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Obama’s Logic Is No Match for Afghanistan
AFTER the dramatic three-month buildup, you'd think that Barack Obama's speech announcing his policy for Afghanistan would be the most significant news story of the moment. History may take a different view. When we look back at this turning point in America's longest war, we may discover that a relatively trivial White House incident, the gate-crashing by a couple of fame-seeking bozos, was the more telling omen of what was to come.
Obama's speech, for all its thoughtfulness and sporadic eloquence, was a failure at its central mission. On its own terms, as both policy and rhetoric, it didn't make the case for escalating our involvement in Afghanistan. It's doubtful that the president's words moved the needle of public opinion wildly in any direction for a country that has tuned out Afghanistan, Pakistan and Iraq alike while panicking about where the next job is coming from.
You can think the speech failed without questioning Obama's motives. I don't buy the criticism that he contrived a cynical political potpourri to pander to every side in the debate over the war. Nor was his decision to escalate mandated by his campaign stand positing Afghanistan as a just war in contrast to the folly of Iraq. Nor was he intimidated by received Beltway opinion, which, echoing Dick Cheney, accused him of dithering. ("The urgent necessity is to make a decision - whether or not it is right," wrote the Dean of D.C. punditry, David Broder.)
Obama's speech struck me as the sincere product of serious deliberations, an earnest attempt to apply his formidable intelligence to one of the most daunting Rubik's Cubes of foreign policy America has ever known. But some circles of hell can't be squared. What he's ended up with is a too-clever-by-half pushmi-pullyu holding action that lacks both a credible exit strategy and the commitment of its two most essential partners, a legitimate Afghan government and the American people. Obama's failure illuminated the limits of even his great powers of reason.
The state dinner crashers delineated those limits too. This was the second time in a month - after the infinitely more alarming bloodbath at Fort Hood - that a supposedly impregnable bastion of post-9/11 American security was easily breached. Yes, the crashers are laughable celebrity wannabes, but there was nothing funny about what they accomplished on Pennsylvania Avenue.
Their ruse wasn't "reality" television - it was reality, period, with no quotation marks. It was a symbolic indication (and, luckily, only symbolic) of how unbridled irrationality harnessed to sheer will, whether ludicrous in the crashers' case or homicidal in the instance of the Fort Hood gunman, can penetrate even our most secure fortifications. Both incidents stand as a haunting reproach to the elegant powers of logic with which Obama tried to sell his exquisitely calibrated plan to vanquish Al Qaeda and its mad brethren.
For all the overheated debate about what Obama meant in proposing July 2011 as a date to begin gradual troop withdrawals, the more significant short circuit in the speech's internal logic lies elsewhere. The crucial passage came when Obama systematically tried to dismantle the Vietnam analogies that have stalked every American foreign adventure for four decades. "Most importantly," the president said, "unlike Vietnam, the American people were viciously attacked from Afghanistan and remain a target for those same extremists who are plotting along its border." This is correct as far as it goes, but it begs a number of questions.
"Along its border," of course, means across the border - a k a Pakistan. Obama never satisfactorily argued why more troops in Afghanistan, where his own administration puts the number of Qaeda operatives at roughly 100, will help vanquish the far more substantial terrorist strongholds in Pakistan. But even if he had made that case and made it strongly, a larger issue remains: If the enemy in Afghanistan, whether Taliban or Qaeda, poses the same existential threat to America today that it did on 9/11, why is the president settling for half-measures?
It's not just that Obama is fielding somewhat fewer troops than the maximum Gen. Stanley McChrystal requested. McChrystal himself didn't ask for enough troops to fight a proper counterinsurgency in Afghanistan in the first place. Using the metrics outlined in the sacred text on the subject, Gen. David Petraeus's field manual, we'd need a minimal force of 568,000 for Afghanistan's population of 28.4 million. After the escalation, allied forces will reach barely a quarter of that number.
If the enemy in Afghanistan today threatens the American homeland as the Viet Cong never did, we should be all in, according to Obama's logic. So why aren't we? The answer is not merely that Afghans don't want us as occupiers. It's that such a mission would require a commensurate national sacrifice. One big difference between the war in Vietnam and the war in Afghanistan that the president conspicuously left unmentioned on Tuesday is the draft. Given that conscription is not about to be revived, we'd have to spend money, lots more money, to recruit the troops needed for the full effort Obama's own argument calls for.
Which again leads us back to the ghosts of Vietnam. As L.B.J. learned the hard way, we can't have both guns and the butter of big domestic projects, from health care to desperately needed jobs programs. We have to make choices. Obama paid lip service to that point, but the only sacrifice he cited in the entire speech was addressed to his audience at West Point, not the general public - the burden borne by the military and military families. While the president didn't tell American civilians to revel in tax cuts and go shopping, as his predecessor did after 9/11, that may be a distinction without a difference. Obama's promises to accomplish his ambitious plans for nation building at home while pursuing an expanded war sounded just as empty.
In this, he's like most of the war's supporters, regardless of party. On Fox News last Sunday, two senators, the Republican Jon Kyl and the Democrat Evan Bayh, found rare common ground in agreeing that an expanded Afghanistan effort should never require new taxes. It's this bipartisan mantra that more war must be fought without more sacrifice - rather than Obama's tentative withdrawal timeline - that most loudly signals to the world the shallowness of the American public's support for any Afghanistan escalation. This helps explain why, as Fred Kaplan pointed out in Slate, the American share of allied troops in Afghanistan is rising (to 70 percent from under 50 percent at the time George Bush left office) despite Obama's boast of an enthusiastic new coalition of the willing.
To his credit, Obama's speech did eschew Bush-Cheneyism at its worst. He conceded some counterarguments to his policy: that the Afghanistan government is corrupt, mired in drugs and in "no imminent threat" of being overthrown. He framed his goals in modest and realistic terms, rather than trying to whip up the audience with fear-mongering, triumphalist sloganeering and jingoistic bravado. He talked of "success," not "victory."
But the president's own method for rallying public support - a plea to "summon that unity" of 9/11 again - fell flat. There are several reasons why. First, 9/11 has been cheapened by the countless politicians who have exploited it, culminating with Rudy Giuliani. The sole achievement of America's Former Mayor's farcical presidential campaign was to render the evil of 9/11 banal. Second, 9/11 is eight years in the past. Looking at the youthful faces of the cadets in Obama's audience on Tuesday, you realized that they were literally children on that horrific day, and that the connection between 9/11/01 and the newest iteration of the war they must fight in a new decade is something of an abstraction.
Finally, the notion that we are still fighting in Afghanistan because the 9/11 attacks originated there is based on the fallacy that our terrorist enemies are so stupid they have remained frozen in place since 2001. Most Americans know that they are no more static than we are. Obama acknowledged as much in citing such other Qaeda havens as Somalia (the site of a devastating insurgent suicide bombing on Thursday) and Yemen.
Americans want our country to be secure. Most want Obama to succeed. And so we hope that we won't get bogged down in Afghanistan while our adversaries regroup elsewhere, that the casualties and costs can be contained, that the small, primitive Afghan Army (ravaged by opium, illiteracy, incompetence and a 25 percent attrition rate) will miraculously stand up so we can stand down. We want to believe that Obama's marvelous powers of reason can check a ruthless enemy and reverse decades of tragic history in one of the world's most treacherous backwaters.
That's the bet Obama made. As long as our wars remain sacrifice-free, safely buried in the back pages behind Tiger Woods and reality television stunts, he'll be able to pursue it. But I keep returning to the crashers at the gates, who have no respect for our president's orderliness of mind and action. All it takes is a few of them at the wrong time and wrong place, whether in Afghanistan or Pakistan or America or sites unknown, and all bets will be off.




27 Comments so far
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Well DUH Frank... Why is it always the NYTimes that is the last to announce the OBVIOUS.
The president is not in control. even the secret shadowy somebodie's behind the curtain, are not is in control. Why is this a surprise?
The whole situation is completely out of control, this means that the anarchists (you know the kids with green hair that get maced, protecting your right to assemble) The anarchists are winning, because we were NEVER in control.
This whole elitist hard on for authority and priveledge ( and the mocking of wannabee's) is pretty nausiating when you factor in the fact that your opinion does not matter for shit.
We have won, shits totally out of anyones control.
Frank Rich suffers from the same disease as Michael Moore, organizations like MoveOn and periodicals like The Nation: they harbor a residual sympathy for Obama The Sun King. Like a child watching an old western movie, they expect the cavalry to arrive in the nick of time to save the settlers from the injuns. No such thing will happen. Obama is a marauder who believes in his mission and never heard Satchel Page's famous admonition not to look back because something might be gaining on you.
Parsing the propaganda: nice work if you can get it, eh Frank?
Mordechai, what do you think of that for the Times' motto? All the propaganda that's fit to parse. You had a really funny one a few weeks back but I've forgotten it...
The slogan really reads...all the news we see fit to print...
Mordechai, I couldn't agree more. Well said.
It's not so much 'residual sympathy' as it is a refusal to accept the fact that BO was hired by The Owners of The Place and has no choice but to do what The Owners tell him to do.
The 'left' continues to 'believe' that if they bitch enough to the Manager of their local Walmart, the Walton family will somehow suddenly 'see the light,' realize the err of their ways, and reform themselves.
The reason for this: the 'left' knows they can't 'reform' The Owners, so they have only two choices: pretend to fight (Obama must do this, Obama must do that) or give up and learn to enjoy the Corporatist ride. The former choice at least keeps them busy and gives em a feeling of false accomplishment...
>>Obama's speech struck me as the sincere product of serious deliberations, an earnest attempt to apply his formidable intelligence to one of the most daunting Rubik's Cubes of foreign policy America has ever known
It obvious to me that Mr Rich was struck senseless.
One may still wonder whether he was senseless because struck or struck because senseless.
Rich re B.O. and the Speech:
"its thoughtfulness and sporadic eloquence"
"the sincere product of serious deliberations, an earnest attempt to apply his formidable intelligence"
"Obama's marvelous powers of reason"
Why this need to believe that Obama is so-o intelligent? Bush attended good schools, too. Bush could get our attention when speaking. Both were greatly assisted into, and in, the White House.
B.O. originally had three things going for him: He's black, he's 'not' Bush, and he can talk. Now he's become quite Bush-like in office, and I don't find his speeches compelling, so in one year even those minimal qualifications have been reduced to only one.
Housewives (homemakers) and garbage collectors, teachers and accountants know it's wrong to kill and be killed overseas (and elsewhere). We aren't far out of the cave and no doubt had contentious ancestors who left us some warlike tendencies, but I would guess the bulk of humanity does not believe that life is all about killing each other but rather is about helping each other. That makes most of us more intelligent than B.O.
Very pointed remarks.
Obama's "formidable intelligence" (Frank Rich's phrase) is a media fabricated attribute. He is not dumb by any means, but, hey, let's not overdo it.
- our terrorist enemies...in...other Qaeda havens as Somalia and Yemen. -
What I want for Xmas is for Progressives to realize that America is stuck in a global insanity.
Trying to solve Afghanistan by itself is hopeless, futile and time-wasting. It's like someone trying to solve a Rubik's cube one side at a time.
America must face its terrorism paranoia, which was enshrined into law by our feckless lizard-brained Congress.
Every country deals with future terrorism but only America declared war against it.
Why is it that Obama's "formidable intelligence" (Frank Rich's phrase) is unable to see (or recall or acknowledge) that:
1) not one of the nineteen hijackers on 9/11 came from Afghanistan;
2) that the attacks of 9/11 were planned in Germany, Spain, Pakistan, and the U.S. primarily, not in Afghanistan;
3) that the Taliban were willing to hand over Osama bin Laden provided the U.S. furnish proof of his guilt (which the U.S. has yet to do, since, on the F.B.I.'s own admission, it does not have sufficient evidence to charge ObL with the crimes committed on 9/11); and
4) that the Taliban of Afghanistan are a nationalist guerilla force whose goal it is to drive the (primarily Western) occupiers out of their land, not to attack the United States on its soil; that the Taliban are not an internationalist organization such as Al Qai'da, whose aim it is to institute an Islamic caliphate; and that this difference between the Afghan Taliban and Al Qai'da has put the two groups at odds with each other, if not worse?
As for Frank Rich, well, he not only does not see these things or refuses to see them, but misses a lot of other ones. One example of Rich's blindness or lack of political education will have to suffice. He does not have a clue why "Obama is fielding somewhat fewer troops than the maximum Gen. Stanley McChrystal requested." Nor why "McChrystal himself didn't ask for enough troops to fight a proper counterinsurgency in Afghanistan in the first place."
Frank Rich, get off your lazy fundament and start informing yourself and using your mind! Or should I say: start seeing an analyst to find why you love to wallow in denial?
to abendland: good article! no need to get personal with mr. rich, though. obama is just afraid of the military, i think. he has not held any national office long enough to get a sense of the power that came with his ascent. he is used to looking at people as allies, not adversaries, and doesn't know when to put the hammer down. his administration has no enforcer; clinton would have carville take on the right, and rove would come up with some god-awful speech every now and then to rally bush's base and put the democrats on the defensive. obama may just be too nice for the job. i mean, mcchrystal has been down right treasonous by leaking troop level suggestions and holding foreign press conferences urging escalation. jfk would have fired him already, and truman might have had him court martialed. mcchrystal is the same guy who flew to meet obama, wearing only combat fatigues! he's openly insolent, but obama puts up with it because he has no sense of what being president is all about. obama doesn't have the backbone to be a successful president in times like this, where drift should be unthinkable and decisive action essential.
In style, BO seems much more moderate and reasonable than Bush, less of a militarist.
But in action he is more militaristic.
1.There are now more US troops in combat than ever were under Bush
2.The military budget is larger than it was under Bush and in fact it's higher than projectd under Bush.
There are no counterveiling trends whereby BO is less militaristic, except BO's soaring and dishonest rhetoric.
another new york slimes reporter/ editor/oped guy
gushing over obama. do you ever get the feeling
that all of these people that work for supposedly
intellectual companies are in fact dim witted twits
in a real life version of the peter sellers film
being there? they prove it to us daily but we re
too busy to realize that we could do a better
more HONEST job then the fools that currently
occupy these jobs. must be the kool aid in the
water coolers! the slimes is now the most dishonest
paper today cooper blair and who knows what shoe
will drop next?
Afghan Army (ravaged by opium, illiteracy, incompetence and a 25 percent attrition rate) will miraculously stand up so we can stand down.
But a so called illiterate man in the person of Mullah Omar has been giving the US the run for their money for the last nine years.
Frank Rich didn't bring up the two points that would end the Afghanistan fiasco overnight: 1. Require that no company can make a profit from any work done in connection with the Afghanistan occupation; 2. Any Congress-creature who voted for this war or their immediate family members under the age of 45 and over 18, as well as the think-tank loafers who believe it's so important, would be forced by law to join up and serve in combat in the great patriotic Af-Pak War.
Another thought from a friend of mine: Is it possible Obama and/or his family were threatened by the M-I-C in order to make him go along with this escalation? With the billions of dollars involved in keeping this thing going, I certainly wouldn't put it past them. Perhaps Obama is nothing more than a prisoner of Pennsylvania Avenue.
It is uncanny how all of these Afghan commentaries always omit the one reason that the US is in Afghanistan, and we posters point it out: The Afghan/Pak Natural Gas Pipeline, which enriches Unocal 76 and Halliburton.
This deal was inked during the Taliban leaders' visit to Houston in early December, 1997, and reported in the BBC News on December 3, 1997. M M's Fahrenheit 9/11 features the film segment of the Taliban leaders visit with then-Governor of Texas, George W. Bush.
Fahrenheit also features a film segment on the Afghan Taliban minister, Sayed R. Hashimi's visit to DC on 3/19/01.
When we cut to the chase, we stay in Afghanistan for the gas pipeline.
So well-stated.
I summarize the situation as follows:
the USA tries to "fight" the taliban , or what are in fact pashtun nationalists as well as other tribes , in order to keep al qaeda out - supposedly - in order to re-order the region to do the USA's bidding.
in order to do what ALL empires tried to do in the region - control its important geostrategic location , control access to energy, borders, and in the case of the USA "surround" or encircle russia and china and have a "look-out" position over the entire landmass spanning from the Asia Far East t0 the central asian landmass - and north towards russia and of course "guard" europe.
but in order to do all that -- the USA ,has to conquer the taliban , the pashtun, the warlords, the tribes..and MAKE them ACCEPT the AMERICAN IDEOLOGY ...
and of THIS the pashtuns, taliban and warlords AND the ordinary people ARE VERY CERTAIN is what the USA is trying to do.
because of this -- a FOREIGN POWER trying to control them - is NOT going to be permitted to achieve it.
Abendland's observations (December 6th, 2009 1:49 pm) are apt. So are many of Rich's. But let me suggest a couple of other things.
Al Qaeda isn't an army, or a nation. It's more like a drug cartel. Rendering it ineffective will best be achieved by raiding its adherents when and where they're setting up operations, which means virtually anywhere in the world.
One of Abendland's most telling points is that the Taliban is "a nationalist guerrilla force whose goal it is to drive the (primarily Western) occupiers out of their land, not to attack the United States on its soil." It also aspires to regain control of all of Afghanistan, not just the limited areas it now controls.
Obama's excuse for attacking the Taliban is to prevent them from protecting and nurturing al Qaeda after they regain control of Afghanistan, and to change Afghanistan into a democracy friendly to the U.S. But this mission is misguided for two major reasons. First, the Taliban and al Qaeda aren't really on the same page, as Abendland points out. Second, preventing the Taliban from regaining control is being justified by claimed concerns about their harsh imposition of Shariah law and other infringements of civil rights on their country, particularly the denial of rights to women. We didn't try to remedy these problems, at least not by military means, before 9/11, and we have no business trying to do it now by military means.
Obama proceeds on the assumption that the U.S. has nothing to say to al Qaeda and equally to the Taliban. Actually, we ought to be talking with the Taliban about how they and we can work together to prevent al Qaeda from mounting terrorist attacks against the U.S. The "surge," along with the military operations already underway, make such discussions virtually impossible.
The U.S. has the wealth to enlist the Taliban in the fight against al Qaeda. Forget Karsai; start funding the Taliban in projects they find in their self interest as long as they work with us in suppressing al Qaeda. We could use the $30 billion just put on the table to provide a reward of, say, $30 million to anyone, including the Taliban, for each of the 100 al Qaeda in Afghanistan they turn over to us. We could use the money we would save by withdrawing our troops from Afghanistan to reward people anywhere else in the world in the same manner.
The incipient cooperation between the U.S. and Mexico in breaking up the drug cartels could be a model applicable world-wide in the "war" against al Qaeda.
Surely, after eight years, it has become obvious that military action such as the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, with the intolerable collateral loss of civilian lives and infrastructure (not to mention the lives and treasure of our own people), has served only to embolden al Qaeda.
There is no need to listen to Bush III (Obama) anymore unless you want to be depressed. Just wait for his 2012 concession speech and listen to that one.
What is the difference between Obama and Romney or Pawlenty? Almost nothing in terms of policy and the real situation in the country. But at least with Romney or Pawlenty, many will have their guard up against being totally played by right wing contracts and policies. Whereas with Obama, you have all of these pathetic fooled people who think, for example, that the health deform will be a net plus.
For every internet article on why the Afghanistan policy or the health deform will fail, there are what, half a million? people who think these proposals are "necessary" and "not so bad". You know, its really disturbing to live in a country loaded with people so easily fooled by the likes of Obama.
I missed the logic part. Was that before or after the speech?
P.S.
Mr. Rich,
If there's some reason to believe that 0bama acts out of good motives, could you provide some reason for this besides your good faith
and desire for continued tenure at the NY Times?
Please pass on the solution for the cube: put the damned thing down and start working on something that needs doing.
FRANK RICH correctly said:
"What he's ended up with is a too-clever-by-half pushmi-pullyu holding action that lacks both a credible exit strategy and the commitment of its two most essential partners, a legitimate Afghan government and the American people."
HOWEVER..Frank Rich and any that think that way also missed the MOST IMPORTANT, and likely the ONLY important matter:
Obama's failure - which it is already - in trying to control the area to suit american ideas - being eventually the SAME as that of other empires before his own -
is a FAILURE NOT because of what America and the "afghani government" - the "two most essential partners" do or want - or imagine they can desire.
it is a failure BECAUSE THE PASHTUNS do NOT LIKE TO BE CONTROLLED by foreigners.
PERIOD!
it's NOT UP TO OBAMA, AMERICA or what America WANTS...short of NUCLEAR BOMBING the ENTIRE REGION to smithereens and causing a GLOBAL NUCLEAR HOLOCAUST that really spreads
"clouds of mass destruction" all across the planet...and once and for all naming america as
THE SATAN incarnate - when it wants to have its will done.
short of THAT - bombing , nuking the whole area in order to declare "victory" - and creating a literally UNPOPULATED, UNLIVEABLE area for tens of thousands of years to come -
america is not going to "win" - for the simplest reason -- the PASHTUNS and other tribes AREN'T Going to PERMIT IT!
period!
@teddy:
Please sir, I beg you to stop capitalizing certain words for emphasis in your posts. It's extremely annoying and draws attention away from what would otherwise be a valid and well-thought-out missive. I can't speak for all CD readers, but I'm more than capable of understanding your message without words like "THAT" and "AREN'T" needing to be capitalized. It's not as annoying as a 10 paragraph, 250 word post without a single capital letter though!
Mr. Rich,
President Obama is a weapon of mass distraction. He doesn't matter. Geithner, Summers, Paulson, Blankfein, Fuld, Buffett, Gates et al MATTER. When are you going to stop the bullshit and attack the enemies of this country?
Right. you want to live a little longer. We get it even if you never will.Cowards like you are helping to destroy this country. Thanks a lot, PAL.
OBAMA's or any pentagon official or any american wanna be empire builder's logic won't work with the taliban or pashtun or afghanis because of ONE statement by an ORDINARY AFGHANI that sums up what the REST of them hold ,whatever the differences between themselves:
"THE AMERICANS THINK we are stupid people...but we know that they are here NOT BECAUSE they want to help us...they are here because they only want to USE us and our land".