The Case for US Withdrawal From Afghanistan
The ultimate weakness of violence is that it is a descending spiral, begetting the very thing it seeks to destroy. Instead of diminishing evil, it multiplies it. Through violence you may murder the liar, but you cannot murder the lie, nor establish the truth. Through violence you may murder the hater, but you do not murder hate.
In fact, violence merely increases hate. So it goes. Returning violence for violence multiplies violence, adding deeper darkness to a night already devoid of stars. Darkness cannot drive out darkness: only light can do that. Hate cannot drive out hate: only love can do that. - Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.
I want justice. And there's an old poster out West, I recall, that says, "Wanted: Dead or Alive". - George W. Bush
In recent history, two concepts of justice have stood out. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., believed in a kind of justice that could only be achieved when systematic oppression had been eliminated from the world. Along the way, people would have to be held accountable for their crimes. Those who had done wrong would have to admit that they had done wrong and pay some appropriate restitution for their crimes, as happened decades later in South Africa's truth and reconciliation commissions. But justice was forever intertwined with a changing of the human spirit for Dr. King. It was the societal uplifting of love over hate, of human dignity over human debasement. It was a coming to terms with our violent history and affirming values of love and compassion over those of hate and retribution.
George W. Bush, on the other hand, believed in the justice of old Western movies and gunfights.
When he inherits the Bush legacy on January 21st, 2009, Barack Obama will have to choose between these two approaches. The decision he makes will reverberate around the world and be one of the first indicators of whether "Change We Can Believe In" was merely good sloganeering.
Ending Bush's imperial misadventures in Iraq will certainly be a top priority for the incoming administration, but Obama will also be tested in Afghanistan. His words so far - calling Afghanistan the "central front" in the "War on Terror" and demanding more military action against insurgents allied with the Taliban - don't inspire confidence that he would chose the King doctrine over the Bush doctrine.
Reckless Interventions
In 1996, the Taliban, a faction of the anti-Soviet Mujahideen with fundamentalist Wahabi Muslim beliefs, took control of Kabul and most of Afghanistan. Zbigniew Brzezinski, Jimmy Carter's National Security Advisor, supported the Mujahideen (who from the very beginning had fundamentalist tendencies) as part of the "Afghan trap" which succeeded in fatally wounding the Soviet empire. While many Afghans greeted the Taliban's rise to power with delight, their theocratic government soon began to grate on the people of Afghanistan, for whom fundamentalist Islam was almost as foreign as Mormonism.
After the events of September 11, 2001, the Bush administration portrayed the Taliban as deeply connected with al-Qaeda, the terrorist network that claimed responsibility for the attacks, and therefore argued for going to war against Afghanistan. When the Taliban countered that they were happy to give up Osama bin Laden, the alleged mastermind of the 9/11 attacks, if the U.S. could produce any evidence for the allegation, the U.S. scoffed. Then the U.S. invaded.
The invasion succeeded in two things: First, it brought down a terrible fundamentalist regime while taking an inordinately heavy toll in civilian causalities. The Taliban had instituted a brutal form of shariah law and forced minorities to wear identification tags. They had even destroyed ancient Buddhist carvings claiming that the depiction of the human form is "unislamic." Many Afghans - particularly the half of the population who happen to be women - were excited to see the Taliban ousted. While this is an accomplishment, it's worth remembering that expectations for improvement in women's lives were largely unmet.
The second and even more dangerous accomplishment of the U.S. invasion of Afghanistan was to elevate the Taliban, al-Qaeda and anyone willing to resist U.S. aggression to the status of heroes or freedom fighters.
Perhaps the easiest way to understand what most Afghans and many South Asians, Muslims, and others around the world felt after the invasion is to remember how Americans felt after the September 11 attacks. George W. Bush was a deeply unpopular president. The election that brought him to power had split the population, with shady dealings in Florida and an activist Supreme Court ultimately deciding the race in favor of Bush. Many of my liberal compatriots despised the president, who was already acquiring a reputation for spending his presidency on vacation.
But after the 9/11 attacks, those same liberals were rallying around Bush. The logic was simple: in a time of crisis, with your country under attack, you support those who are going to defend you. You may not like George W. Bush, but his policies his armed forces stand between you and whoever caused significant damage to New York and Washington, DC.
By the same logic, who stood between Afghan civilians and the NATO aerial bombardments that killed about 3,000 people? The Taliban. Every bomb that detonated on a wedding party led to tens, perhaps hundreds of young people - mostly young boys and many of them orphans - joining the resistance movement under the flag of the Taliban.
And it's not just that the Afghan population believes that the Taliban resistance is legitimate; that resistance is legitimate under international law. No less important a document than the United Nations charter gives the Taliban and other Afghans the right to legitimate self-defense against U.S. aggression.
The Real War against Fundamentalism
So if aerial bombardments and occupations give legitimacy to those very fundamentalists who Afghans would remove from power, what does the real war on fundamentalism look like?
In 1999 I was the first staff person of the International Network for the Rights of Female Victims of Violence in Pakistan, a group that was combating "honor crimes" along the Pakistan-Afghanistan border. These were incidences of domestic violence, often against a wife, a sister, a daughter or even a mother who was accused of having some kind of illicit sexual relationship. We understood that these crimes were on the rise because of the spread of Taliban-style Wahabi Islam into tribal areas that already had an extremely patriarchal view of women's bodies.
What was our weapon of choice in fighting against the Talibanization of what has traditionally been a tolerant, ecumenical form of Islam? Education. We taught women their rights under Pakistani and Afghani law, we taught about the passages in the Quran that mentioned women's rights, and we also tried to educate people about other traditions - whether they be secular humanist traditions or the Hindu and Christian traditions of neighboring countries and tribes. In other words we tried to undermine the hatred, the xenophobia, the fear upon which fundamentalism is built.
Such efforts may take generations, and they almost always require the state to play a role in education, development and ensuring employment for all. But ultimately education is the only way to combat religious fundamentalism, just as negotiation is ultimately the only way to end war.
Buying into a Failed Solution
While Obama's election may indicate a shift in U.S. foreign policy (and hopefully a rejection of the Bush doctrine of pre-emptive war), Obama has prescribed more military operations in Afghanistan.
For more than a year, Obama has argued for redeploying U.S. troops from Iraq to Afghanistan. He has called Afghanistan the "central front in the War on Terror" and has even threatened to bomb Pakistan should there be evidence that Afghan warlords are hiding there and the Pakistani government isn't "doing enough" about it. (On this last point, Bush has already bombed Pakistan several times over the last few months, prompting the Pakistani government to publicly rebuke the U.S. for violating its sovereignty.)
While Obama's rhetoric in arguing for increased involvement in Afghanistan makes some sense - he claims that Bush has been so involved with Iraq that the al-Qaeda leaders who allegedly orchestrated the September 11 attacks are still at large - his proposed methodology doesn't.
Instead of scaling up an already disastrous war, the United States could change course in a way that would ultimately do a lot more to ensure the world's safety. Such measures should include:
- Withdrawing troops. International law is clear on this subject. No country may occupy another indefinitely and certainly not without the will of the people being occupied. If an Obama administration truly thinks that withdrawing U.S. and NATO troops would be a bad thing for Afghans, hold a referendum to see who would like the troops to remain.
- Working with the various Afghan factions to begin negotiations. Wars are rarely stopped on the battlefield, and those that are have a tendency to break out again after a few years. The recent history of Afghanistan illustrates this point. It's better by far for enemies and friends, Pashtun, Tajik, and others to settle differences through negotiation based on mutual respect and the rule of law.
- Once stability and security are guaranteed in Afghanistan, beginning the attack on fundamentalism in earnest. Working to incorporate Afghanistan into the international human rights framework through enforcing UN measures which Afghanistan has already ratified, such as the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women is one step that can be taken in this regard. Another is major investment in social infrastructure and particularly health and education measures which will ultimately help Afghanistan recover from being bombed "into the stone age."
If the idea of immediately stopping all military operations in Afghanistan sounds radical, it shouldn't. No less than President Hamid Karzai pleaded for an end to the bombings immediately after the U.S. election, as yet another wedding party fell victim to bombs from the sky.
For the sake of all us, Afghan and American, let's hope President Barack Obama heeds his call.
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27 Comments so far
Show AllWhen Nixon came into office in 1968, he didn't withdraw troops from Vietnam overnight. In fact, it wasn't until around his reelection time that he finally did it. Obama's sure going to face a hellish nightmare in getting troops withdrawn from Iraq and Afghanistan and I hope he makes it safely. Furthermore, if there's enough strong enough to suggest that Osama is still hiding in Afghanistan or at least along the Afghan/Pak border, the most I can see Obama doing is redirecting troops from Iraq to Afghanistan.
Richard Milhouse Nixon, one of the greatest villains and worst presidents in U.S. history, deliberately prolonged the Vietnam War and engineered our withdrawal to insure his reelection in 1972. Tens or hundreds of thousands died horribly and in vain so this paranoid, angry and resentful piece of gutter trash could then give us the treason of Watergate.
In the end, the United States, or NATO, will cut a deal with the Taliban and tiptoe out the back door in Afghoulistan, just as Nixon cut a deal with North Vietnam and withdrew, setting up the North's conquest of the South and subsequent unification of the country which was then finally rid of foreign domination.
The United States, like any powerful bunch of imperialists, never learns anything and sooner or later we'll be at it again. The only thing these strutting assholes are good at is cutting off their faces to spite their noses.
The real hellish nightmare will be a redeployment of tens of thousands of U.S. troops into Afghanistan, the graveyard of every invader, time out of mind.
Most recently, just ask the British and the Russians.
The only thing the flies have ever done in that mountainous and warrior tribe land is capture the flypaper.
Wonderfully said.
You have omitted Obama's most definitive words on war, which were that he is not against all war, just this war (Iraq). This election was not about King vs Bush doctrine. It was about what people saw might evolve as Obama doctrine. Only those not reading or listening would have thought he would be a pacifist. Nothing in his history says that.
The invasion of Afghanistan was illegal. The fact that this war has gone on 7 years is an obscenity.
It is shameful that Obama wants to put more troops in Afghanistan. It is the main reason I did not vote for him.
Please write this to www.change.gov every day.
Joe
George W Bush, and conservative Christians in general, embrace the Pentateuch's lex talionis conception of justice and reject Jesus's merciful, pacifistic ethos. This is mirrored by the virtually identical Qur'anic code embraced by the Taliban, al Qaeda and the Wahhabis. For all of their reciprocal hatred and demonization, they are the flip sides of the same counterfeit ethical coin. This spurs the very cycle of offense and retribution Dr King warned against. After every major war we resolve "never again," but the shelf life of our moral insight is tragically short.
Alex
Why didn't more people vote for anti-war candidates?
The continuation of war has been mandated by millions of Americans in this past election.
Obama was pretty upfront about Afghanistan, as pointed out in the article. Pelosi's record since 2006 speaks for itself. etc. etc. etc.
Paul Siemering
What is needed is a whole lot of peacefulness. The made by usa mujahadeen and made by usa Taliban and tricked into war by usa Soviets had been busily destroying Afghanistan for 20 years when the usa itself for no good reason decided these very poor, war weary, hungry, people needed some real big bombs. The people upon whom those bombs fell did not know anything about the usa. they said why are they bombing us? No one has been able to answer them for 8 years because there is no answer. Obama must somewhere find the courage- and it takes some- to call off this bogus "war on terror"and send in food and work crews to repair all the damage those crazy neocons have perpetrated. here and Iraq both.
why do you think the colleges in the US are full of heroin now
duh?
Dyncorp-Halliburton
lots of money
I guess Locust's plan would be to kill everyone in Afghanistan and hope that all Alquida & Taliban were included.
Maybe he should remember that we are fighting our own creation - Al Qaida that is financed by Saudi Arabian interests(our allies & supplier).
Too bad people with no love of humanity like Locust appear to have Obama's ear.
May Allah have mercy on us, we definitely know not what we are doing.
But I could be wrong !
No. You are right. We built up Taliban. We don't know where Bin Laden is. (I have my nagging doubts about his level of involvement in 911, but that is another story.) We have alienated the Afghanis. (Those crazy people do not like to have their weddings bombed.) They won't help us find Osama, if he is there. Our troops will not have clue about where to look. The poppies will continue to grow, increasing heroin use in Iran and other countries. (Maybe that is desired by our government, I don't know.)
It is a huge mess that we helped to create and the best we can do is just get out. We can use some of the military money we save to help farmers in Afghanistan who would prefer to grow food rather than poppies.
Joe
Locust, you point out a major dilemma Obama faces on the matter of Afghanistan. Let's look at history; Obama may do what Nixon did in Vietnam: expand the war temporarily to negiotiate from a position of strength in order to withdrawal under victory as opposed to under fire.
"Negotiating from a position of strength" to withdraw "under victory" from Viet Nam is a long-discredited and foolish notion, but the U.S. must not let the "Viet Nam Syndrome" die. Indignity must be forever heaped upon more Indignity on the path to global hegemony.
It's all about "realpolitik" and appearances isn't it? How many more thousands must die in an expanded war to save face for a bunch of corrupt politicians and militarists? Obama's biggest dilemma is being a tool of the New World Order.
curmudgeon99 -
How am I the misguided one?
Who is the US fighting in Afghanistan? the Taliban and terrorists linked to al-Qaeda.
Why? Because the US declared war against them. This is the war that the US military is fighting, those are the declared enemies. Read the execrable piece of legislative crap of an AUMF that Congress passed that started this fiasco, read Bush's words about who the enemy is (and Congress gave him the power to name the enemy).
It would be great if the US took its troops out of Afghanistan. Do y'all think that 'gee, it would be great if..' is the argument that will sway President Obama and the US militaries?
Do you think that the US will admit that it did wrong and therefore will leave? That we shouldn't be there to control the pipelines? That the US will pay any attention at all to what the Afghans themselves want? Gee, that'd be great.
If we don't understand what keeps us there we will never get out before the inevitable catastrophe.
The choices confronting President Obama are: to withdraw and be forever denigrated by political enemies for losing, to continue the conflicts, or to announce victory over al-Qaeda and the Taliban. Which do you see happening?
I think it was wrong to attack Afghanistan and said so at the time. It should have been a police action. I think the US gov't/military and NATO should get out and pay reparations.
The invasion of Afghanistan was just as spuriously founded as that of Iraq.
The US went after the Talibans not because they were providing shelter for Bin Laden, but because after they had been wined and dined in Texas by among others Occidental Petroleum and had agreed to allow a pipeline from the Central Asia petroleum fields to be built across Afghanistan to empty out in Pakistan, they backed out on the deal. They also rained on the CIA's heroin trade parade by prohibiting the growing of amapola in most Afghan provinces.
The invasion of Afghanistan was to enforce the contract between thieves. Bin Laden had no part in the real motive. Why would he, when he was still on the CIA payroll?
The CIA is back in business controlling more than 80% of the heroin trade.
And that's why the invading troops are still there.
The US is first of all going to have to stop its hypocrisy if it wants to gain back any credibility in the rest of the world. It pours billions of tax dollars into the renegade regime in Colombia in order to insure the unfettered flow of cocaine to its addicts and a big chunk of change to the DEA.
I thought that it was Unocal that had the initial contract with the Taliban? Hamid Karzi was a Director for Unocal and I thought that he was sent in to show the Taliban and the rest of the Middle East, "If a Coup does not work, we will invade you.....
Zbigniew Brzezinski is one of Obama´s foreign policy advisers and said that he was proud of his decision to de-stabilize Afghanistan, "Which would you rather have as an enemy the Soviet Union or the Taliban?"
"Operation Cyclone" was funded with over 3 billion from the U.S. and 3 billion from the Saudis. Milton Bearden, ex CIA Director in Afghanistan, said, "Osama Bin Laden did nothing more than bring in 20 to 25 million dollars a month from Arab Countries." 100,000 Islamic Militants were recruited and based in Pakistan. It was a joint CIA and ISI project and lasted through the 90´s
.
The Saudis are presently negotiating with the Taliban. The Saudis funded the insurgency in Iraq.
One of Hamid Karzai´s relatives is rumored to be the biggest drug dealer in Afghanistan.
There are so many "Off Book CIA Companies" that the U.S Congresses have been rendered impotent in stopping the CIA´s Black Ops. Whether it is: Georgia or Afghanistan,Chile or Iraq, Venezuela or Pakistan,Colombia or Iran, wherever there is a nation struggling against destabilizing forces there are ex-CIA and Mercenaries carrying out the work of "The Corporate Elite".
September of 2007, a plane went down in Mexico with 3.3 tons of cocaine. The European Union discovered that the plane had been used for 4 flights to Guantanamo.
Nobody in the states did an investigation of the owners once they discovered that the plane was owned by no one, a ghost company, a name and an empty office.....The CIA is still bringing in drugs, but they use "Off Book Companies".
We need to get our little dirty fingers out of other countries and stop mudering innocent people.
It has never been Democracy versus Communism in the past 50 years. It has been American Capitalism vs any country with a natural resource that can be used by "The Corporate Elite."
You are absolutely right that it was Unocal--I had just written something about Occidental in Ecuador on another site and it was on my mind.
When that CIA plane went down in Campeche, here in Mexico, there was immediately a lot of spin activity trying to pin the cocaine on Venezuela.
Several things are wrong with that: 1) Venezuela is not a cocaine producer, and 2) although the plane did make a stop in Venezuela at the airport on the coast that serves Caracas, it was EMPTY when it left and it made another lengthy stop in Colombia before heading to Campeche.
Both the CIA and the DEA are in the drug trafficking business BIG TIME--among other activities, the drug money funds other activities that the agencies don't have a sufficient budget for and for which they don't care to make any accounting.
The US had no evidence that Osama masterminded 9-11, so all it could do was "scoff" at the Taliban's reasonable request for evidence.
The Case for US Withdrawal From Afghanistan
The Case for US Withdrawal From Iraq
The Case for US Withdrawal From Pakistan
The Case for US Withdrawal From Syria
The Case for US Withdrawal From Iran
The Case for US Withdrawal From . . . . Israel
Locust,
Sameer is right and you are the one who is misguided.
For a much better policy to follow:
http://www.threecupsoftea.com/
"Three Cups of Tea is beautifully written. It is also a critically important book at this time in history. The governments of Pakistan and Afghanistan are both failing their students on a massive scale. The work Mortenson is doing, providing the poorest students with a balanced education, is making them much more difficult for the extremist madrassas to recruit." -Ahmed Rashid, best-selling author of Taliban: Militant Islam and Oil in Central Asia and Descent Into Chaos.
"A Template For Peace" -Bloomsbury Review
Greg Mortenson has provided a Three Cups of Tea Reading Guide and a Question & Answer Interview for use in book clubs, interviews, classrooms, etc.
But I could be wrong !
We should withdraw from Afganistan because that is what we should do. If its a UN operation, fine....we'll match other countries troops numbers. And the UN can pay for it.
Afganistan has the same right as Iraq, to decide her own fate. Time to come home.
Simple truth. But I am not sure what the UN would do either. I would like to help Afghanistan to change from a poppy economy to something more healthful for their own people and the world. It would be a long term and complicated project, especially since we long ago extinguished voices of democracy and modernism there in the name of fighting the cold war.
Until we know what would be helpful, we should stay away.
Joe
While I agree with the author's sentiment, the military conflicts in Afghanistan are misunderstood. I'm not surprised at that.
The US is at war with al-Qaeda and the Taliban (see my comment under the Rumsfeld article). Bush chose Afghanistan as the first battlefield in this war. That is one reason why we are there.
No President is going to withdraw troops from an on-going conflict, for fear of domestic political backlash. Only victory is acceptable. Victory is impossible, because the victory condition for this war is the prevention of future terrorist acts by these groups (and their supporters - the enemies' list has grown).
Mr. Obama is not likely to announce that these groups no longer exist (and thus future terrorism prevented), so victory is impossible. He will not withdraw US troops, because that would be an admission of defeat. Do not expect this conflict to end. If Mr. Obama strongly reins in the Pentagon this conflict will continue as is. If Mr. Obama doesn't, then expect this conflict to escalate, both in Afghanistan and worldwide (it is a GLOBAL war on terror), as the Pentagon does its job and hunts down enemies.
US troops are also in Afghanistan as part of the UN-mandated NATO-led support for the Afghan government.
Solving this conundrum, this morass of interlocking conflicts and missions, and achieving the goals outlined in this article, is impossible. Because nobody is strong enough to stand up for peace, to stand up against the military-industrial-media-complex, these conflicts will continue until the problem is solved for us (and we won't like that one bit).