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NATO's Role in the Afghanistan Escalation
NATO countries are poised to add 7,000 soldiers to the 30,000-troop US escalation in Afghanistan, providing a cover of multilateralism for the Obama administration and the NATO commander, US General Stanley McChrystal. The NATO decision is expected to be ratified January 28 at a conference called by the United Kingdom, Germany, France, the Karzai administration and the United Nations Afghan Mission (UNAM).
To assuage European public hesitation, McChrystal is describing the troop surge for the first time as a step towards negotiating a political settlement with the Taliban. The London paper points out that "the prospect that an eight-year war could end with some Taliban leaders in power represents a remarkable turnaround" in US and NATO policy.
While NATO escalates its troop commitment, the London conference is billed as a display of "soft power" that will stabilize Afghanistan. One of the conference sponsors, the discredited Afghan president Hamid Karzai, will ask the conference for a $1 billion commitment to lure Taliban fighters onto the Kabul regime's payroll, a replica of the payments to 99,000 Sunni insurgents during the Iraq surge of 2007-8.
Afghanistan and Iraq are not identical conflicts, however. Iraq's Sunnis were a 20 percent minority fighting a majority Shi'a government and army, which the United States installed in power. In Afghanistan, the Taliban are powerful among the 45 percent Pashtun population, and cannot be defeated by Karzai's dysfunctional government or the northern Hazara, Tajik or Uzbek minorities. The situation resembles an ethnic-based stalemate, which Secretary of Defense Robert Gates acknowledged this week , in saying the Taliban are woven into the "political fabric" of Afghanistan.
One reason for the dovish hints is that European and Canadian public opinion strongly oppose the escalation. In Germany 71 percent are opposed, and in the UK 56 percent . In France, 82 percent are against increased troop commitments. Canada is committed to withdrawing troops in 2011, and pressure is building for other NATO nations to follow.
Obama's escalation is causing increased US and NATO casualties, a toll that is sure to increase rapidly as more troops arrive. In January, twenty-five Americans and twelve Europeans and Canadians have died, compared to twenty-four Americans and nine Europeans and Canadians during the same month last year. The 57 percent spike shows that the Afghan "fighting season" is becoming year-around rather than concentrated in the summer months.
Twenty-five deaths may seem a small number in the so-called war on terror, but the toll accumulates. The American dead in the war so far number 972, and will pass the 1,000 mark in the coming weeks. At that rate, an additional 1,000 Americans will die before the Obama administration's planned date for beginning withdrawals, in summer 2011. The numbers of American wounded leaped to 350 per month last summer. The cumulative European and Canadian death number is 617, doubling in a single year.
The cost of the eight-year war so far is $250 billion, and roughly $1 million per US soldier. It will become another trillion-dollar war by the end of Obama's second term. Along the way, the budget costs are likely to capsize Obama's domestic agenda and intensify inflationary pressures.
In keeping with the new tone of the escalation, the UK's Gordon Brown describes the London plan as "fully aligning military and civilian resources behind an Afghan-led political strategy," an echo of McChrystal's recent strategic plan. Brown promises that Afghan troops will begin replacing NATO units as early as this year. But beneath the rhetoric, Brown is pledging 500 additional British troops, bringing the number up to 9,500.
The London-based Stop the War Coalition is calling for mass protests in London this week, at both the conference and Friday's so-called Chilcott inquiry, an official investigation of the deceptions British and American officials employed in launching the Iraq War. Former Prime Minister Tony Blair is expected to testify Friday. Protests in several other European capitals are being organized as well.
Germany is particularly conflicted because both constitution and custom forbid the deployment of troops in war zones for aggressive purposes. Yet a German commander ordered the September 4, 2009, airstrike that killed some 142 Afghan civilians. The civilian deaths were denied at first, then acknowledged, then defended, resulting in the German official's resignation and widespread German debate. This week the Angela Merkel government is expected to send 500 more German troops, raising the total to 5,000. And Germany will train another 30,000 Afghan police and soldiers, doubling its current commitment.
The Karzai government recently raised alarms by predicting that NATO will remain in Afghanistan until 2024, to train and protect the still-weak Afghan security forces.
The current "talk about talks" runs counter to the neoconservative espousal of the "long war" doctrine, but there is no reason to believe that peace is at hand. Instead, the Obama/Pentagon plan is for brutal combat, including an emphasis on drones and special operations, for eighteen to twenty-four months, in the belief that the Taliban can be pounded into accepting an American-imposed peace settlement, and to permit Karzai's Afghan army time to grow into an effective force.
The sides are far apart. The Taliban, the Karzai government, some Europeans and the peace movement all agree that the United States and NATO must set a deadline for ultimate withdrawal of its forces, to be replaced by nonaligned peacekeeping troops. Further, negotiations must include the Taliban leadership, particularly Mullah Omar, who currently are headquartered in the Pakistan state of Baluchistan, over the Afghan border. They demand a lifting of the UN's so-called blacklist, which classifies 144 Taliban leaders as criminals and bars them from travel. Until the blacklist is suspended, no direct talks will be possible. Peace advocates also demand that 750 detainees be granted due process to avoid another Guantánamo. As an incentive towards peace, the Taliban have implied in recent statements that they may separate themselves from any Al Qaeda agenda in exchange for a power-sharing role in the future Afghanistan.
The United States and many in NATO, on the other hand, refuse so far to set a deadline for withdrawal, although Obama has announced a timeline to begin withdrawing. Nor will they negotiate with the Taliban leadership, viewing Omar as an ally of Al Qaeda. The United States has demanded that Pakistan "eliminate" Omar and the Taliban leadership in Baluchistan, or permit it to launch a military assault there. Recent statements by Gates and other US officials insist that the Taliban is linked irrevocably to Al Qaeda. Any US offer to negotiate at present is aimed at lower-echelon Taliban fighters in Afghanistan's villages. Although the United States has promised to identify the 750 detainees, any semblance of the rule of law is at best a work in progress in occupied Afghanistan.
The present quagmire is likely to result in bloodshed through 2011, reaching a crisis point when Obama is scheduled to begin the withdrawal of US troops. The Europeans and Canadians will be packed and ready to go by that point, and likely will linger no later. But the Pentagon, and the domestic hawks, could be predicting catastrophe if the United States departs, leaving Obama and the Democrats to choose between a deeper stalemate and the politics of strategic disengagement as the 2012 elections approach.
Research for this article was contributed by Emily Walker, of the Peace and Justice Resource Center.
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5 Comments so far
Show AllTom Hayden's predicted time frame - that the bloodshed will escalate "reaching a crisis point at the time Obama is scheduled to begin the withdrawal of US troops" in 2011 - has an eerie familiarity. The ebb and flow of battlefield events on the other side of the globe appears orchestrated to frame the issues likely to dominate the domestic US election cycle. Sometimes the attempt to synchronize war for partisan gain succeeds, sometimes it does not.
In the fall of 2002, the big Pentagon/White House propaganda push was on to march from Afghanistan to Baghdad, with the hectic debate and doomsday Senate roll call vote upon the 2002 Iraq War authorization for use of military force resolution as its centerpiece. In the fall of 2008, the violence in occupied Iraq scaled back significantly, in order for the "success of the surge" to be trumpeted to burnish the tattered legacy of the Bush/Cheney regime and help the McCain/Palin ticket. In 2012, it looks like a spike in violence in the Af/Pak theatre of the global war on terror will put Barack Obama and the Democrats right in the Faux News crosshairs.
The GOP manipulated the 2002 election cycle masterfully, but not even Petraeus' magical surge could put McCain in the White House in 2008 when the economy tanked in the waning months of the Bush/Cheney era. Right now, 2012 looks really ominous, if the killing in Afghanistan escalates like Hayden and pretty much everybody familiar with the Afghan quagmire predicts.
If Obama renigs on his 2011 Afghan troop withdrawal pledge, he loses a big, active chunk of the Democratic base and independents while the GOP simultaneously blames the failure of the West Point surge squarely on the Commander-in-Chief's own incompetence.
If Obama keeps to his 2011 troop withdrawal schedule, then he can be accused of stabbing the troops in the back, failing to stay the course, retreating, and handing victory to the evildoers.
By deciding to tie his fate to escalating the Afghanistan war rather than ending the US military presence in the region, Barack Obama has set the stage to go the way of LBJ. And people and pundits all across the political spectrum will declare in unison that he has no one to blame but himself.
Bill from Saginaw
isn't Tom Hayden the guy that wanted guns banned but had guns in his home? He must have meant take away other people's guns, not his.
This article misses the point. In fact it attempts to persuade the reader to avoid the point and is consequently simplistic propaganda, which is called Public Diplomacy in America. As such it comes from the masturbatory heart of the present effete militarist USA.
The point in Afghanistan is nothing to do with the practicality of the war. It is everything to do with the uselessness of it.
As western people and for the good of our society we are obliged to oppose and destroy those elements and their structures within our society that pursue this war, and indeed any war. Governments that in any way tolerate the ridiculous American maxim War is Peace need to be opposed and actively overthrown, the tools of their trade beaten into ploughshares.
We must take this opportunity to break the hold of those amongst us who are now so absurdly exposed and to rationalise the structure of our societies.
If we do not, we are indubitably them and the world does not need us, no matter how much we wring our hands.
1000 US dead/year in any of these wars really is no big deal, when viewed as a fraction of the total dead. The big deal is that 1000 US dead implies 10s of 1000s of foreign dead, a large fraction of them innocent civilians.
I note the US "war on drugs" most likely causes over 5000 "combat deaths"/year (homicides) in the US itself.
THEY ARE ALL DOING IT FOR THE WORLD BANK AND IT'S CORPORATE WHORES....WANT PROOF???
HERE..........
"Oil and Natural Gas Resources Assessment. A nationwide oil and gas resources assessment was initiated by USGS in Spring 2003 with funding from the U.S. Trade and Development Agency (TDA). This 24-month activity should be completed in early 2005, and will dovetail with two projects that are being funded by the World Bank. These World Bank projects are for engineering assessments of the oil and gas reserves in existing fields and for an assessment of the fertilizer, sulfur, and power plants associated with natural gas production in the northern oil and gas basins of Afghanistan. The completion of these projects should be near the end of 2004. The USGS project calls for a Quantitative assessment of the northern basins and a Qualitative assessment of the southern basins (Katawaz and Helmand)."
Helmland is where Marja is, check your USGS site and read more.
"Petroleum Law. The writing and discussion of a modern Afghanistan Petroleum law have been ongoing for more than two years. This law, when enacted, will serve to level the playing field for all interested foreign investors in the oil and gas sector and will provide for transparency in the management of this critical energy sector of the country. Basically, it will lay out the Afghanistan Government's leasing process for foreign investors. The World Bank is funding this activity; government approval of the new law is expected by the end of calendar year 2004. USGS serves a consulting role in this activity." And as with all government projects, it takes much longer than previously outlined, so we are still there doing what we intend to do, use their resources for our corporate/aka WB benefits.
Emeralds!!! Wow.
If you have any interest in finding out more...
C. J. Wandrey
Project Chief, Oil and Gas Resource Assessment of Afghanistan
MS 939, DFC
Denver, CO 80225
Voice: (303) 236-5341
Email: cwandrey@usgs.gov
or
http://afghanistan.cr.usgs.gov/oil.php
and so much more.....