rather than defeating an enemy. That state became completely predatory and we chose to ignore it. We essentially tried to "fix" the graveyard of empires.

A lot of people got rich off of it. But the goal was never to actually 'win." That's bad for business. There was no "win" state in Afghanistan unless the Taliban and other groups such as IS-K signed an agreement to end the conflict. That was never possible. The pitch was to "degrade" them enough so that government institutions could begin administering services. Well, the US and allies would chase the Taliban away, welcome in the Afghan government, which then began treating the local populations, particularly in Kandahar and Helmand horribly because the "local government" consisted of people from northern Afghanistan such as Tajiks and Uzbeks who HATED Pashtuns. After the Battle of Marjah, the US forces talked about "Government In a Box." The Taliban were back in Marjah within a few months. The government never had any legitimacy outside of Kabul.

This is what we spent trillions on. Do you think we were there to win? The Taliban waited until the time was right and the regime and the military collapsed within weeks. It was a mirage. This is because we never intended to win. The mirage was for investors and shareholders, not for the Afghan people.

1

13Witnesses t1_iu0crno wrote

Says a lot when you have a literal war going on in Ukraine.

1

Sketti_n_butter t1_iu0fyqb wrote

Afghanistan is not a country. There is no national identity in the region. What we call "Afghanistan" on a map are basically groups of tribes. The idea that America was going to somehow, go into Afghanistan, bomb the shit out of it, and then bring the warring tribes together was never on the table. We're talking about thousands of years of culture and identity. There was not a chance that was happening. Besides, even if it did,would that be considered genocide?

5

Sketti_n_butter t1_iu0g6bk wrote

For what purpose? To try out our military equipment and keep our soldiers active and give them something to do while working our the bugs in new technology?we can do that without invading a country and hurting/killing people who never wanted us there.

1

Sketti_n_butter t1_iu0giq1 wrote

Exactly. Why take away their autonomy? There are 195 countries on earth. Why the fuck is Afghanistan the place where both England and America went to war. That poor, poor place. I feel bad for all of it's residents.

1

Trav3lingman t1_iu0i0rn wrote

There is a literal "invasions of Afghanistan" wiki page it's happened so many times. The US the Soviets and the UK were all suuuperr late to the invade Afghanistan game. Leave them to be how they want.

2

Evening_Wheel4969 t1_iu0mav8 wrote

What’s up with the dude in the pink blazer on the left? Bold strategy in Afghanistan. Especially after Labor Day.

2

hellsfire29 t1_iu0tlmo wrote

If you support Ukraine but not Afghanistan, you might not be a veteran.

Tried to protect Afghanistan from a terrorist network, but US civilians said fuck Afghanistan and left them at the mercy of the taliban. Now look at it.

Russia, whom civilians think Trump aligned with, invades Ukraine, US civilians support Ukraine even though it may cause ww3, but if it does, blame Trump anyways.

Good job, everyone.

−6

Mothrahlurker t1_iu266n5 wrote

There are a lot of countries in Africa that are significantly less secure than Ukraine due to warlords roaming around, Myanmar is probably also a lot less secure since the Junta has air supremacy and can airstrike everywhere.

0

fartuni4 t1_iu26q8y wrote

It was a lot more secure when it was flooded by opium and drone strikes

1

SomnAmbalamps t1_iu2k6kz wrote

By that same definition, neither is Canada, the US, Mexico, Spain, etc. Make it work or don’t. That’s not really anyone else’s responsibility.

I love how people like to point out how “colonial powers” drew the maps of the Middle East after conquering them without regards to the different groups which actually live there. Yea they did. This is also how every single country in Europe was created as well as all of the other countries every where else in the world. This is how countries are made. Yes. Uh huh. Yep. That’s what they did.

1

os_kaiserwilhelm t1_iu2twxo wrote

England was just good old imperialism. Afghanistan came to the US in 2001 when it allowed its territory to be a safe haven for ALl Qaeda. Additionally the Northern Alliance fought the opening phase of the war. The Taliban had been driven from Kabul before American boots touched the ground thanks to US Air support.

1

os_kaiserwilhelm t1_iu2ufw7 wrote

It was literally the seat of Ahmad Shah Durrani's empire. Before that it had been the seat of Timur's heir, and later the base for Babur for his invasion of India.

Does that mean every valley had state presence? But the cities and surrounding countryside were under a loose system of fealty not too dissimilar to feudalism.

2

Trav3lingman t1_iu2xj7m wrote

IIRC Alexander had full control but he also retired troops there with land grants. Veteran soldiers flat out living in a region probably helped a lot. My memory could be faulty though. It's been 10+ years since I got a curiosity bug on Afghanistan.

1

46dad t1_iu3176d wrote

Becomes? Who was in first before?

1