The Obama administration has a new and better outlook on Afghanistan than his predecessor George W. Bush, his plan being moderate at most levels of authority. The new plan of action is deliberately based on the number of given resources available at any time. According to most Bush’s plan of divide and conquer are just too costly of American casualties, the days of once shooting from the hip and at any direction are far from over, primarily based on the outlook of President Obama’s plan to secure Afghanistan as a nation.
The fact that the Afghanistan people need a clear future ahead of them should be addressed first and foremost for the President Obama’s agenda in the region. Rather than concentrating all of the resources of stabilizing a Democracy, the plan of action is to supremely to secure the nation and its borders from the Taliban attack or influence first.
The belief that a real time strategy flies over the head of some American military leaders. It’s believed that the Obama administration should first and foremost take a realistic action that the country is at war and there is no way out of it but to duke it out.
The Obama agenda is not based on the prior agenda of former President Bush, but to win over the hearts, minds, and yes even the stomachs of the Afghanistan people. To do this you must first and foremost stabilize the region and advance forward with a new stable and civilized government.
Further planning is due come April when President Obama attends the Nato summit with France and Germany.
Although for most in the Obama administration, Afghanistan is only small potatoes compared to Iran. Iran is believed to almost be capable of manufacturing nuclear weapons, in which could turn the region out of whack with the stage set ahead.
You can expect strong retaliation for President Obama from many leaders in Washington with any negations with Iran; some may even call for military action from the President themselves, a hectic choice of words and actions if it were to play out.
Speaking of which, Iran was close to the stages of entering war with Afghanistan in 1998, to even lending a helping hand of setting up a stable government in Afghanistan with the Americans shortly after the invasion, the American-Iran friendship was short lived after it was believed that Iran was supplying the Taliban with weapons. But the negotiation of peace and friendship for the newly elected President Barack Obama is real and plausible; for a man who has solely campaigned for change for the nation.
