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Warning to the US: Beware Treating Afghanistan like Iraq
It's a mistake to think that 'failed states' won't put up strong resistance
President Obama is likely to announce in the coming days that he will withdraw all US combat troops from Iraq by August 2010. Many of these soldiers will end up in Afghanistan where the Taliban is getting stronger and the US-backed government weaker by the day. How much has the US learnt from its debacle in Iraq?
Tne lesson not learnt in Washington is that it is a bad idea to become involved in a war in any so-called "failed state". This patronising term suggests that if a state has failed, foreign intervention is justified and will face limited resistance. But the greatest US foreign policy disasters over the last generation have all been in places where organised government had largely collapsed.
There was Lebanon in 1983, when 242 US marines were blown up in Beirut, Somalia 10 years later, and Iraq after the overthrow of Saddam Hussein. The lesson, which applies to nowhere more than Afghanistan, is that societies with weak state structures devise lethally effective ways of defending themselves.
I remember an Iraqi neurosurgeon, who had just successfully defended his hospital in Baghdad against looters with a Kalashnikov in 2003, saying to me: "The Americans should remember that even Saddam Hussein had difficulty ruling this country." Iraq was never like an east European autocracy. Even under Saddam every Iraqi owned a gun. Iraqis would not fight for Saddam's regime, but they would fight for their own ethnic or sectarian community or their country. An error made by the US was to imagine that just because Shia and Sunni Arabs hated each other that Iraqi nationalism was not a potent force.
This conviction that a victory has already been won is leading American commentators to assume blandly that the US can leave behind 50,000 non-combat troops in Iraq without any Iraqi objection. This would also be contrary to the Status of Forces Agreement negotiated with enormous difficulty and after prolonged wrangling last year.
The greatest source of error for the Americans in Iraq was not a policy mistake but an abiding belief that they alone made the political weather. Anything good or bad which happened was the result of American action. Thus if the Sunni insurgency against American forces started to come to an end in the second half of 2007 it must be because of the "surge", as the 30,000 extra US troops and more aggressive tactics on the ground were known. The real reason for the fall in violence had more to do with the Shia victory over the Sunni in an extraordinarily savage civil war, a reaction against Al-Qa'ida, and the ceasefire called by the Mehdi Army to which belonged most of the Shia death squads.
If the US intervention in Iraq proved anything it was that the Americans never had the strength to shape the political and military environment to their own liking. Yet well-reviewed books on Iraq still appear in which Iraqis have a walk-on role and when somebody pushes a button in Washington something happens in Baghdad. These misconceptions are important because the mythology about the supposed success of the "surge" is being promoted as a recipe for victory in Afghanistan.
This would not be the first time that false analogies between Iraq and Afghanistan have misled Washington. I was in Afghanistan during the war against the Taliban at the end of 2001 and the beginning of 2002 and one of the most striking features of the conflict was the lack of fighting. The warlords and their men, who had previously rallied to the Taliban, simply went home because they did not want to be bombed by US aircrafts and they were heavily bribed to do so. There was very little combat. Yet when I went to Washington to work in a think-tank for a few months later that year the Afghan war was being cited by the Bush administration as proof of America's military omnipotence.
It is difficult to believe that the Obama administration is going to make as many crass errors as its predecessor. So amazed were the Iranians to see President Bush destroy their two most detested enemies in Afghanistan and Iraq in 2001 and 2003 that some theologians held that such stupidity must be divinely inspired and heralded the return of the Twelfth Imam and the Shia millennium.
The reinforced US military presence in Afghanistan risks provoking a backlash in which religion combines with nationalism to oppose foreign intervention. It is this that has been the real strength of movements like Hezbollah in Lebanon, Hamas in Gaza, the Mehdi Army in Iraq and the Taliban in Afghanistan which the US wants to eradicate.
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33 Comments so far
Show AllOregoncharles
Good article Patrick. You have been the voice of reason over these long years.
But ....
I'd like to add something to your analysis: it's just plain wrong to brutalize people who don't agree with you? These manly arguments about whether it's feasible to go here or there, war machinery in tow, ignore the basic reason for not surging in Afghanistan or anywhere else: thousands of people - and mostly children - who deserve to finish out their lives will be killed, often brutally. What if "we" could "win" in Afghanistan, Iraq, Pakistan, would all the death and destruction be worth it?
Good question. The answer is to obvious to comment on.
I can identify with Iraqis who would not fight for their country but would fight for their families and communities. My government will lie to me when the truth will do just as well.
Obama is the best orator I have seen and even he is not up to the task of inspiring nationalistic fervor in me.
Patrick Cockburn is cogent as usual. I hope Obama pays heed as he reviews long term Afghanistan/Pakistan policy.
To Cockburn's list of factors that caused the 2008 downturn in violence inside Iraq (the end of Shia/Sunni ethnic cleansing, the Sunni nationalist insurgency's turn against al Qaeda in Anbar province, and the Mehdi army's withdrawal from death squad activity), one should add there was back channel urging from the powers-that-be in Iran. The mullahs, too, benefited from a well-timed decline in violence inside Iraq because it blunted the lame duck Bush regime's propaganda push calling for a US/Israeli attack on Iran based not not only WMD development fears, but on Tehran's purported training and clandestine supply support of the anti-American insurgency.
The post-surge mirage of "success" in Iraq never got much traction with American voters when the McCain/Palin campaign tried to sell it on the 2008 campaign trail. It would be a double tragedy if Obama's top advisors bought into the illusion that what "worked" last year in Iraq can be applied next to "work" in the years ahead in Afghanistan.
That would be bloody folly.
Bill from Saginaw
If the US intervention in Iraq proved anything it was that the Americans never had the strength to shape the political and military environment to their own liking.
What the intervention in Iraq so aptly demonstrates is how cosmically, shamefully dumb the American government and military truly are. Yes, George Wanker Bush is gone, swept away by the rip tide of his own incompetence, stupidity and genius for failure. But the thing, whatever it is, however it can be described, that put him in office twice, is still out there, awaiting the arrival of the next shambling, homicidal knuckle dragger who has that certain swaggering snot-nosed something that Americans like so much they want to have a beer with it.
I heard on "Democracy Now" another reason for the recent quiet in Iraq is that we are paying 100,000 Sunnis about $300/mo to keep their Kalashnikovs in the Kloset! Oh the power of payola...how totally American!
Peace
Maybe we can give the Taliban money to keep their guns in the closet too. Cheaper than giving it to the war-profiteers and better propaganda.
This talk about going into failed states reminds me of a story:
A woman called the police, saying that a skunk had gotten into her basement. The police told her to open the door and leave a trail of breadcrumbs from the basement to her back yard. She called the police again in 1/2 hour: "Now I have two skunks in my basement".
Who will intervene when the US become a failed state -- where seems to be the direction we are headed?
Good article -------- I am not sure what failed state in Afghanistan he is referring to, the Taliban had tight control of 90% of the country and had not failed economically. Maybe he is refering to Karzai but he is our ally so supposedly were are not fighting his government. It may be a failed state now but certainly not before we dislodged the Taliban.
Sunni hating Shia was not prevalent before we attacked Iraq. One third of married people in Baghdad were Sunni/Shia couples.
Can anyone locate the picture of bush shaking hands with the Taliban at Crawford pre invasion?
A failure to build or maintain infrastructure and provide widespread social services is also a sign of a failed state, as is the lack of human rights and rule of law. Afghanistan has always been a failed state.
zmann 6:44 You are repeating misinformation. History and my own experience there tells me Afghanistan was not a failed state until the USA armed the Mujahadeen.Then the Taliban ressurected the state( and no, discrimitory violence does not make a failed state)The USA government and MSM fostered misconceptions of USA citizens are what allows a USA policy of ethnic cleansing. It is so sad that USA citizens are so easily led for such nefarious purposes.
The main determination of a failed state is control, and for most people the Taliban had too much control.
My bad, 250 years ago Afghanistan was indeed seemingly effectively ruled by a central government. Since then however...practically never.
Read the history Afghanistan has not been a failed state since gaining control from Britain. The Shah in the 1920's was modernizing the country. In the 1970's I traveled throughout the country and the government had control and it was peaceful and well run. In fact it was the Banking Center for Central Asia.
"A failure to build or maintain infrastructure and provide widespread social services is also a sign of a failed state, as is the lack of human rights and rule of law."
Under this definition The USA can be called a "failed state."
Heh, not quite, the collapse has to be almost complete. But certain areas certainly qualify.
I wish Patrick Coburn was Secretary of State. But, then, i have alot of wishes.
Right now the biggest difference between Iraq & Afghanistan is Pakistan.
Last week the central government ceded control of the Swat valley to militants, weakening itself.
Now opposition leader Nawaz Sharif has been banned from parliament for supporting former chief justice Chaudhary's return to the bench. There is rioting in the streets.
The US is fearful.
The Taliban is overjoyed.
From South Waziristan to Northwest Afghanistan?
From Islamabad to Kabul?
How about from General Pasha to Karzai?
Joe.
"azjoe February 26th, 2009 9:38 pm
Right now the biggest difference between Iraq & Afghanistan is Pakistan.
Last week the central government ceded control of the Swat valley to militants, weakening itself."
I WONDER about that. What's reported in many news media and what's really going on doesn't always match except in terms of front-and-center-stage acts; not revealing what goes on other than on the stage. From what I read over the past week and perhaps it was in the article here at CD and on the Google Earth findings of U.S. military bases in Pakistan, a "good" number of bases, the Pakistani govt has not been really honest when condemning U.S. invasions into Pakistan. The govt may have been a little honest about that, but maybe nowhere as much as the leadership should've been when stating such words or condemnation. The govt there apparently does not really care much about the country's sovereignty, but this is what I gathered from the very recent article or two.
NONE of us is there, much less there and behind the doors where the leaders are talking. So we only get what news media provide; for the most part only that anyway.
Could the Pakistani govt have agreed to this Swat valley deal in order to try to get all of the militant fighters in Pakistan to group there and with the (I suppose) possible aim of making it easier for the U.S. to kill many more of them? I wonder and will watch for articles that provide better and more thorough analysis on this situation.
MikeCorbeil, Hi.
"The government there apparently does not really care much about the country's sovereignty."
Mike as amazing a statement as that is, I think you may be right.
But maybe with this parsing. Pakistan is made up of it's parliament, powerful courts, the president, military, Taliban, militants, the people and most importantly the ISI,
When one says 'the government,' in P., it begs the questions, what parties are in how much and what type of control? What are their goals? And what are their strategies and current tactics for achieving them?
Wheels within Wheels. Joe.
I saw that Glenn Ford made a couple of posts in which he says that Afghanistan was not a failed state until the U.S. formed the mujahideen there as of around 1979 and the 1980's, and I've read this from respectable people on the topic of this country and what the U.S., CIA, and Pakistani ISI did in forming the mujahideen and this leading to the (I guess) overthrow or replacement of a good Afghan leader and govt, as well as respect for human rights, etcetera. Russia or the USSR had helped a lot with the human rights situation, protecting it or something like that, maybe helping to make sure it was established, too. I'm not sure, but have read again from respectable experts on Afghanistan that the USSR had provided some real good in terms of respect for human rights, so including for women, in Afghanistan.
But it's a failed state since the U.S. made it into one. The Taliban could've been persuaded to improve. I believe they could've been brought to respect women's rights, if they had been approached correctly and persistently on this need, respectfully and with legitimate enticements, like really fair business, say. They did strongly well with eradicating the cultivation of the poppies and therefore the production of heroin, hence the trafficking of heroin; and I think they could've been gradually persuaded to respect women's rights by, perhaps first of all, helping them to understand that there's nothing to fear from respecting women's rights, that they need to cease fearing this as if it's going to mean state failure, or denial of rights for the men, or .... They're human, have minds, and can be spoken with, but it must be [respectfully], as we should always treat each other worldwide as well as locally; micro- and macro-scopically. Respect provides for healthy soil for real roots to form in and life to evolve. Disrespect, hypocrisy, hegemony, ... provides soils in which roots may begin a little but soon die off; nothing good can evolve or come from it.
"Do for others as you'd want done for yourself" (Jesus) and "Do not do to others what you wouldn't want done to yourself" (Confucius). Fine perspectives those are.
AlJazeera has a new and exclusive report in video and posted at youtube Feb 26th. It's a little over four minutes.
"Exclusive: Taliban mediators, Afghan and Western officials in secret talks - 26 Feb 09",
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QKPBEbCvU3U
QUOTE:
As the Afghan foreign minister meets his US counterpart in Washington, Al Jazeera has learnt of secret talks between Taliban-linked mediators and Afghan officials, which could lead to wider negotiations between the Afghan government and the Taliban.
The deal involves the return to Afghanistan of Gulbbaldin Hekmatyar, the former prime minister, whose forces fight alongside the Taliban.
It involves a complex and delicate round of meetings from the heart of Afghanistan to Dubai, London and Saudi Arabia.
From Kabul James Bays has this exclusive report.
END QUOTE
however Afghanistan is defined as a "failed state" - then and now , it is clear that US interference..particularly in connection with using Afghanistan through CIA machinations to "give RUSSIA her own vietnam"..
PRODUCED a failed state...or at the very least ..a "state" or region where the resulting interferences decades ago brought out the most extreme tendencies such as those displayed by the taliban .
we have to remember that any entity : a party, country, a community.etc, has ranges of behavior and character..from extreme to moderate ..and it is a matter of whether CONDITIONS give greater impetus for INTERNAL potentials to surface as the dominant power.
in that case: what the USA DID decades ago created the Conditions..the "externalities"...that became the nursery for the flowering of the INTERNALITIES that we recognize as the "extreme" taliban power that is now dominant.
in other words: the "unforeseen consequences" of US mendacity and cynicism in interfering in that region for an ulterior motive :
US hatred for the Soviet Union that led the USA to make the "devil's pacts" towards that purpose of destabising "russia" as a way of "having victory over communism".....
in order of course to propagate what General Smedley Butler called:
"OUR SUPERNATIONALISTIC CAPITALISM".
if one were to answer the rhetorical question of Patrick Buchanan:
"we didn't like it when the Soviet Union was in our neighborhood (cuba)....so......what are WE doing in Russia's neighborhood?" ...
one would have the clear answers, one of them being:
"we have just given the USSR her own Vietnam" (Brzezinski reporting to Carter)....which was PURE MALICE towards another country (USSR)...nevermind what americans think of communism or russia's system.
Afghanistan as the USA's attempted way of Sitting astride the Central Asian region towards the motive of gaining control over geopolitical, energy related , PIPE-linistan extension of its global hegemony
and of course what General Smedley Butler also said:
"OUR foreign policy has always been geared towards gathering as much of the world's resources unto ourselves...at the expense of other nations..the true purpose of the US military is to make the world safe for our BIG BOSS: our Supernationalistic Capitalism, and our economic and cultural Assault...it has nothing to do with democracy ...it is about PROFIT....I was our Big Boss Capitalism's Chief Enforcer and Chief Racketeer".
if one went to a more "poetic" version of this description -- one can go to Rudyard Kipling, Poet of Empire, and adopt his words "here lies a man that tried to hustle the East"....
and so -- to answer Buchanan's rhetorical question:
"......so.....what are WE doing in Russia's Neighorhood?"
or for that matter in OTHER neighborhoods?..
the "poetic" version a la Rudyard Kipling would be:
"THE USA HUSTLES the EAST".
and eventually will meet the FATE of "the man that tried to hustle the East" as
Kipling wrote in "To the Grave of a Dead Soldier".
Wjy is it that we always need a war? Iraq winds down, and we escalate in Afghanistan. What is our mission, and what are our goals? I am an Obama fan, but his decision regarding Afghanistan I believe is a mistake and will be costly.
because of this -- stated decades ago:
"WE ARE now a nation that has been on a permanent war-footing...through incessant fear-mongering about non-existent threats and enemies...fed through our media propaganda by the military-industrial complex"......
General Douglas McArthur.
i often like to say : the USA is really a WARFARE nation...always has been...from Wounded Knee to Afghanistan.
compare this with the "next" goal for invasion and "regime change" of the neo-cons (who just happen to be the more recent STILL current representation of essentially a WAR nation) -
IRAN.
compare , and the words of Patrick Buchanan in an article today are quite as honest as one can get abotu US policies and warLIKE history:
"....Iran that has not launched an offensive war against any nation within the memory of any living American.
Can we Americans say the same?"
in fact -- Iran has NOT invaded any country for 500 hundred years .. rather, it has been iran that has been invaded or its borders crossed by others....and THAT includes the USA having undercover operations fomenting instability....
can one say the SAME about IRAN trying to make 'regime change' IN the USA?
in other words-- there is NO nation on earth that has been MORE MEDDLESOME , leading to war, or HABITUALLY being at war against other nations -- overtly and covertly -- THAN the USA.
it is a WAR MAKING nation. period.
Antiwar.com
February 27, 2009
Return of the War Party
by Patrick J. Buchanan
"Real men go to Tehran!" brayed the neoconservatives, after the success of their propaganda campaign to have America march on Baghdad and into an unnecessary war that has forfeited all the fruits of our Cold War victory.
Now they are back, in pursuit of what has always been their great goal: an American war on Iran. It would be a mistake to believe they and their collaborators cannot succeed a second time. Consider:
On being chosen by Israel's President Shimon Peres to form the new regime, Likud's "Bibi" Netanyahu declared, "Iran is seeking to obtain a nuclear weapon and constitutes the gravest threat to our existence since the war of independence."
Echoing Netanyahu, headlines last week screamed of a startling new nuclear breakthrough by the mullahs. "Iran ready to build nuclear weapon, analysts say," said CNN. "Iran has enough uranium to make a bomb," said the Los Angeles Times. Armageddon appeared imminent.
Asked about Iran's nukes in his confirmation testimony, CIA Director Leon Panetta blurted, "From all the information I've seen, I think there is no question that they are seeking that capability."
Tuesday, Dennis Ross of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, a front spawned by the Israeli lobby AIPAC, was given the Iranian portfolio. AIPAC's top agenda item? A U.S. collision with Iran.
In the neocon Weekly Standard, Elliot Abrams of the Bush White House parrots Netanyahu, urging Obama to put any land-for-peace deals with the Palestinians on a back burner. Why?
"The Israeli-Palestinian conflict is now part of a broader struggle in the region over Iranian extremism and power. Israeli withdrawals now risk opening the door not only to Palestinian terrorists but to Iranian proxies."
The campaign to conflate Hamas, Hezbollah and Syria as a new axis of evil, a terrorist cartel led by Iranian mullahs hell-bent on building a nuclear bomb and using it on Israel and America, has begun. The full-page ads and syndicated columns calling on Obama to eradicate this mortal peril before it destroys us all cannot be far off.
But before we let ourselves be stampeded into another unnecessary war, let us review a few facts that seem to contradict the war propaganda.
First, last week's acknowledgement that Iran has enough enriched uranium for one atom bomb does not mean Iran is building an atom bomb.
To construct a nuclear device, the ton of low-enriched uranium at Natanz would have to be run through a second cascade of high-speed centrifuges to produce 55 pounds of highly enriched uranium (HUE).
There is no evidence Iran has either created the cascade of high-speed centrifuges necessary to produce HUE or that Iran has diverted any of the low-enriched uranium from Natanz. And the International Atomic Energy Agency inspectors retain full access to Natanz.
And rather than accelerating production of low-enriched uranium, only 4,000 of the Natanz centrifuges are operating. Some 1,000 are idle. Why?
Dr. Mohamed El-Baradei, head of the IAEA, believes this is a signal that Tehran wishes to negotiate with the United States, but without yielding any of its rights to enrich uranium and operate nuclear power plants.
For, unlike Israel, Pakistan and India, none of which signed the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty and all of which ran clandestine programs and built atom bombs, Iran signed the NPT and has abided by its Safeguards Agreement. What it refuses to accept are the broader demands of the U.N. Security Council because these go beyond the NPT and sanction Iran for doing what it has a legal right to do.
Moreover, Adm. Dennis Blair, who heads U.S. intelligence, has just restated the consensus of the 2007 National Intelligence Estimate that Iran does not now possess and is not now pursuing a nuclear weapons program.
Bottom line: Neither the United States nor the IAEA has conclusive evidence that Iran either has the fissile material for a bomb or an active program to build a bomb. It has never tested a nuclear device and has never demonstrated a capacity to weaponize a nuclear device, if it had one.
Why, then, the hype, the hysteria, the clamor for "Action This Day!"? It is to divert America from her true national interests and stampede her into embracing as her own the alien agenda of a renascent War Party.
None of this is to suggest the Iranians are saintly souls seeking only peace and progress. Like South Korea, Japan and other nations with nuclear power plants, they may well want the ability to break out of the NPT, should it be necessary to deter, defend against or defeat enemies.
But that is no threat to us to justify war. For decades, we lived under the threat that hundreds of Russian warheads could rain down upon us in hours, ending our national existence. If deterrence worked with Stalin and Mao, it can work with an Iran that has not launched an offensive war against any nation within the memory of any living American.
Can we Americans say the same?
COPYRIGHT CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.
Find this article at:
http://www.antiwar.com/pat/?articleid=14323
Copyright 2008 Antiwar.com
although the article from which the excerpt below is taken was written in 2004/05 - it seems to have proven predictive in many ways -- being written even BEFORE the Economic meltdown at the "heart of american power" revealed itself....
it is a long article where the excerpt below is just one of SEVERAL main subjects are discussed as to how easily China or a combination of "russia/china" and some similar combination of countries which the "united states has always bullied all along"...find it critical ENOUGH to their survival to respond severely to US provocations, economically or militarily -- where the "unipolarism" of the USA just "won't stop" despite the challenges to it that should have been serving as lessons to the USA...
the Article - a very long one - is written as an analysis from a military point of view by Retired Philippine Brigadier General - with US training - and naturally might see things from both the "east and west" points of view, in itself a certain advantage of viewpoints over that of a ny "unilateral" american point of view...Colonel Victor Corpus -- for Asiatimesonline.
and it deals with 2 main sections:
What could conceivably happen SHOULD the USA come into military "shooting wars" against China for one reason or another....and the more varied options china possesses compared to that by the USA, such as responding to any US aggressiveness through "America's Acupuncture Points"...like technologically blinding American satellites and its greater dependence on computerization as a "mixed blessing"...or through causing a "dollar run" by disinvesting in the dollar and moving more to gold, euro, etc....that could collapse the US dollar and economy "overnight"....
as well as the second section of "RUSSIA/CHINA/IRAN TRIUMVIRATE"...
-------
<<<<<<<<<<
There is a good chance that even Saudi Arabia and the other oil-exporting countries in the Middle East may follow suit. They wouldn't want to be left with fast-shrinking dollars when the shift from petro-dollar to euro-dollar occurs. Again, the herd psychology will come into play, and the US will eventually be left with a dollar that is practically worthless. Considering the strong anti-American sentiments in the world caused by American unilateralism, especially in the Middle East, a concerted effort to dump the dollar in favor of the euro becomes even more plausible.
When the dollar was removed from the gold standard in August 1971, the dollar gained its strength through its use as the currency of choice in oil transactions. Once the dollar is rejected in favor of the euro or another currency for global oil transactions, the dollar will rapidly lose its value and central banks all over the world will be racing to diversify to other currencies. The shift from petro-dollar to petro-euro will have a devastating effect on the dollar. It could cause the dollar to collapse; and the whole US economy crushing down with it - a scene reminiscent of the collapse of the Twin Towers on September 11, 2001. But this one will be a thousand times more devastating.
A successful assault on the US dollar will make America crawl on its knees with a minimum of movements. And this assault can come from China, Russia or Iran - or a combination of the three - if they ever decide that they have had enough of US bullying.
5 Diplomatic isolation
In 1991, when the Soviet Union collapsed from its own weight, the US emerged as the sole superpower in the world. At that crucial period, it would have been a great opportunity for the US to establish its global leadership and dominance worldwide. With the world's biggest economy, its control of international financial institutions, its huge lead in science and technology (specially information technology) and its unequaled military might, America could have seized the moment to establish a truly American Century.
But in the critical years after 1991, America had to make a choice between two divergent approaches to the use of its almost unlimited power: soft power or hard power. The exercise of soft power would have seen America leading the world in the fight against poverty, disease, drugs, environmental degradation, global warming and other ills plaguing humankind.
It would have pushed America in leading the move to address the debt burden of poor, undeveloped or developing countries; promoting distance learning in remote rural areas to empower the poor economically by providing them access to quality education; and helped poor countries in Asia, Africa and Latin America build highways, railways, ports, airports, hospitals, schools and telecommunication systems.
Unfortunately, such was not to be. If there was any effort at the exercise of soft power at all, it was minimal. In fact, it is not America which is practicing soft power in diplomacy but a rising power in the East - China. China has been busy in the past decade or so exercising soft power in almost all countries in Africa, Latin America, Central Asia, Southeast Asia, South Asia and the Middle East, winning most of the countries in these regions to its side. Through the use of soft power, China has created a de facto global united front under its silent, low-key leadership.
The US, on the other hand, decided to employ mainly hard power in the exercise of its global power. It adapted the policy of unilateralism and militarism in its foreign policy. It discarded the United Nations and even the advice of close allies. It unilaterally discarded signed international treaties (such as the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty). It adapted the policy of regime change and preventive war. It led the North Atlantic Treaty Organization in the 78-day bombing of Serbia purportedly for "humanitarian" reasons. It invaded Afghanistan and Iraq without UN sanctions and against the advice of key European allies like France and Germany.
The US-led war in Iraq was a tactical victory for the US initially, but has resulted in strategic defeat overall. The Iraq war caused the US to lose its principal allies in Europe and be isolated, despised and hated in many parts of the world. Without too many friends and allies, the US is likened to an "emperor with no clothes".
So in a major conflict between America and China, isolated America cannot possibly win against a global united front led by China and Russia.
This brings us to the question of alliances, another "acupuncture point" in the anatomy of the superpower, which will be addressed in the second part of this report.
>>>>>>>>>>
what seems ironic at this juncture is:
as the USA tries to hold on to its "hard power" such as opening a new "front in the war against terror" in afghanistan to camouflage its OBVIOUS hegemonic intentions (though probably not THAT obvious TO many americans who might believe "america ONLY has good intentions") --
the USA also is forced to come 'a-begging' to CHINA - to PLEASE "continue to buy US TREASURIES"....
because as Clinton H says:
"it is mutually beneficial -- the USA can not buy good from China that China wants to Sell UNLESS the US economy is strong" ---
THEREFORE to KEEP it strong "china can CONTINUE to BUY US TREASURIES"....
that is: PROP UP THE USA ......
but then -- what happens if china decides that it is BETTER OFF IN THE LONG RUN
to begin divesting itself of too much dependence on US TREASURIES (which is central and fundamental to the "cheap labor to service the american economy" in their relationship) and TURN its attention towards its long-neglected DOMESTIC CONSUMPTION MARKET whichis the REAL or should be the real "national sovereign wealth" of china or ANY nation for that matter?
that would be the most frightening thing for the USA to confront.........
it is clear -- the USA can NOT afford to annoy China...or for that matter the others that hold US "treasuries"....
beyond the purely military "triumvirates" challenges....should THOSE countries perceive that USA is INCREASINGLY more threatening to their national survival or interests.
AMERICA'S ACUPUNCTURE POINTS
PART 1: Striking the US where it hurts
By Victor N Corpus
Speaking Freely is an Asia Times Online feature that allows guest writers to have their say. Please click here if you are interested in contributing.
A noted Chinese theorist on modern warfare, Chang Mengxiong, compared China's form of fighting to "a Chinese boxer with a keen
knowledge of vital body points who can bring an opponent to his
knees with a minimum of movements". It is like key acupuncture points in ancient Chinese medicine. Puncture one vital point and the whole anatomy is affected. If America ever goes to war with China, say, over Taiwan, then America should be prepared for the following "acupuncture points" in its anatomy to be "punctured". Each of the vital points can bring America to its knees with a minimum of effort.
I Electro-magnetic Pulse (EMP) attack
China and Russia are two potential US adversaries that have the capability for this kind of attack. An EMP attack can either come from an intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM), a submarine-launched ballistic missile (SLBM), a long-range cruise missile, or an orbiting satellite armed with a nuclear or non-nuclear EMP warhead. A nuclear burst of one (or more) megaton some 400 kilometers over central United States (Omaha, Nebraska) can blanket the whole continental US with electro-magnetic pulse in less than one second.
An EMP attack will damage all electrical grids on the US mainland. It will disable computers and other similar electronic devices with microchips. Most businesses and industries will shut down. The entire US economy will practically grind to a halt. Satellites within line of sight of the EMP burst will also be damaged, adversely affecting military command, control, communications, computers, intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance (C4ISR). Land-based intercontinental ballistic missiles will be rendered unserviceable in their silos. Anti-ballistic missile defenses will suffer the same fate. In short – total blackout. And American society as we know it will be thrown back to the Dark Ages.
Of course, the US may decide to strike first, but China and Russia now have the means of striking back with submarine-launched ballistic missiles with the same or even more devastating results. But knowing China's strategy of "active defense", when war with the US becomes imminent, China will surely not allow itself to be targeted first. It will seize the initiative as mandated by its doctrine by striking first.
China has repeatedly announced that it will not be the first to use nuclear weapons. But as an old Chinese saying goes: "There can never be too much deception in war." If it means the survival of the whole Chinese nation that is at stake, China will surely not allow a public statement to tie its hands and prevent it from seizing the initiative. As another saying goes: "All is fair in love and war."
2 Cyber attack
America is the most advanced country in the world in the field of information technology (IT). Practically all of its industries, manufacturing, business and finance, telecommunications, key government services and defense establishment rely heavily on computers and computer networks.
But this heavy dependence on computers is a double-edged sword. It has thrust the US economy and defense establishment ahead of all other countries; but it has also created an Achilles' heel that can potentially bring the superpower to its knees with a few keystrokes on a dozen or so laptops.
China's new concept of a "people's war" includes IT warriors coming, not only from its military more than 2-million strong, but from the general citizenry of some 1.3 billion people. If we add the hackers and information warriors from Russia, Iran, North Korea, Venezuela, Cuba, Syria and other countries sympathetic to China, the cyber attack on the US would be formidable indeed.
So, if a major conflict erupts between China and America, more than a few dozen laptops will be engaged to hack America's military establishment; banking system; stock exchange; defense industries; telecommunication system; power grids; water system; oil and gas pipeline system; air traffic and train traffic control systems; C4ISR system, ballistic missile system, and other systems that prop up the American way of life.
America, on the whole, has not adequately prepared itself for this kind of attack. Neither has it prepared itself for a possible EMP attack. Such attacks can bring a superpower like America to its knees with a minimum of movement.
3 Interdiction of US foreign oil supply
America is now 75% dependent on foreig
3 Interdiction of US foreign oil supply
America is now 75% dependent on foreign imported oil. About 23.5% of America's imported oil supply comes from the Persian Gulf. To cut off this oil supply, Iran can simply mine the Strait of Hormuz, using bottom-rising sea mines. It is worthwhile to note that Iran has the world's fourth-largest inventory of sea mines, after China, Russia and the US.
Combined with sea mines, Iran can also block the narrow strait with supersonic cruise missiles such as Yakhonts, Moskits, Granits and Brahmos deployed on Abu Musa Island and all along the rugged and mountainous coastline of Iran fronting the Persian Gulf. This single action can bring America to its knees. Not only America but Japan (which derives 90% of its oil supply) and Europe (which derives about 60% of its oil supply from the Persian Gulf ) will be adversely affected.
In the event of a major conflict involving superpower America and its allies (primarily Japan and Britain) on the one hand and China and its allies (primarily Russia and Iran) on the other, Iran's role will become strategically crucial. Iran can totally stop the flow of oil coming from the Persian Gulf. This is the main reason why China and Russia are carefully nurturing intimate economic, cultural, political, diplomatic and military ties with Iran, which at one time was condemned by US President George W Bush as belonging to that "axis of evil", along with Iraq and North Korea.
This is also the reason why Iran is so brave in daring the US to attack it on the nuclear proliferation issue. Iran knows that it has the power to hurt the US. Without oil from the Gulf, the war machines of the US and its principal allies will literally run out of gas.
A single blow from Iran or China or Russia, or a combination of the three at the Strait of Hormuz can paralyze America. In addition, Chinese and Russian submarines can stop the flow of oil to the US and Japan by interdicting oil tanker traffic coming from the Middle East, Africa and Latin America. On the other hand, US naval supremacy will have minimal effect on China's oil supply because it is already connected to Kazakhstan with a pipeline and will soon be connected to Russia and Iran as well.
One wonders: what will be the price of oil if Iran blocks the Strait of Hormuz. It will surely drive oil prices sky high. Prolonged high oil prices can, in turn, trigger inflation in the US and a sharp decline of the dollar, possibly even a dollar free-fall. The collapse of the dollar will have a serious impact on the entire US economy.
This brings us to the next "acupuncture point" in the US anatomy: dollar vulnerability.
4 Attack on the US dollar
One of the pillars propping up US superpower status and worldwide economic dominance is the dollar being accepted as the predominant reserve currency. Central banks of various countries have to stock up dollar reserves because they can only buy their oil requirements and other major commodities in US dollars.
This US economic strength, however, is a double-edged sword and can turn out to be America's economic Achilles' heel. A run of the US dollar, for instance, which would cause a dollar free-fall, can bring the entire US economy toppling down.
What is frightening for the US is the fact that China, Russia and Iran possess the power to cause a run on the US dollar and force its collapse.
China is now the biggest holder of foreign exchange reserves in the world, accumulating $941 billion as of June 30 and expected to exceed a trillion dollars by the end of 2006 - a first in world history. A decision by China to shift a major portion of its reserve to the euro or the yen or gold could trigger other central banks to follow suit. Nobody would want to be left behind holding a bagfull of dollars rapidly turning worthless. The herd psychology would be very difficult to control in this case because national economic survival would be at stake.
This global herd psychology motivated by the survival instinct will be strongly reinforced by the latent anger of many countries in the Middle East, Eurasia, Southeast Asia, Africa and Latin America that silently abhor the pugnacious arrogance displayed by the lone Superpower in the exercise of its unilateral and militaristic foreign policies. They will just be too happy to dump the dollar and watch the lone Superpower squirm and collapse.
The danger of the dollar collapsing is reinforced by the mounting US current account deficit, which sky-rocketed to $900 billion at an annual rate in the fourth quarter of 2005. This figure is 7% of US gross domestic product (GDP), the largest in US history. The current account deficit reflects the imbalance of US imports to its exports. The large imbalance shows that the US economy is losing its competitiveness, with US jobs and incomes suffering as a result.
These record deficits in external trade and current accounts mean that the US has to borrow from foreign lenders (mostly Japan and China) $900 billion annually or nearly $2.5 billion every single day to finance the gap between payments and receipts from the rest of the world. In financial year 2005, $352 billion was spent on interest payment of national debt alone - a national debt that has ballooned to $8.5 trillion as of August 24.
The International Monetary Fund has warned: "The US is on course to increase its net external liabilities to around 40% of its GDP within the next few years - an unprecedented level of external debt for a large industrial country."
The picture of the US federal budget deficit is equally grim. Dennis Cauchon, writing for USA Today said:
The federal government keeps two sets of books. The set the government promotes to the public has a healthier bottom line: a $318 billion deficit in 2005. The set the government doesn't talk about is the audited financial statement produced by the government's accountants following standard accounting rules. It reports a more ominous financial picture: a $760 billion deficit for 2005. If social security and medicare were included - as the board that sets accounting rules is considering - the federal deficit would have been $3.5 trillion. Congress has written its own accounting rules - which would be illegal for a corporation to use because they ignore important costs such as the growing expense of retirement benefits for civil servants and military personnel. Last year, the audited statement produced by the accountants said the government ran a deficit equal to $6,700 for every American household. The number given to the public put the deficit at $2,800 per household ... The audited financial statement - prepared by the Treasury Department - reveals a federal government in far worse financial shape than official budget reports indicate, a USA Today analysis found. The government has run a deficit of $2.9 trillion since 1997, according to the audited number. The official deficit since then is just $729 billion. The difference is equal to an entire year's worth of federal spending.
The huge US current account and trade deficits, the mounting external debt and the ever-increasing federal budget deficits are clear signs of an economy on the edge. They have dragged the dollar to the brink of the precipice. Such a state of economic affairs cannot be sustained for long, and the stability of the dollar is put in grave danger. One push and the dollar will plunge into free-fall. And that push can come from China, Russia or Iran, whom superpower America has been pushing and bullying all along.
We have seen what China can do. How can Russia or Iran, in turn, cause a dollar downfall? On September 2, 2003, Russia and Saudi Arabia signed an agreement on oil and gas cooperation. Russia and Saudi Arabia have agreed "to exercise joint control over the dynamics of prices for raw materials on foreign markets". The two biggest oil and gas producers, in cooperation, say, with Iran, could control oil production and sales to keep the price of oil relatively high. Sustained high oil prices, in turn, could trigger a high inflation rate in the US and put extreme pressure on the already weak dollar to trigger a more rapid decline.
Russia is now the world's biggest energy supplier, surpassing Saudi Arabia in energy exports measured in barrel oil equivalent or boe (13.3 million boe per day for Russia vs 10 million boe per day for Saudi Arabia). Russia has the biggest gas reserves in the world. Iran, on the other hand, runs second in the world to Russia in gas reserves, and also ranks among the top oil producers. If and when either Russia or Iran, or both, shift away from a rapidly declining dollar in energy transactions, many oil producers will follow suit. These include Venezuela, Indonesia, Norway, Sudan, Nigeria and the Central Asian Republics.
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Article From
http://www.atimes.com/atimes/China/HJ19Ad01.html
in other words -
the ARticle in this discussion --
"USA BEWARE OF TREATING AFGHANISTAN LIKE IRAQ"....
is really ONLY a part of a larger concept which should correctly be:
"USA beware of treating the WORLD like Its Servant".
One more time for the intellectually impaired. It. Is. Not. A. War. It. Is. An. Occupation.
Never criticize a man until you've walked a mile in their moccasins - Native American proverb.