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Switch to Petraeus Betrays Afghan Policy Crisis
WASHINGTON - Despite President Barack Obama's denial that his decision to fire Gen. Stanley A. McChrystal as commander in Afghanistan and replace him with Gen. David Petraeus signified any differences with McChrystal over war strategy, the decision obviously reflects a desire by Obama to find a way out of a deepening policy crisis in Afghanistan.
Then U.S. Senator Barack Obama listens (L) as Gen. David Petraeus (R) discusses security improvements in Baghdad while giving him an aerial tour of the city, in this July 21, 2008 file photo. In calling on Petraeus to replace Gen. McCrystal, the Obama administration appears to be taking a page from the Bush administration's late 2006 decision to rescue a war in Iraq which was generally perceived in Washington as having become an embarrassing failure. (REUTERS/Lorie Jewell)
Although the ostensible reason was indiscreet comments by McChrystal
and his aides reported in Rolling Stone, the switch from McChrystal to
Petraeus was clearly the result of White House unhappiness with
McChrystal's handling of the war.
It had become evident in
recent weeks that McChrystal's strategy is not working as he had
promised, and Congress and the U.S. political elite had already become
very uneasy about whether the war was on the wrong track.
In
calling on Petraeus, the Obama administration appears to be taking a
page from the George W. Bush administration's late 2006 decision to
rescue a war in Iraq which was generally perceived in Washington as
having become an embarrassing failure. But both Obama and Petraeus are
acutely aware of the differences between the situation in Iraq at that
moment and the situation in Afghanistan today.
In taking command
in Iraq in 2007, Petraeus was being called upon to implement a
dramatically new counterinsurgency strategy based on a major "surge" in
U.S. troops.
Obama will certainly be put under pressure by the
Republican Party, led by Sen. John McCain, to agree to eliminate the
mid-2011 deadline for the beginning of a U.S. withdrawal and perhaps
even for yet another troop surge in Afghanistan.
But accounts of
Obama administration policymaking on the war last year make it clear
that Obama caved into military pressure in 2009 for the troop surge of
2010 only as part of a compromise under which McChrystal and Petraeus
agreed to a surge of 18 months duration. It was clearly understood by
both civilian and military officials, moreover, that after the surge
was completed, the administration would enter into negotiations on a
settlement of the war.
Petraeus's political skills and ability
to sell a strategy involving a negotiated settlement offers Obama more
flexibility than he has had with McChrystal in command.
Contrary
to the generally accepted view that Petraeus mounted a successful
counterinsurgency campaign in Iraq, his main accomplishment was to make
the first formal accommodation with Sunni insurgents.
Petraeus
demonstrated in his command in Iraq a willingness to adjust strategic
objectives in light of realities he could not control. He had it made
it clear to his staff at the outset that they would make one last
effort to show progress, but that he would tell Congress that it was
time to withdraw if he found that it was not working.
As
commander in Iraq, Petraeus chose staff officers who were skeptics and
realists rather than true believers, according to accounts from members
of his staff in Iraq. When one aide proposed in a memorandum in the
first weeks of his command coming to terms with the Shia insurgents led
by Moqtada al Sadr, for example, Petraeus did not dismiss the idea.
That
willingness to listen to viewpoints that may not support the existing
strategy stands in sharp contrast to McChrystal's command style in
Afghanistan. McChrystal has relied heavily on a small circle of
friends, mainly from his years as Special Operations Forces (SOF)
commander, who have been deeply suspicious of the views of anyone from
outside that SOF circle, according to sources who are familiar with
the way his inner circle has operated.
In an interview with IPS,
one military source who knows McChrystal and his staff described a
"very tight" inner circle of about eight people which "does everything
together, including getting drunk".
"McChrystal surrounded
himself with yes men," said another source who has interacted with some
of those in the inner circle. "When people have challenged the
conventional wisdom, he's had them booted out," the source said.
The
McChrystal inner circle has been accustomed to the insularity that
Special Operations Forces have traditionally had in carrying out their
operations, the source added.
The primary example of McChrystal's
rejection of outside expertise that challenged his beliefs cited by
the sources is the case of David Kilcullen.
Kilcullen, a retired
Australian Army officer, is recognized as one of the most
knowledgeable specialists on insurgency and was an adviser to Petraeus
in Iraq in 2007-2008. Kilcullen is known for speaking his mind, even if
it conflicts with existing policy.
After McChrystal took
command of U.S. and NATO forces in Afghanistan last year, Kilcullen was
slated to become an adviser on his staff. But after some early
interactions between Kilcullen, and the McChrystal team, that decision
was reversed, the sources said.
Kilcullen's views on targeted
killings as wrongheaded clashed with the assumptions of McChrystal and
his inner circle.
McChrystal's staff was also supposed to
create a "red team" of outside specialists on Afghanistan who could
provide different perspectives and information, but after the inner
circle around McChrystal tightened its control over outside
information, the idea was allowed to die, according to one source.
Several
members of McChrystal's inner circle are officers who worked for the
general during his five-year stint as head of the Joint Special
Operations Command, which carried out targeted raids aimed at killing
or capturing insurgent leaders in Iraq and Afghanistan from 2003 to
2008, the sources say.
Two of the key officers on McChrystal's
staff who were part of his former JSOC inner circle are his
intelligence chief, Maj. Gen. Michael T. Flynn and his Deputy Chief of
Staff for Operations, Maj. Gen. Bill Mayville.
Flynn was
McChrystal's director of intelligence at JSOC from 2004 to 2007 and
then his director of intelligence at the Joint Staff in 2008-2008.
Mayville also served under McChrystal at JSOC.
McChrystal's
political adviser, retired Army Col. Jacob McFerren, is not a veteran
of JSOC. But he is described by one source familiar with McChrystal's
team as one of the general's old Army "drinking buddies".

31 Comments so far
Show All"McChrystal's strategy is not working..."
Of course not. Any strategy that includes staying in Iraq, Afghanistan and Pakistan will not work, no matter who's in charge.
"the U.S. political elite had already become very uneasy about whether the war was on the wrong track."
Meanwhile, a lot of us non-elites had figured out this was the wrong track a long time ago... like before the war started.
"Any strategy that includes staying in Iraq, Afghanistan and Pakistan will not work, no matter who's in charge."
Yeah, I think one must look at this ruckus within the administration through that proposition.
McChrystal's team and Obama's team are looking to blame each other, methinks. But, deep down they know this "war" is lost. And no one wants to take the blame.
I hope Patraeus also drinks and his tongue slips ...
Gen Petraus is nicknamed 'General Betray Us' for a very good reason. While I don't agree with everything McCrystal did, he was at least competent.
General McCrystal, through his actions in the Afghan war has proven himself incompetent. Arrogance combined with stupidity seems to be the nature of the greater part of the US militay's general staff.
In large part, that's due to the military people advancing the same way it's often done in the private sector: nepotism. McChrystal got into West Point because daddy was a general. Once there, he distinguished himself same same way that McCain (a son of an admiral) did at Annapolis: by being a screwup and graduating low in his class.
This is nothing new. MacArthur got into West Point because he was such a wonderful prospect. Did I mention that his dad was a general at the time?
While at West Point, he set a record for the highest GPA ever. Did I mention that his dad was a general at the time?
After graduation, he went to Europe to fight in world war I. Within two weeks he won the medal of honor. Did I mention that his dad was a general at the time?
The military is like hollywood. When you see a new star, it often turns out to be some older star's demented kid.
It shouldn't be surprising to anyone why our military is incompetent.
Ever notice that Petraeus wears his hair the same as MacArthur? Must go with the rank.
So there is still civilian rule in America? Generals can still get fired by the "civilian" Commander In Chief? The way things are going it may soon be the other way around, in fact, it may be that way now. The "generals" just look civilian in their suits and ties.
It's total BS for Obama and others to imply the military is subordinate to civilian rule.
Give it a little more time and presidents will be called in by the Brass, offering their resignation for insubordination.
BLAA BLAA BLAA, BLAA DO DA BLAA DA DA GOO GOO DA DA
We don't know crap, except they lie...we know that very
well.....we will never know what just happened.....
has anyone heard anything about the second person that
died in the Gulf of Mexico? They speak of the Capt that
they say shot himself but haven't heard about what happened
to the other guy yet,,, can't wait for that story....
Someday our military will win another war. There's someone in the world we can beat. I'm almost positive.
Let's try the Cayman Islands. They didn't do anything to us, but they are too hospitable to put up a fight. And, as a bonus, you can get good Cuban cigars there.
I think McChrystal knows this war is lost and he wanted out so he would not be blamed for the loss. Wake up the sheeple, we are in deep do-do.
Exactly. Better to be remembered as the guy who was fired for badmouthing his boss than being remembered for the photo that shows him hanging onto a helicopter while being evacuated from the embassy in Kabul.
The other benefit is that now he can tell people that we would have won if only he had been left in command.
That will help in in the upcoming election (Palin/McChrystal 2012).
Let's get this straight, Obama is replacing the General who covered up the murder of Pat Tillman and ran the covert hit squads in Iraq with the General who lost $2 billion dollars in small arms, mainly 9mm Berretas' and AK-47s' intended for the Iraqi Police Force and the Iraqi Military when he was in charge of training them. Afterwards many of these weapons showed up at crime scenes throughout Europe and the Middle East and in the possesion of insurgents in Iraq. And everybody is happy about this. What could possibly go wrong?
This is just a ploy to be able to strech out our time in Afghanistan, you know for that couple of trillion dollars in our gas, our oil, our litium, our iron and copper ore, ours, ours, ours, ours! Sorry, I was channeling Daffy Duck, in Ali Baba Bunny there for a moment!
Your comment states that Petraeus is willing to coverup/hide things from the American public, is willing to illegally kill people, and is a wasteful when it comes to military equipment/spending. Sounds like he has all the qualifications that the MIC is looking for in a general!
"the General who lost $2 billion dollars in small arms, mainly 9mm Berretas' and AK-47s' intended for the Iraqi Police Force and the Iraqi Military when he was in charge of training them."
Can you link that claim, I can't find it.
Thank you-
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/08/05/AR2007080501299.html
It was back about 2005, I'll have to dig it up again.
The weapons went missing in 2004 and 2005, the article was in a Monday August 6, 2007 article in the Washington Post (I don't have a link) The article was entitled: "Weapons Given to Irag are Missing" by Glenn Kessler.
"The decision obviously reflects a desire by Obama to find a way out of a deepening policy crisis in Afghanistan."
Obviously? REALLY? Funny how it came right after a lot of juvenile comments became public. Too much testosterone and alcohol and arrogance.
We've got a bunch of drunken punks running our "War" over there.
When I look at the mess called Afghanistan I find myself in the strange world of defending the military (not the MIC though). After Mr. Obama was sworn in as president the generals did not have to talk him into a renewed offensive in Afghanistan because Obama had already decided that before he became president. Suppose your aim is to "eradicate talibanism". Your choice is between "shock and awe militarily" and searching for a political non-military solution. Mr. Obama chose neither but opted for a half-arsed compromise of fewer soldiers than Petraeus/McChrystal had asked for, a stupid "deadline", and no talking with the Taliban. No wonder then that the generals and civilian leaders like Eikenberry began to scheme behind his back.
General Petraeus would have been stupid to accept his new command without demanding total freedom of action and total respons to any requests for more soldiers.
Folks, the president is the problem here, not the military.
Apparently Mr. Obama never read the full text of Prussian General von Clausewitz' treatise on war. He warned the King of Prussia that armies do not like to be used for his foreign adventures.
Incidentally, my position has always been "don't get into Afghanistan" before day one of the invasion.
"Suppose your aim is to "eradicate talibanism" ". If that is their aim it will never happen. You can never eradicate something as etherial as a meme. These are true believers willing to kill themselves for their cause, and there is a continuous stream of them being created by their religious leaders. Just like christian fundamentalists keep grinding out their true believers.
Apparently you are ignorant of "playing the devil's advocate" which is what I did.
As a matter of fact president Obama has repeatedly stated that his aim is to "eradicate talibanism".
I have somewhat changed my view of generals McChrystal and Petraeus. Given what you correctly analyze as an impossible task ("it will never happen") they should have refused to accept and have resigned.
It can all be summed up like this: Those pesky Taliban. Don't they know they're supposed to go along with our plan?
This war is simply a no win situation. One way or another we will just end up picking up our "toys" and going home. We really cant win this thing because we are not fighting a government that can surrender to us. Heck we are not even fighting an organized group that has a primary leader that can surrender to us, and tell his followers to stop fighting.
On the other hand the people we are fighting can never really defeat us, as in destroying our military, so the war will continue until the US really gets sick of it, (AKA VIetnam)or goes broke, which ever comes first.
So why not display some real intelligence and call it quits now before even more people die for naught.
That would only make sense if we were TRYING to win.
We are trying to control and profit. So far pretty good on that level. People dying? Meh. War is hell, right?
And if we did just leave, I bet a lot of our toys would stay; like in the hands of the local mafias and under the roads that children walk on.
Obama is getting the US deeper into the horrible policies of Bush, relying on the same war criminals.
General Betrayus is therefor the perfect front man of American crimes against humanity.
Accepting a resignation with regret is about the softest method of firing anyone I've ever heard of. Now McChrystal can retire with full pension and take over Xe (Prince is already gone). In less than 10 years he can be a billionaire. And Obama's Petraeus makes the war go on and on and on. First outsourcing person to be hired: McChrystal.
Having entered the Long Emergency, the Empire is in now in wobble mode: the stock exchange has been wobbling for a while, the economy is in wobble mode, the energy situation is wobbling, the Congress is double-wobbling, the two (or three, if one includes the nearly daily drone spills into Pakistan) phoney wars are hyper-wobbling, the generals are wobbling, and so on.
wikipedia ~ soap opera:
A soap opera, sometimes called "soap" for short, is an ongoing, episodic work of dramatic fiction presented in serial format on television or radio. The name soap opera stems from the original dramatic serials broadcast on radio that had soap manufacturers such as Procter & Gamble, Colgate-Palmolive, and Lever Brothers as sponsors[1] and producers.[2] These early radio serials were broadcast in weekday daytime slots when mostly housewives would be available to listen; thus the shows were aimed at and consumed by a predominantly female audience.[1]
The term soap opera has at times been generally applied to any romantic serial,[1] but it is also used to describe the more naturalistic, unglamorous UK primetime drama serials such as Coronation Street.[3] A crucial element that defines soap opera is the open-ended nature of the narrative, with stories spanning several episodes. The defining feature that makes a program a soap opera, according to Albert Moran, is "that form of television that works with a continuous open narrative. Each episode ends with a promise that the storyline is to be continued in another episode".[4]
Soap opera stories run concurrently, intersect and lead into further developments. An individual episode of a soap opera will generally switch between several different concurrent story threads that may at times interconnect and affect one another or may run entirely independent of each other. Each episode may feature some of the show's current storylines but not always all of them. Especially in daytime serials and those that are screened each weekday, there is some rotation of both storylines and actors so any given storyline or actor will appear in some but usually not all of a week's worth of episodes. Soap operas rarely bring all the current storylines to a conclusion at the same time. When one storyline ends there are several other story threads at differing stages of development. Soap opera episodes typically end on some sort of cliffhanger.
the complicity of U.S. media manufacturing this soap opera is appalling but not surprising, quoting Taliban leaders liking disruption if he was replaced, was reported on Fox propaganda;CNN claiming major shift on War on Afghanistan & speculation who will replace him with non stop HYPE HOURS before announcement .
It's not even about "competency" or success in Afghanistan unless you believe in a successful Occupation ,but that's how it's framed or discussed by the complicit and misinformed .
Instead of directly asking the pentagon WHY are U.S. troops walking by Poppy fields (by default protecting them)and NOT DESTROYING THEM or WHY NATO denied offer by RUSSIA to eradicate them (Everybody knows were they are , grown in same location YEAR after Year and increased 12X..12X AFTER INVASION.
Naw, not an issue for complicit "news" that DRUGS traveling through so called ally Pakistan (billions of dollars making Pak. Generals wealthy ) ending up in U.S. & U.K. killing thousands, naw not an issue when you can manufacture silly illusion that troops are coming home, a meaning less issue .
As in Iraq and I said during invasion years ago , the U.S. wants at least 50K plus the unreported vast number of MERCENARIES in IRAQ and prob. 60 -80 plus mercs in Afghanistan , once RESISTANCE is squashed . But there lies the prob. , the OIL pipeline can't be built but the POPPY INDUSTRY is flourishing , making more rich than just Afghans , but the alphabet agency , like they profited during the Vietnam war .
But issue is always framed as " winning " or "strategy " of occupying Afghanistan , regurgitating the propaganda "winning hearts & minds" the pentagon approved reports by CNN, Fox news repeat non stop .
It's not obama's war , it wasn't Bush's war it's a war designed by Trilateral Member Brzezinski , the neocons and your every day Imperialist , who believe it's our right to invade and intimidate foreigner countries , who don't have A RIGHT to control their own resources according to these racists , murdering war profiteers .
Obama (the Empty suit)will get his replacement, who will carry on this RESOURCE WAR and nothing will change but more Afghans wiped out by Drones .
There is no policy other than a never ending occupation to keep the military industrial complex well oiled in money.
Osama Bin Laden, CIA ghost will never be caught and will be 250 years old hiding in the mountains.
He has had a face change and lives very well in Saudi Arabia with his relatives.
Stop the bullshit, end these occupations for pipeline and oil resources.
Welcome to the United Stupid of America, soon to become the United Stazi of America.