US Fails To Win Hearts And Minds In Afghanistan

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First Posted: 05-28-09 06:04 PM   |   Updated: 05-28-09 06:12 PM

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Jean MacKenzie I GlobalPost

KABUL, Afghanistan -- "You've all heard of strategic communications," said the high-ranking U.S. official, holding an off-the-record briefing for journalists in Kabul last month. "It used to be called 'psyops,' and before that, 'propaganda.' Well, the United States is about to unroll a major stratcom initiative. We cannot let men on motorcycles and flatbed trucks win the information war."

Welcome to the Battle for Afghan Hearts and Minds, where -- using the language of strategic communications, or "stratcom" -- combat becomes "kinetics," an accidental shooting becomes an "escalation of force" and assassination squads are known as "counterinsurgency operations."

In this world, the message is king, and reality is fungible. Clearly discernible in every briefing, interview or conversation with a military official, is the stated policy of the U.S. administration.

The message, the official at the Kabul briefing said, was "complex yet simple: The United States is here to help you. We are not occupiers. And the Taliban are not great leaders of the faithful."

Unfortunately, that message fell flat in early May in Farah province, when U.S. forces dropped a pair of 2,000-pound bombs on two residential compounds, killing at least 97 people, most of them women and children. It is the largest civilian loss of life since the war began in 2001. The high death toll was due to the size of the bombs, and the fact that residents of the area had placed their families in the homes of tribal elders to shelter them from a firefight between the Taliban and government forces.

When the Afghan police and army were in over their heads, they called for help from the U.S. forces, which provided tactical air support and, later, a B-1 bomber. Convinced that insurgents were hiding in the compounds, the air crew dropped their payload.

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The exact casualty figure is still in doubt, since many of the bodies were so mutilated by the blast that they could not be identified; partial remains were buried in a large common grave. But the Afghan Independent Human Rights Commission (AIHRC), after conducting extensive investigation, said that 65 children, 21 women and 11 men died in the air strikes.

The incident prompted Admiral Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, to warn that the new U.S. strategy was in real danger unless measures were taken.

"We cannot succeed in Afghanistan ... by killing Afghans," he told scholars at the Brookings Institution, in remarks widely quoted in the media. "We can't keep going through incidents like this and expect the strategy to work."

That advice has yet to filter down to the operational level in Afghanistan, where clumsy efforts at "messaging" have sought to obscure the scale of the tragedy.

Judging by the response to the Farah bombing, "stratcom" is having a bit of trouble getting off the ground.

The U.S. military tried desperately to spin the story, initially denying that any significant civilian casualties had resulted from the air strikes. Carefully placed leaks in the media suggested that the Taliban themselves had killed dozens of innocent people with grenades to make it appear that they had been killed by U.S. bombs.That "message" failed to gain traction, and was quietly abandoned.

When doctors and public health officials began to speculate on the reasons for the horrendous burns suffered by the Farah victims, the U.S. military circulated reports that the Taliban had been known to use white phosphorous. That, too, was not substantiated.

The U.S. conducted an investigation, eventually conceding that 20 or 30 civilians may have died. The Afghan government rushed to announce that 140 civilians had perished, with President Hamed Karzai eager to use this latest outrage to bolster his own anti-American credentials.

The Taliban, meanwhile, had a relatively easy time of it, scoring a public relations coup as everyone from Secretary of State Hillary Clinton to the new U.S. ambassador to Kabul, retired Lieutenant General Karl Eikenberry, apologized for the killings and pledged to do better.

While the insurgents came in for their share of opprobrium for putting civilians at risk, the U.S. military absorbed most of the anger.

Human rights groups criticized the "disproportionate" level of force used. An Afghanistan Independent Human Rights Commission report issued on May 26 quoted chairwoman Dr. Sima Samar, condemning "the use of excessive airpower by the pro-government forces, that consequently causes a high number of civilian casualties."

But Col. Greg Julian, spokesman for the U.S. forces in Afghanistan, is still trying to shift the blame.

"We still do everything we can to avoid civilian casualties, while Taliban extremists deliberately planned this event to create a civilian casualty crisis," he said. He also tried to shift blame for the white phosphorous claim to the Taliban: "White phosphorous was not used by either side -- but the Taliban tried to throw that out there to stir up more public outcry."

The Taliban, for their part, continue to beat the anti-American drum.

"The Taliban never use civilians as shields," said Qari Yusuf Ahmadi, spokesman for the Taliban, speaking by telephone. "We are here to defend the people, to defend their rights and their honor, to defend Islam. It is the foreigners who kill people."

The Taliban spokesman could not refrain from what might be considered gloating.

"Everything is playing into our hands," he said. "All Afghans now hate the foreigners. They are occupiers, who do not value people's lives and honor."

As propaganda goes, neither side quite has it mastered, at least according to the Afghans who are the ostensible target of the "stratcom" wars.

"What can we do?" said Abdul Manaan, a resident of Farah. "We cannot stand up to either side. They both have guns, they both use us as shields. What have we done that we should be the ones getting killed?"

Abaceen Nasimi and Fetrat Zerak contributed to this report.

Read more from GlobalPost.com.

Jean MacKenzie I GlobalPost KABUL, Afghanistan -- "You've all heard of strategic communications," said the high-ranking U.S. official, holding an off-the-record briefing for journalists in Kabul l...
Jean MacKenzie I GlobalPost KABUL, Afghanistan -- "You've all heard of strategic communications," said the high-ranking U.S. official, holding an off-the-record briefing for journalists in Kabul l...
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Does anybody else feel the urge to listen to "Holy Wars" from Megadeth?
War ensemble from Slayer also seems fitting.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:11 AM on 05/29/2009
- blaising I'm a Fan of blaising 21 fans permalink
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"We cannot let men on motorcycles and flatbed trucks win the information war."

Works for the GOP.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:10 AM on 05/29/2009
- S1m0n I'm a Fan of S1m0n 100 fans permalink
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It doesn't matter one bit if the Taliban planned this, or not. If they did, it worked. They will go on working it, again and again, until the US army becomes as welcome in Afghanistan as the soviets.

This is a strategy the US is largely powerless to resist, because your entire military apparatus and every force multiplier you have, (barring night vision goggle) is designed for the airgame that you are losing.

Every time you commit an atrocity, PR briers and the Pentagon say things like "we cannot fight with one hand tied behind our backs". If you really can't, THEN GET OUT. Because You. Cannot. Win. By bombing civilians. No matter what your rules of engagement or the laws of war say. It may be legal, but it is futile. Which makes it immoral.

And because you can't win while doing so, you are killing people, guys (and women and children) both good and bad for nothing.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:02 AM on 05/29/2009
- morgan1 I'm a Fan of morgan1 15 fans permalink

The US has never embraced other cultures. The belief has always been we are right, we are Christians and you must convert or be enslaved or killed. We went into Vietnam with no conception of their language or way of life. We have done that everywhere we put boots on the ground or covert ops. The US still subscribes to the belief (Famously quoted about Vietnam): We had to destroy the village in order to save it. Now we do countries and publicly embrace genocide and torture. We will now totally destroy Afghanistan as well as Pakistan (Obama's Wars) but we will leave behind, when we cut our losses eventually, Super Embassies as monuments to our audacity and stupidity. Wow, we are so mature now on the world stage.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:57 AM on 05/29/2009

Correct! Bible thumping US soldiers in a Muslim country is not the way.
US forces should take on some British officers as advisors, as the British are much more sensitive to different cultures in these situations. When the British recently left Basra in Iraq there were a lot of Iraqis who were worried that the rather 'shouty' and aggressive American methods would set back the goodwill which British troops had built up among locals in the preceeding months.
Sure there will be firefights, and times when some aggression is the only option, but if the US and its allies are ever going to be able to leave Afghanistan as a reasonably stable country they MUST change their day-to-day way of interacting with average Afghan men, women and kids in the streets and vilages.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:51 AM on 05/29/2009
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Well they do have the benefit of actually having the experience of managing an empire. Although they did have their screwups, the Sepoy Mutiny is an excellent example of how warm and fuzzy these imperial ambitions are in reality.


"When the British retook Cawnpore, the soldiers took their sepoy prisoners to The Bibigarh and forced them to lick the bloodstains from the walls and floor. They then hanged or "blew from the cannon" (the traditional Mughal punishment for mutiny) the majority of the sepoy prisoners."

Yeah, the brits are gentlemen.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:31 AM on 05/29/2009
- fbr79 I'm a Fan of fbr79 12 fans permalink
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I guess you think that other cultures/countries don't think they are always right and that we must convert to their religion. Which country you have in mind that "embraces other cultures"? France opening a military base in the UAE? Iran logistically supporting Lebanese militias? Russia going for a walk in Georgia and providing destroyers to Venezuela? Saudi Arabia not allowing non-muslim holly books enter their country? England and it's ghettos filled with impovirished people who imigrated form their former colonies?

You obviuosly have never served in the military to think that the US currently has a policy of "destroy the village in order to save it". We put our lives on the line everyday against an enemy that hides behind it's own civilian population. We do our best to avoid civilian casualties and try rebuild any property destroyed.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:52 AM on 05/29/2009
- realpolitic I'm a Fan of realpolitic 159 fans permalink

Bill O'Reilly was calling anyone a traitor who blamed Americans for the recent bomb strike that killed 97 people, mostly women and children. When it was substaniated that the bombing was our fault he quietly dropped the story. What a rat! We have to stop this indiscriminate killing and use more targeted fighting.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:50 AM on 05/29/2009
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I am sorry to say, but we will never reach zero civilian casulties, that's crazy talk. The only way to avoid civilian casulties, is to not go to war.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:03 AM on 05/29/2009
- realpolitic I'm a Fan of realpolitic 159 fans permalink

Yes, but your post has little to do with dropping 500 lb. pounds from thousands of feet in the air. Ask General Petraeus if killing innocent civilians is the most effective counter-insurgency strategy. He will tell you it should be avoided even if it means letting the enemy go at times.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:23 AM on 05/29/2009
- mergina I'm a Fan of mergina 92 fans permalink
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We should simply be there to DESTROY ALL TALIBAN AND AL QAQA. That's it. Ok, on the way out DESTROY ALL THE POPPY FIELDS and let them grow some food. What a novel idea huh?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:11 AM on 05/29/2009
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I think they would spit on your grave for burning their poppy fields. There is not a single crop, I know of, that can bring in the same cashflow. So what if its illegal; if your children are hungry, you will do it. We should be buying their opium ourselves if we wanted to gain their support. You can always make the morpine you will need for the occupation.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:07 AM on 05/29/2009

It is a relief to observe that commentators are very considerate and are well versed with the subject on which they pass their valuable comment, except for some. Thanks a tot to my fellow commentators for it.

The subject being winning the "hearts and minds" of the people was very simple for those Republican fools to achieve but willfully didn't do it like after declaring "Mission Accomplished" the Generals undermined the "Mission Accomplished" and named it "Mission Unaccomplished".

So why worry about it there is enough time up to eternity to win the heart and mind even the soul of the people of Iraq. If they do not sell, their heart and mind to us then send G W Bush+Dick Cheney+ Ramsfled to accomplish this objective. I grantee you all in one single burst they will accomplish the Mission successfully and win what to say the heart and mind even the souls for ever to the satisfaction of Israel.

Only the Republican could dream of achieving such an objective under threat of barrel of guns. I remember an old saying "No right can be achieved in a wrong way and no wrong can be done in a right way". Obama is on the right track dealing with Israel. He should alert all his intelligence agencies and establishments to keep a strict vigilance over the activities of foreign intelligence agencies working within USA with a view to counter any attempt like that on JFK. CIA to understand !!!!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:00 AM on 05/29/2009
- yappnmutt I'm a Fan of yappnmutt 76 fans permalink

a history quiz. what was the last country to defeat afghanistan in a war? be civil. don't all shout at once. raise your hand.....now raise both of your hands. now you are getting warm.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:57 AM on 05/29/2009
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My understanding is that the Mongolian Armies in 1219 under Genghis Khan were the last to effectively subjugate the region of Afghanistan. The atrocities they committed to achieve this objective would make the eastern theatre of WWII seem like Disneyland.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:24 AM on 05/29/2009
- Paulo1 I'm a Fan of Paulo1 43 fans permalink

As a History major instructor I would give you the winning award.
There were a couple of overlapping areas that fell to various transient regional regimes but overall the Mongols did the deed last.

Of and it is OK to get graphic people should know exactly what means were needed. Its called building pyramids out of peoples heads and slaughtering everything that moves so you could have pastureland for your horses. I believe it would have been Dick The War Criminal Cheney's preferred solution if someone had handed him a history book.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:23 AM on 05/29/2009
- yappnmutt I'm a Fan of yappnmutt 76 fans permalink

you win, indeed. the mongolians used the kill 'em all strategy very successfully in all their work.

the extrapolation of that answer makes the mini escalation(let's hope it stays "mini") in afghanistan kinda pointless sooo, what's the point? are they so arrogant that they think they can defy history?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:09 PM on 05/29/2009
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humm, let's see... this is a legal war backed by the UN and supported by Obama, but it is failing.

Yet, Bushes "illegal" war in Iraq is succeeding and may very well turn out to be the seed of western democracy that helps shape the Mid East to a more peaceful future.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:41 AM on 05/29/2009
- maddie0001 I'm a Fan of maddie0001 3 fans permalink

Maybe the legal war is failing because it was hard to do and so we switched to the illegal war?

Personally I never understood how a bunch of illiterate peasants (Afghan people) are responsible for what their unelected government (the Taliban) did (support BinLadin) but the educated American people are totally innocent in everything their elected government does.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:14 AM on 05/29/2009
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The "legality" of the war is irrellevant. The Indian Wars were legal as well. Slavery was legal.

It was not a war of defense; the non-existant state of Afghanistan did not attack us, and it poses no real existential threat. More Americans died in these wars to "prevent terror," than were killed in the original attacks.

We should have tried to kill Bin Ladin and dismantle his network, and that should have been the only objective. No democratization, no aid projects that will just be smoldering hulks when we depart 20 years from now, these things serve for nothing if the objective was to protect America.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:55 AM on 05/29/2009
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"More Americans died in these wars to "prevent terror", than were killed in the original attacks."

So, your support for war ends when the number of soldiers killed exceeds the number of civilians killed by the enemy? Using this “logic” you would have wanted the US to pull out of WWII a few months after Pearl Harbor.

You obvioulsy don't get Islamic facism and terrorism, do you?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:07 PM on 05/29/2009
- gakabani I'm a Fan of gakabani 20 fans permalink
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Vietnam anyone?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:36 AM on 05/29/2009
- Rayme I'm a Fan of Rayme 13 fans permalink

I'm still unclear as to how to win this war, is there a point? If winning the hearts and minds of the Afghanistan people is the goal, I think we can do that by leaving, no one loves an invading murderous army from a foreign country. Imagine if China invaded the US for our own good, how would we feel about that?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:10 AM on 05/29/2009
- maddie0001 I'm a Fan of maddie0001 3 fans permalink

We'd like the health care.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:15 AM on 05/29/2009
- dmyron I'm a Fan of dmyron 8 fans permalink

Your glib is showing!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:59 AM on 05/29/2009
- skialethia I'm a Fan of skialethia 168 fans permalink
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Obama's foreign policy sux big time. Why is he listening to Neocons? Why is he extending the Bush policies and keeping Bush loyalists around.

If he keeps this up he will be responsible for a massive humanitarian crisis in Pakistan and the destabilization of that country.

Get out of Iraq! Get out of Afghanistan! Stop k1lling civilians in Afghanistan and Pakistan! Reduce the size of the embassy in Iraq; and do not expand the embassy in Pakistan....as this will only add more fuel to an increasingly out of control fire.

Obama is squandering his foreign political capital!

This situation is UNTENABLE! Focus on the creation of a Palestinian state! If Obama succeeds only in achieving this he will with one foreign policy achievement undo the resentment and ire accumulated in the past 8 years in the Middle East!

Forget all these wars and work on the only avenue to peace available before it shuts down forever!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:24 AM on 05/29/2009
- GrainOSand I'm a Fan of GrainOSand 269 fans permalink
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Is there nothing to be done in Pakistan or Afghanistan? Are you saying the U.S. should assume a posture of "no concern" regarding the two hotspots? Would that not be dangerous given the official story of 9/11? I am all for ending any military engagement. War, in my mind, does more killing than it does good. However, evil exists, and some evil only understands the mirror of carnage and death as a response to the carnage and death it fosters, it exports, it manufactures...as horrific tool of dissent. I state this as a committed pacifist.

I agree on the question of a Palestinian State. If Mr. Obama and his administration prove instrumental in ending the hostilities, the tragic death, the suspension of life due to uncertainty and fear, and all other stagnating issues regarding the plight of the Palestinian people as a people deserving of the right to self-govern and self-determine, he would secure his place in history as an extraordinary leader. However, Mr. Obama is but a single human being, and many have preceded him in trying to grapple with the Israel/Palestine issue. The onus is on the two parties to the conflict to play a central role in resolution. The U.S. can point to water, but the U.S. cannot make stubborn horses drink. Stubborn horses need to realize a thirst for peace. An honest broker cannot broker a deal between two hardened interests. Sacrifice all around for peace all around.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:43 AM on 05/29/2009
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Something not treating a patient is a better course of action than a physician providing the worng treatment. It is apparent that our presence is making the situation worse, not better. It is unrealistic to expect the USA to have the resources or the will to police the world.

In summary, there is nothing significant that can be done. Invading Afghanistan was a knee-jerk reaction, where a punitive expedition would have been the appropriate response.

It seems at this point; we are just continuing due to inertia. Nobody in the government seems to have the nerve to suggest that we should just leave.

Only in government is refusing to admit a mistake or change course considered a positive character trait.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:34 AM on 05/29/2009
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You can never win the hearts and minds of people when you are occupying their their country, shooting them, bombing them, destroying their livelyhood. That is why our military leaders know that they can never win this war militarily.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:21 AM on 05/29/2009
- naschkatze I'm a Fan of naschkatze 90 fans permalink

Plus the US under Bush went in there once before like conquering heroes but abandoned them before the job was done. How on earth could they trust us?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:53 AM on 05/29/2009
- Khirad I'm a Fan of Khirad 298 fans permalink
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"Welcome to the Battle for Afghan Hearts and Minds"

How about stop pretending there's any such thing as an Afghan? There's an example of 'strategic communications' for you.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Afghanistan#Ethnic_groups

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:18 AM on 05/29/2009
- jbd I'm a Fan of jbd permalink

Our military lies regularly and the chicken media lets them get away with it. The media takes the press releases as gospel and fails to really point out the falsehoods to the stories. This is why we are mired in so many places with unlimited budgets. Anyone want their kid to take a KBR shower?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:17 AM on 05/29/2009
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