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Obama's Great Afghanistan Gamble
Everyone knows 17,000 more troops can't win the war in Afghanistan. So what's the exit strategy?
IF YOU CAN'T IMAGINE how President Obama intends to win the war in Afghanistan, you're not alone. The challenge is daunting: Along with a handful of war-plagued African states-Somalia, Burundi, the Democratic Republic of Congo-Afghanistan is one of the world's poorest countries. It's been racked by 30 years of war. Millions have fled into Pakistan and Iran; tens of thousands more have been killed since the US-backed jihad in the 1980s. "The reason we don't have moderate leaders in Afghanistan today is because we let the nuts kill them all," Cheryl Benard, Rand Corporation specialist and wife of former US Ambassador to Afghanistan Zalmay Khalilzad, told me in 2004, during an interview for a book on political Islam. Obama's advisers say that their plan is to surge, then negotiate-that is, beef up the US presence, stabilize the war, and then seek a deal backed by regional diplomacy. But that raises a host of questions, starting with: If negotiations are the answer, who's at the table?
President Hamid Karzai: His government is, well, mostly nonexistent. "Forty percent of the country is either partly or entirely off-limits to the government and to international aid groups," says Mark Schneider of the International Crisis Group. Karzai has been derided as merely the "mayor of Kabul," but it's worse than that: "He doesn't have much influence with parliament, so you can't even say that he controls the capital," says Marvin Weinbaum, a former State Department intelligence official who advised Obama's campaign. Terrorists strike fortified targets in Kabul, from the Indian Embassy to the Ministry of Justice, with impunity.
Karzai is struggling to regain control. By skillfully appointing governors and mayors, he's built a cadre of officials loyal to the regime. Still, in the provinces, the government's writ is weak. Law enforcement and the courts are virtually absent, leaving the field to criminals and drug traffickers. Corruption poisons everything: Afghanistan is ranked 176 out of 180 countries surveyed by the corruption watchdog group Transparency International; it produces more than nine-tenths of the world's illicit opium; and criminal gangs reach from the most remote districts into Karzai's own family-one of his brothers has been accused of involvement in the heroin trade.
The security forces: The pre-surge force of 13,100 US and 56,420 NATO troops (including 24,900 Americans) has been unable to secure Kabul and its environs, not to mention huge swaths of the south. Some NATO forces do little fighting, and some, like Canada's, are leaving. Afghan public opinion is turning against the coalition, partly because of rising civilian casualties caused by air strikes. Meanwhile the 80,000-strong Afghan National Army can't operate on its own, while the Afghan National Police, also numbering around 80,000, are dysfunctional, corrupt, and infiltrated by Taliban fighters; many are merely militiamen for local warlords.
The Taliban: In the 1990s, they rode to power by mobilizing armies of orphans and refugees brainwashed in Pakistani madrassas; toppled in 2001, they've come roaring back in rural areas where Karzai's feckless governors and crooked cops are viewed with disdain. They use threats, blandishments, and their cultlike ideology to expand their power base, village by village and clan by clan. Yet their hold is not as firm as it might seem. Polls indicate that 9 out of 10 Afghans disapprove of the Taliban. And, notes Seth Jones, an Afghanistan expert at Rand, "Most of the tribal, subtribe, and clan leaders don't particularly care for the central government, and they don't particularly care for the Taliban. They are willing to switch sides." The hardcore Taliban, he estimates, may be as small as just 2,000 to 3,000 fighters. They do, however, have allies-other militant factions, criminal gangs, and, of course, their own brethren beyond Afghanistan's borders. In Pakistan, the Taliban shura (council) is run by Mullah Mohammad Omar, the one-eyed true believer who headed Afghanistan until 2001. Farther north, Mullah Omar's allies include the Haqqanis, heirs to one of the more violent jihadist factions from the US-sponsored war in the 1980s, and Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, perhaps that war's most bloodthirsty combatant, both of whom regularly dispatch fighters into contested areas surrounding Kabul. (See Your Tax Dollars at War.)
The new players: With US advice and funding, Karzai is trying to counter the Taliban through a pair of new initiatives. The Afghan Social Outreach Program is quietly building anti-Taliban local councils. A parallel program, the Afghan Public Protection Force, has a pilot project under way in Wardak province to build quasi-official militias not unlike the US-sponsored Sunni Awakening that mobilized Iraqi tribes against Al Qaeda. J Alexander Thier of the US Institute of Peace is hopeful. But, he says, "It scares the bejesus out of people because this would result in the arming of Pashtun militias. It's extremely risky."
Which gets us back to the question: What's the endgame of the surge-and-negotiate strategy? Already there is plenty of negotiating behind the scenes. Karzai has an ongoing dialogue with the Taliban, with former Taliban allies in Saudi Arabia and Pakistan mediating, and there are reports of talks involving Hekmatyar, too. But Obama's advisers are split on whether those top-down negotiations will work: Some suspect that there can be no deal as long as the Taliban think they're winning.
An alternative approach gaining favor inside the beltway is bottom-up negotiations to mirror the Taliban's village-by-village strategy. "This is a country that historically has had very little central government," General David McKiernan, the US commander, said last November. "But it's a government with a history of local autonomy and local tribal authority systems." Jones, of Rand, says the key is winning the loyalty of rural Afghans. If it's done right-if America maintains a light footprint, if tribal leaders see improvements in security (as well as cold, hard cash), and if Afghanistan's meddling neighbors can be persuaded to help stabilize the country-then the loyalties of the Pashtun tribes may turn. If that happens, Jones says hopefully, "They can tip pretty quickly." Of course, if the surge causes more civilian deaths and further inflames anger at the United States, they could just as easily tip the other way. Therein lies the great risk of Obama's gamble.
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20 Comments so far
Show AllIF YOU CAN'T IMAGINE how President Obama intends to win the war in Afghanistan, you're not alone.
Here's the official military/civilian strategy: General McChrystal, the new AfPak George Armstrong Custer, sits down with Obysmal in a movie theatre, just the two of them. They smoke Thai Stick, then repeatedly view George C. Scott's bloody invocation to his troops in "Patton" - "The Nazis are the enemy! Wade into them! Spill their blood! Shoot them in the belly!" Obysmal is wearing his leather bomber jacket with the presidential seal on the left chest that Leon Panetta gave him yesterday. Obysmal, the boy scout, the square apple, the straight arrow, becomes overcome with adolescent fervor, the kind that sends teenagers to the Marine Corps recruiting office after repeated viewings of their latest tv commercial. Obysmal jumps out of his seat. shouting, "WE WILL DEFEAT YOU! BRING 'EM ON!"
That's the strategy.
when lies are built upon lies upon more lies, upon bodies and more lies and more bodies, what good is discussion? the only valid action is cessation...stopping...
quit killing and raping and orphaning people in their own country, apologize, and go back home...there is no other 'exit' strategy...
There is no end-game planned, or even desired, for that matter. The liberals (now a very right-wing group) merely want to keep America's war machine going forever, so that their corporate buddies can make lots of money. That's all it's about. There's absolutely no concern for the people of Afghanistan, with terrorism, with global peace, or even the security of the US (which is gravely endangered by these endless wars and abuses). All it's about is endless money for the military-industrial complex and the infinitely greedy and corrupt Democrats and Republicans. I'm quite sure that Obama and Clinton are already planning their next wars, god knows where. Venezuela, Sudan, Somalia, ??? It doesn't really matter where, it's just endless war that's desired.
Actually, mike, you're right on.
Gates spoke about this not long ago, mentioning all the countries on the list including those very places you named plus a few more.
They are all insane. I'm praying the world will do something to stop them because all the internal forces to reign it in have been totally ignored or pushed aside. The only other hope is total economic decimation, which will cause terrible despair for average Americans.
But that's the way it might have to go.
There's no exit strategy on account of nobody can explain how we ever can be done 'preventing future terrorism', which is what our corrupt and cretinous Congress set as our military goal.
The military will keep preventing future terrorism until ordered to stop. The Pentagon has called it the 'Long War'.
Mr. Obama's gamble is the same as LBJ's was - try not to lose. He can't withdraw forces as long as there's a single al-Qaeda flag to be found - he would be politically eviscerated for 'losing to the terrorists'.
There is no possible victory and defeat is unthinkable so there can be no exit strategy. The only strategies allowed are 'more of the same'; more troops, more money, more guns, more death.
Congress must clean up the mess they allowed Bush to make. Until then, or until the inevitable catastrophe, there is no exit strategy.
One exit strategy that Dreyfuss doesn't discuss (or apparently can't even imagine) is that the U.S. forces, well...exit.
While a phased withdrawl will, of course, lead to all kinds of uncertainties, it will also yield one undeniable certainty: the force that is causing the most violence -- the United States military -- will be removed from the situation.
Apparently even Dreyfuss, a generally progressive and rational writer cannot admit to the first clean fact: the United States of America cannot control the world either militarily or economically -- and should stop trying to do so.
tj 1:56 --------- Exactly! Why not negotiate now, Karzai is willing, oh thats right we are sending in dictator Khalilzad( take Khalilzad or be killed by McChrystal) to squash Karzai and his nasty peace overtures.
Also the Dreyfuss article does seem to follow the Obama propaganda premises.
No reference to the major cause of the current mess i.e. lack of reconstuction funds or an attempt to peacefully pacify the countryside after Karzai was elected.
Bush sole policy was cash to Warlords and off to attack Saddam.
One thing referenced in the article is that before the Taliban collapse the USA was attempting to negotiate with moderate Taliban. The ISI would tell the USA who the moderates were and then the ISI told the Extremetist Taliban who promptly killed the moderates.
ps:
sorry dubet. you got this first. didn't see it.
tj
that's okay, tj...I'm glad we agree...I was just going to respond to locust's writing:
There's no exit strategy on account of nobody can explain how we ever can be done 'preventing future terrorism', which is what our corrupt and cretinous Congress set as our military goal.
I agree, locust, that how to live in continual fear of one's cohabitants is an enormous problem...relying on others to provide such defense is problematic, as well...
Maybe it's like in War Games...the only way to win is not to play...or, as Jesus suggested, Love Thy Enemy and Turn The Other Cheek...
Or like Finding Nemo, the only way out is to stop clinging to existing conceptions (frames) and simply let go...
Living our lives, around the world, with weapons aimed and fingers on triggers is no life...are we unable to live any other way? Cooperatively, for example? Someone would have to go first...why not US?
The day after the Shri Lakans defeat the Tamil Tigers( within the same nation) they declare they are free from fear of Terrorism . What a difference.
Let the people decide: http://ni4d.us/
Afghanistan is a more complicated issue than what most people know. I have mixed support on this issue. On the one hand, since the Taliban have been regrouping there and since progressives and liberals are supposed to be against human rights abuse, crushing the Taliban might not be a bad job. On the other hand, a better solution would be to first get rid of the CIA and stop funding the Taliban in the process and see how the civilians take on the Taliban when they find out that those oppressive forces are weak and underfunded. Since the first decision which only requires getting rid of the parasite is easier than the second decision which involves curing the problem altogether, I think we can see what Obama's thinking. In fact, which president wouldn't? I don't support bombing Afghanistan but we cannot afford to allow the Taliban and Al Quaida to infest that country and spread like cancer. If they get affected, we'll all be eventually affected.
"since progressives and liberals are supposed to be against human rights abuse, crushing the Taliban might not be a bad job. "
"I don't support bombing Afghanistan but we cannot afford to allow the Taliban and Al Quaida to infest that country and spread like cancer. If they get affected, we'll all be eventually affected."
I see neo-conservatism is alive and well, even here on CD.
You think I'm a neocon ? Nice try pal. But I see you're for allowing the Taliban to crush innocent women and children in Afghanistan so who's the neocon now ? Besides, I made it clear that government can shut up and defund those rogues and abolish the CIA. Can't you read?
Max what is your source that the CIA is currently funding the Talibs? That would be very helpful information. Thank You
There are articles on this site which actually confirm the role of the CIA in arming and strengthening the Taliban. Look them up. MP does have a point though about our side being too inconsistent. If we really support human rights and especially of women and children, then we shouldn't be supporting the very same Taliban that is rightwing and anti-human rights. Of course, whatever Obama does in Afghanistan, as long as he crushes the Taliban and Al Quaida in the process, then I approve of it. While I would be disappointed if more civilians were killed just to purge the Taliban, at least Afghanistan can't get any worse once the Taliban is removed and people are free to rebuild a civilized society in Afghanistan.
Nice try. Are you in favor of invading, bombing, and occupying all repressive regimes? Or just this one? How long of a list do you have? When do we bomb ourselves?
Sounds like the same fanciful strategy used in Iraq. And we all know that adventure will never end.
Obama's NOT _ G a m b l i n g _ with Afghanistan ,
It's clearly a Coo Coo derivative of no - thing at all :
C _ o l a t e r i z e d
◎ _ b y s m a l
O _ v e r s e a s
C _ o n t i n g e n c y
O _ p e r a t i o n
O _ b l i g a t i o n
Namaste
Those of us who are old enough, can remember recent history, when we fought a war in Vietnam. It also was going to be a short war because we had the "most powerful armed forces in the world".
We were forced to leave their country because we lost the war and would be overwhelmed by the very people we were trying to bring "democracy" to.
Today Vietnam is a beautiful tourist destination and Foreigners are welcomed, especially if they bring their money, and everything is peaceful. Even without the presence of our troops. It seems that our counterproductive military efforts just caused unnecessary trouble toward an inevitable outcome.
Does this say anything about the "dangers" of getting out of Iraq and Afganistan? History will run it's course whether we meddle in it or not. As I said before, it seems to be a prerequisite for politicians to sleep through their history classes or to have such inflated ego's that they think they can change it.
The real problems with withdrawing our troops are:
Diplomatically: The U.S. will have to admit another one of it's screwball presidents went to war with the wrong countries on trumped up information.
Economically: The numerous corporations that are profiting from the contracts let by the govornment will have to go back to getting their own peacetime contracts. Unless our screwball politicians find another trumped up war to wage.
Educationally: Some of the money spent on the war might find its way into education and we can have an educated populace. This might prove dangerous for the screwball politicians.
Culturally: The screwball politicians might eventually be able to figure out a way to provide health care for the populace with some of the money they spent on the wars. They might even be able to stop raiding the profits made by Social Security (one of the entitlements that they say is breaking the country) in order to run the government (pay their salaries, expenses and healthcare).