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Analysts Expect Long-Term, Costly US Campaign in Afghanistan
As the Obama administration expands U.S. involvement in Afghanistan, military experts are warning that the United States is taking on security and political commitments that will last at least a decade and a cost that will probably eclipse that of the Iraq war.
U.S. Lance Cpl. Decker Brower of Victor, MT, looks out from a post on a firebase with G Company, 2nd MEB, near the village of Now Zad in Helmand Province, Afghanistan, Saturday, Aug. 8, 2009. (AP Photo/Julie Jacobson) Since the invasion of Afghanistan eight years ago, the United States has spent $223 billion on war-related funding for that country, according to the Congressional Research Service. Aid expenditures, excluding the cost of combat operations, have grown exponentially, from $982 million in 2003 to $9.3 billion last year.
The costs are almost certain to keep growing. The Obama administration is in the process of overhauling the U.S. approach to Afghanistan, putting its focus on long-term security, economic sustainability and development. That approach is also likely to require deployment of more American military personnel, at the very least to train additional Afghan security forces.
Later this month, Gen. Stanley A. McChrystal, the top U.S. commander in Afghanistan, is expected to present his analysis of the situation in the country. The analysis could prompt an increase in U.S. troop levels to help implement President Obama's new strategy.
Military experts insist that the additional resources are necessary. But many, including some advising McChrystal, say they fear the public has not been made aware of the significant commitments that come with Washington's new policies.
"We will need a large combat presence for many years to come, and we will probably need a large financial commitment longer than that," said Stephen Biddle, a senior fellow for defense policy at the Council on Foreign Relations and a member of the "strategic assessment" team advising McChrystal. The expansion of the Afghan security force that the general will recommend to secure the country "will inevitably cost much more than any imaginable Afghan government is going to be able to afford on its own," Biddle added.
"Afghan forces will need $4 billion a year for another decade, with a like sum for development," said Bing West, a former assistant secretary of defense and combat Marine who has chronicled the Iraq and Afghan wars. Bing said the danger is that Congress is "so generous in support of our own forces today, it may not support the aid needed for progress in Afghanistan tomorrow."
Some members of Congress are worried. The House Appropriations Committee said in its report on the fiscal 2010 defense appropriations bill that its members are "concerned about the prospects for an open-ended U.S. commitment to bring stability to a country that has a decades-long history of successfully rebuffing foreign military intervention and attempts to influence internal politics."
The Afghan government has made some political and military progress since 2001, but the Taliban insurgency has been reinvigorated.
Anthony H. Cordesman, another member of McChrystal's advisory group and a national security expert with the Center for Strategic and International Studies, told reporters recently that even with military gains in the next 12 to 18 months, it would take years to reduce sharply the threat from the Taliban and other insurgent forces.
The task that the United States has taken on in Afghanistan is in many ways more difficult than the one it has encountered in Iraq, where the U.S. government has spent $684 billion in war-related funding.
In a 2008 study that ranked the weakest states in the developing world, the Brookings Institution rated Afghanistan second only to Somalia. Afghanistan's gross domestic product in 2008 was $23 billion, with about $3 billion coming from opium production, according to the CIA's World Factbook. Oil-producing Iraq had a GDP of $113 billion.
Afghanistan's central government takes in roughly $890 million in annual revenue, according to the World Factbook. Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates has pointed out that Afghanistan's national budget cannot support the $2 billion needed today for the country's army and police force.
Dutch Army Brig. Gen. Tom Middendorp, commander of the coalition task force in Afghanistan's southern Uruzgan province, described the region as virtually prehistoric.
"It's the poorest province of one of the poorest countries in the world. And if you walk through that province, it's like walking through the Old Testament," Middendorp told reporters recently. "There is enormous illiteracy in the province. More than 90 percent cannot write or read. So it's very basic, what you do there. And they have had 30 years of conflict."
Unlike in Iraq, where Obama has established a timeline for U.S. involvement, the president has not said when he would like to see troops withdrawn from Afghanistan.
White House officials emphasize that the burden is not that of the United States alone. The NATO-led force in the country has 61,000 troops from 42 countries; about 29,000 of those troops are American.
Still, military experts say the United States will not be able to shed its commitment easily.
The government has issued billions of dollars in contracts in recent years, underscoring the vast extent of work that U.S. officials are commissioning.
Among other purposes, contractors have been sought this summer to build a $25 million provincial Afghan National Police headquarters; maintain anti-personnel mine systems; design and build multimillion-dollar sections of roads; deliver by sea and air billions of dollars worth of military bulk cargo; and supervise a drug-eradication program.
One solicitation, issued by the Army Corps of Engineers, is aimed at finding a contractor to bring together Afghan economic, social, legal and political groups to help build the country's infrastructure. The contractor would work with Afghan government officials as well as representatives from private and nongovernmental organizations to establish a way to allocate resources for new projects.
"We are looking at two decades of supplying a few billion a year to Afghanistan," said Michael E. O'Hanlon, a senior fellow and military expert at the Brookings Institution, adding: "It's a reasonable guess that for 20 years, we essentially will have to fund half the Afghan budget." He described the price as reasonable, given that it may cost the United States $100 billion this year to continue fighting.
"We are creating a [long-term military aid] situation similar to the ones we have with Israel, Egypt and Jordan," he said.
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14 Comments so far
Show AllWhen we run out of billion$ and our troops become worn out and disheartened by their futile task and finally leave or refuse to fight anymore, the Pashtuns will still be there, armed with their homemade weapons, ready to fight off the next foreign invader that tries to take their country, that kills members of their families and clans, that lays waste to whatever little they have.
So they have done since the time of Alexander. Each nation that has tried to subdue them has been but a blip on their history. They have endured as nations and empires rose and fell. They will endure when we, too, are long gone and only a mention in the pages of history.
Except this time around... They have tens of billions $$$ in hi-tech weaponry cached in their caves and tunnel networks... hold-overs from when the CIA provided them with munitions and training to fight the Russians in the 1980's...
Afghanistan is where we have learned that Obama is not really an intelligent person at all. He is stupid and corrupt in the same manner as Lyndon Bloodthirsty Johnson and Richard Deathouse Nixon. He will meet their same political end. Obama goes around and says, "if you think that the United States is nothing more than a self-interested empire, you're way off base." He actually believes this. Therein lies the soul of his stupidity.
This gives little more than what B0sh & Rummy announced in '01: "ongoing war on terror" and so forth.
Multi-trillion $$ estimates for the invasions began to crop up several years ago, though admittedly not at the POST.
Afghanis have a "decades-long" history of resistance!? Apparently Congress finds it easier to invade the country than to read more than a few decades of history or look at a timeline.
The big difference between Iraq and AfPak, is that AfPak's economy requires US to foot the bill to support a mega-army to support OUR puppet government.
Even then we will control not a thing on the other side of the earth. Is Iraq a better place? They are just waiting for us to leave!
Paying our taxes is getting to be a war crime these days.
It has been since Viet Nam started. Real patriots pay taxes only because they are afraid not to.
We are a nation of fools who think war=patriotism or cowards who pay up so they won't become a statistic in prison population numbers.
They don't want us there. We don't want to be there. JUST LEAVE.
Afraid of losing face? Have any idea what your face looks like to the rest of the world?
I think we could improve our standing in world opinion if we JUST LEFT.
Everybody knows we are nearly broke. Nobody thinks of us as a moral beacon. We are become a has-been who can't stop pretending.
Let me repeat some thoughts for consideration that I posted elsewhere:
1. As long as these wars last, the corporate owners of the means of war make big bucks! Our only exportable products.
2. There are no jobs here in the U.S. for any returning veterans. We need to keep sending unemployed young ones off to fight abroad to take them off the streets at home.
But I could be wrong !
But I could be wrong ! - I wish!
No wonder the stock market has gained nearly 3000 points since Obama's election.
Poet
It is the classic "pump & dump"...
If we hang in there, maybe in 50 years or so, then after we have rounded up all the remaining Afghanis and put them on reservations, they will be able to set up gambling casinos and start making an economic comeback.
In 2001 Afghanistan was enduring a famine, there were a million internally displaced people overcrowding refugee camps. Aid workers, resources already stretched thin, warned that bombing would shut down all access and result in a humanitarian disaster. There had been no peace in the country for nearly 30 years.
The people living under the bombs were mostly illiterate peasants living in mud huts. These are the people the u.s. decided to drop their bombs on. none of them had any idea why they had been chosen to receive those bombs.
Because there was no reason. They had no air defenses of any kind so they were very easy targets. Helpless.
It was never anything but a massacre of innocent civilians, and a cruel, monstrous war crime
"Analysts Expect Long-Term, Costly US Campaign in Afghanistan"
"Funny" analysts, if long-term hasn't been obvious to them for plenty of years already. It's been obvious for plenty of years, just that the U.S. and NATO quickly overthrowing the Taliban in 2001 probably or surely left many people with the impression that the war wouldn't last long; but the Taliban who survived re-formed, built up, etc., and have never shown any sign of giving up against the criminal war of the U.S. and NATO in Afghanistan.
The U.S. and probably, or surely, other western "elites" want Afghanistan for the oil pipeline, plenty, at least high-ranking military people want heroin traffic profits, and the "elites" have been clearly working on the goal of achieving global domination, which includes vis-a-vis Russia, as well as China.
Such projects aren't small in scope; they're HUGE, vast, broad, and encompass goals that humans who are [awake] and true of heart, truly caring cannot support.
This has been obvious for people who [read] from good sources and don't allow themselves to be fooled by msm "news" media bs or bs, charlatan lies of politicians ... for many years already.
I have not once really hoped the war in Afghanistan would be short, because it was obvious that it was not going to be and that Americans, Brits, Canadians, ... were [not] going to cause more than minor "civil unrest" because of or based on their opposition to this war; and they're still not going to put up more than minor demonstrations of protest. They or we are too generally [spoiled] and don't want our materially comfortable lives to be disturbed more than feeling some emotions of ... sorrow and having some thoughts of oppositional kind.
I've protested plenty of times about the war needing to be stopped and for everyone to pay attention to this highly or extremely urgent need, but people had to go buy milk for their children, or shoes for the weekend (like Condie Rice and her shoe-shopping at a critical time or moment several years ago, f.e.), etc. But there was rather never any real hope for this war being less than [long], very long term.
The same applies enough with the war in Iraq, which still isn't really over. It may not seem like a war today because there aren't reports of major U.S. bombings of Iraqi towns, cities, etc., and killings of Iraqis, but the war's nevertheless not over yet; and it doesn't look like it will be soon, either.
Like with the words of "news" media and "leading" U.S. politicians, including Obama, about the economy in the U.S. supposedly getting better, fewer jobs being lost now than ... before, etc.; it's BS! There might be fewer jobs being cut, but if this is true, then it probably should be expected. After the many millions of jobs that have already been cut, we should expect the rate of cuts to decrease, some time, for companies that continue to operate certainly need workers, the governments need employees, etc. They can't cut [everyone] from jobs.
Anyway, the following article gives a serious indication that U.S. (and NATO) war ... on humanity is definitely not going to be over soon.
"Afghan War: NATO Builds History's First Global Army
Never before have soldiers from so many states served in the same war theater",
by Rick Rozoff, Stop NATO, Aug 9, 2009
http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=14707
He has plenty of STOP NATO! articles posted at his Yahoo group and at the above GR site, and certainly seems to know a lot about NATO operations of EXPANSION worldwide; definitely someone to read on the topic of NATO expansionism, which of course is in full support of the U.S. and fully supported by the U.S. The U.S. can't conquer the planet [alone], and the U.S. and NATO have been working on this major build-up of their "shared" empire, globally, for a LONG time now!