The
cost of the war without a reason raging in Afghanistan has and is
costing the UK dear. Not only is it draining the public purse at a
time when our cabal of millionaires in the cabinet are slashing
viciously at all our social services, but even more seriously, it is
costing the lives and future of thousands of our young people.
Leaving aside the massive slaughter of Afghans on their own soil by
foreign troops they never asked to enter their country, the figures
for the UK suffering is unacceptable. Along side the 382 UK deaths since the start of this tragedy there is the wounded.
1,792
UK military and civilian personnel were admitted to UK Field
Hospitals
and
categorised
as wounded in Action.
3,440 UK military and civilian
personnel were admitted to UK Field Hospitals for disease or
non-battle injuries.
256
UK personnel were categorised as Very Seriously Injured from all
causes excluding disease.
268
UK personnel were categorised as Seriously Injured from all causes
excluding disease.
Then of course there are those who have suffered trauma and will struggle with mental heath problems, probably for the rest of their lives, causing more suffering and anguish for their friends and families and so the misery spreads. WHY.
Don't you know, wars create jobs.
Ask
any of our pampered politicians why we are there and each one will
give a different reason. They'll have to give some reason, for them
to admit that they don't know would not go down too well with their
bosses. I'm sure any man or woman on the street would most certainly
find it hard to come up with a reason and no doubt each reason would
differ from the other. The truth is this war defies reason. I'm sure
somewhere deep in the dark corridors of corrupt power there will be a
handful of millionaires who know the reason for this ten years and
counting slaughter and destruction. Somewhere there will be a benefit
to some corporate body, perhaps the arms industry, they must be
making a mint from the death and destruction. Perhaps it will be the
Western corporate mining sector, rubbing their sweaty hands thinking
of all that mineral buried under the mountains of Afghanistan and all
that cheap labour in a country with no infrastructure. The corporate
world feeds on the blood of the people, slaughter in Iraq, all that
shiny black oil, Libya, more of the black stuff. The potential wealth
for the corporate world from all those precious minerals waiting to
be exploited by the wealthy and powerful Western mining sector will
gladden the heart of many of those on any Stock exchange.