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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- helonias I'm a Fan of helonias 266 fans permalink
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MAking friends, one blown off body part at a time,

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:04 PM on 05/28/2009

Um, it might help if Obama would prosecute the perpetrators of these two unnecessary wars! Yeah, maybe then we would see this turn out in our favor... but nope, it wont happen, so we all look like the criminals we are and we can all wander through history with egg on our faces. It's so strange that The Obama/Steven Harper camp are still toting their values to countries filled with people who clearly feel betrayed!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:47 PM on 05/28/2009
- Horst I'm a Fan of Horst 24 fans permalink

Afghanistan was a violent backwater in the 19th century and remains so today. Let them have their shari'a and medieval mentality and bring the troops home ASAP.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:44 PM on 05/28/2009

You know so little of Afghanistan or Islam; but whatever it takes to get the U.S. out of there, not so much for the good of this nation, well on its way to being a 21st century backwater, but for the people of Afghanistan who will still be living in tribal confederations after America has become a "third world" country, plunged into a chaos of its own making.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:04 PM on 05/28/2009
- Horst I'm a Fan of Horst 24 fans permalink

Tell us how Islam is a force for modernity.....let's start with polio vaccine which you and your co-religionists find so offensive.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:51 PM on 05/28/2009
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Have U.S. forces rape and torture some more people there, then clumsily try to cover up the war crimes. See how that works for you.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:39 PM on 05/28/2009
- marco01 I'm a Fan of marco01 228 fans permalink
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I don't think your rape comment is fair.

Torture, however.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:52 PM on 05/28/2009
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Check out the news stories about the rape photos that are being kept secret.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:15 AM on 05/29/2009
- abouttime I'm a Fan of abouttime 24 fans permalink

"Catch'a twenty two"
Insanity reigns in our America!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:37 PM on 05/28/2009
- probo I'm a Fan of probo 273 fans permalink
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Please can we just get out of these two money traps that Bush got us into? How many more lifes must be wasted on this? This country, Afghanistan broke the Soviet Union, do we need it to break us ?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:23 PM on 05/28/2009
- naschkatze I'm a Fan of naschkatze 110 fans permalink

Pakistan will be thrown into the mix too, little kid. What a world you are inheriting.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:12 PM on 05/28/2009
- alexa07 I'm a Fan of alexa07 53 fans permalink

"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'."

What baffles me mightily is that our military uses the same failed methods in Iraq & Afghanistan that have proved to be inflammatory, but useless for the IDF in Palestine & Lebanon?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:00 PM on 05/28/2009
- DSOTM I'm a Fan of DSOTM 107 fans permalink
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Afghanistan is a nation that has never seen peace, thinking the USA could change that makes it even more tragic

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:57 PM on 05/28/2009

How about not using propaganda at all, and just being honest? How about using a 500lb. bomb when that's all that is required. Quit thinking in terms of overkill, and start using bullets instead. At least a sniper would have to see who he/she is shooting at.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:53 PM on 05/28/2009
- dteg I'm a Fan of dteg 27 fans permalink
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Thanks this is a good article. This is the type of news reporting I would pay to read. This does not sound like some generic piece released by the government.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:50 PM on 05/28/2009
- melpol I'm a Fan of melpol 8 fans permalink
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Americans are waiting for the day when Afghanistan will be a peaceful nation. But at the present time the idea seems as remote as the one where the Lion sits down with the lamb. Let us hope that the billions spent in the region will make the impossible dream a reality.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:41 PM on 05/28/2009
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