Re: Politics
Posted: Sun Aug 15, 2021 4:28 pm
I think the only real help our governments can provide now is to fulfil the promise of refuge, though this is likely too late for many.
This Guardian piece, postulating why the Afghan army seemed to evaporate so quickly, demonstrates that bad news is handled in a manner familiar to those who have worked in large corporations.
This Guardian piece, postulating why the Afghan army seemed to evaporate so quickly, demonstrates that bad news is handled in a manner familiar to those who have worked in large corporations.
The Guardian wrote: The Sigar report also lambasted the tendency for politicians and senior military to look for good news. It says there is a “natural desire for good news to pass on up the chain of command”.
“In the words of one former senior military official: ‘As intelligence makes its way up higher, it gets consolidated and watered down; it gets politicised. It gets politicked because once policymakers get their hands on it, and frankly, once operational commanders get their hands on it, they put their twist on it.
“Operational commanders, state department policymakers and Department of Defense policymakers are going to be inherently rosy in their assessments. They will be unaccepting of hard-hitting intelligence.’”