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Afghan War Enters 10th Year With Uncertain Future Under Obama

DEB RIECHMANN   10/ 6/10 08:38 PM ET   AP

Afghanistan Hospital
Wounded Afghans lie in a hospital in Kandahar city, south of Kabul, Afghanistan.

KABUL, Afghanistan — It's make-or-break time in Afghanistan.

The war enters its 10th year Thursday, and this is no ordinary anniversary.

With extra American troops now in place, this is the critical juncture to determine if President Barack Obama's revised war stategy will work and reverse Taliban momentum.

Key players are hedging their bets, uncertain whether the Obama administration is prepared to stay for the long haul, move quickly to exit an increasingly unpopular conflict, or something in between.

Fearing that his Western allies may in the end abandon him, Afghan President Hamid Karzai has started to prepare his nation for a withdrawal of international forces by shoring up relations with neighboring Pakistan and reaching out to insurgents interested in reconciliation.

Pakistan, America's nominal ally, says it's fighting insurgents. But it still tolerates al-Qaida and Afghan Taliban militants hiding out on its soil – out of reach of U.S.-led NATO ground forces.

Public support for the war is slipping in the United States and Western Europe. Already, the Netherlands has pulled out its troops, the first NATO country to do so. The Canadians leave next.

Patience is running out here as well. Afghans are tired of the violence, increasingly resentful of foreign forces. Many wonder why their quality of life has not markedly improved when their nation has been awash in billions of dollars of foreign aid.

"NATO is here and they say they are fighting terrorism, and this is the 10th year and there is no result yet," Karzai said in an emotional speech last week. "Our sons cannot go to school because of bombs and suicide attacks."

All this is very different from the near universal international support the Bush administration enjoyed when it launched attacks on Oct. 7, 2001. The war was aimed at toppling the Taliban from power because they harbored Osama bin Laden and other al-Qaida leaders responsible for the stunning strikes on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon less than a month earlier.

The hardline Islamic regime, which repressed women, banned music and held public executions for disloyal actions, collapsed within two months.

But looking back at the first years of the war, the effort was underfunded from the start. When the Bush administration's attention shifted to Iraq in 2003, the Taliban began to regroup. After several years of relative calm and safety, the situation in Afghanistan began to deteriorate around 2006. The Taliban have steadily gained strength since then. And bin Laden remains alive.

Obama ramped up the war this year, sending tens of thousands more troops. Casualties are running at their highest levels since 2001, when the Taliban were overthrown without a single American combat death. The U.S. death toll in July was 66, setting a monthly record; to date, about 2,000 NATO troops have died in the conflict, including more than 1,220 American service men and women.

U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates said in June that the U.S. and its NATO partners have to show progress before the end of this year or face a decline in public support for the war.

There's plenty of frustration at the White House and in the U.S. Congress too. In August, when Sen. John Kerry, chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, visited Kabul, he bluntly stated that if the Karzai government didn't clean up corruption, it was going to be hard "to look American families in the eye and say, `Hey that's something worth dying for.'"

On the battlefield, NATO's top commander, Gen. David Petraeus, is banking on his plan to protect heavily populated areas, rout the Taliban from their strongholds and rush in better governance and development aid to win the Afghans' loyalty away from the Taliban.

In February, NATO launched an offensive in Helmand province, the largest military operation in Afghanistan since the 2001 invasion. Nearly eight months after U.S. forces mounted a high-profile assault that ended Taliban control of the rural town of Marjah, U.S. Marines there are still clearing it. There are signs that governance is improving, though troops still face daily gunbattles and an entrenched insurgency that shows no signs of easing soon.

Afghan and international forces now are ramping up security in neighboring Kandahar province where the Taliban insurgency was born. Fighting in and around the nation's largest city in the south has been intense as coalition forces push into areas long held by insurgents. Failure in Kandahar would be a major setback for the NATO force.

"We're still fighting the fight," U.S. Army Capt. Nick Stout, a company commander with the 101st Airborne Division's 1st Battalion, 502nd Infantry Regiment, said in Senjeray, capital of Zhari district northeast of Kandahar city.

"It kind of begs the question: What is it? What's the answer?" he said at a joint U.S.-Afghan outpost near Kandahar.

"America alone is not the answer to stopping" the insurgency, said the 27-year-old Stout, who wasn't old enough to order a drink in his home of Lake Orion, Mich., when the war began.

Commanders like Stout believe the war will be won only if Afghan civilians start supporting the troops. And, they say, the only way that will happen is if the forces can provide enough security to allow people to break free of the fear and intimidation of Taliban threats. In some places, residents don't even want to be seen talking to U.S. forces for fear of Taliban reprisals.

Ready to refute pundits who say the war is lost, U.S. Adm. James Stavridis, the supreme NATO commander in Europe, has compiled a list of nearly 50 examples that the coalition is making progress. He shared them in a five-page letter Oct. 1 to defense chiefs in NATO nations.

In a 90-day period ending in early September, he wrote, Special Operations Forces conducted 3,302 operations, resulting in 251 enemy leaders killed or captured; ammonium nitrate, a key ingredient in homemade bombs, is being seized in record amounts around the country; schools and the district police station have reopened in Marjah and insurgents there are suffering from low morale and shortages in food and weapons; and the Afghan security forces will expand to 260,000 by the end of the year – 5,000 higher than the target.

"Afghanistan remains a tough fight, but at least three-quarters of the country – starting with bustling Kabul, extending into most of the north and west and including parts of the east – is either in reasonably promising shape or improving," said Michael O'Hanlon, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution think tank who just returned from a trip to Afghanistan. "We should remain hopeful for now. The current strategy could well produce significant and convincing progress within a few months."

Karzai still backs coalition efforts but has also used back channels to reach out to Taliban leaders who seem amenable to finding a political resolution to the war. Karzai appointed nearly 70 people last week to a High Peace Council, which will guide efforts to reach out to insurgents.

Pakistan also wants to maintain relations with some factions of the Taliban, which it believes will be a powerful player in Afghanistan when the Americans go home.

And there's strong suspicion in the region that U.S. troops will go home sooner rather than later – largely because of Obama's decision to set July 2011 as his goal for starting a drawdown of U.S. forces.

Obama and Petraeus have repeatedly claimed that the U.S. is not planning a mass exodus in July 2011. Petraeus says all the extra U.S. troops and civilians needed to reverse the Taliban's momentum have just arrived – and only now can Obama's revised war strategy begin to work.

But as the war drags on, the U.S. has lowered its sites and goals. Fewer people these days are talking about establishing Western-style democracy in Afghanistan. Instead, the focus is on finding some way to force out al-Qaida – even if that involves a deal with Taliban members.

Stephen Biddle at the Council on Foreign Relations says the Obama administration must clarify what the end game will look like.

"Without clear limits on acceptable outcomes, the U.S. and NATO military campaign will be rudderless, as will any negotiation strategy for a settlement with the Taliban," Biddle said.

He predicts success in Afghanistan will mean "arriving at an intermediate end state – somewhere between ideal and intolerable."

Hovering like a shadow over the discussion is Afghanistan's bloody history.

The Soviet Union invaded and occupied Afghanistan in 1979 but was forced to withdraw nine years later by anti-communist mujahedeen forces, who were supplied and trained by the United States, Saudi Arabia, Pakistan and others. These U.S.-backed rebels took power in 1992 when the pro-Moscow government collapsed.

They quickly turned their guns on each other and a violent civil war ensued. The Taliban took advantage of the power vacuum and within two years had seized Kabul.

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KABUL, Afghanistan — It's make-or-break time in Afghanistan. The war enters its 10th year Thursday, and this is no ordinary anniversary.
KABUL, Afghanistan — It's make-or-break time in Afghanistan. The war enters its 10th year Thursday, and this is no ordinary anniversary.
Filed by Curtis M. Wong  | 
 
 
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07:46 PM on 10/11/2010
Should it enter an 11th year, we will have another president in 2012.

GTFOOT--the sooner the better
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AZreb
equal-opportunity Independent heathen
09:28 AM on 10/11/2010
First we invaded Afghanistan and the reason was to find and kill or capture bin Laden - didn't happen. Then we had the preemptive war in Iraq - and we see that it was not the success that has been touted. Now - back to Afghanistan with a surge like the one in Iraq.

Next stop - Pakistan, where we are conducting strikes by drones. Will that escalate into another war? Have we become a nation of endless war? A nation whose economy depends on the military industrial complex?

Our troops are tired, wounded both physically and mentally. Suicide rates in the military are escalating - more dependence on mercenaries - our economy suffering - more poverty in our own country. At 73, I wonder if these wars will end in my lifetime.
09:43 PM on 10/10/2010
Love and honor our men and women who wear the uniform and serve. Bless you all!
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06:31 PM on 10/10/2010
As the Tenth Year starts for the War in Afghanistan, does anyone care?
Guess Not. Maybe thats why the economy does not recover, everyone is so worried about the economy, no attention is paid to the war and there is No film on the daily news. Shame.

http://blogs.aljazeera.net/americas/2010/10/09/afghanistan-does-anyone-us-still-care
02:59 AM on 10/10/2010
Once a soldier, I've always had an affection for antiwar movement- they care. It's the chicken hawks that I hate most.
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06:17 PM on 10/09/2010
The soldiers being sent over there now were in elementary school when Bush let Osama escape from Tora Bora. Brilliant.
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omobob
left coast, usa
11:07 AM on 10/09/2010
After ten years where is the 80,0000 man Afghan Army and National Police force. The US Combat troops continue to lead the fight the Afghan Army seems unwilling and ill prepared to go themselves. The Afghan Army is under motivated. The Insurgency is highly motivative. As soon as the US leaves the insurgency will crush the Afghan Army. Would you fight for Karzai? The corrupt US backed despot? WHEN THE US LEFT SVN WE LEFT THEM THE THIRD LARGEsT AIR FORCE IN THE WORLD. sorry about there caps lock. The US, The Soviet Union and South VietNam. And they still lost. A motivated force will always find a way to defeat an under motivated foe. When the US leaves Afghanistan will fall back into the hands of the insurgency. The "VietNamization" of Afghanistan is following in the historical foot steps of the mid 70s.
01:53 AM on 10/09/2010
Hate the war, not the soldiers.
I've just been called a murderer, soon the spitting starts.
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Regenleif Ali
We promote peace.
06:07 AM on 10/09/2010
war is a part of high politics.... consequently the common man suffers while the big "boss" is staying in hotels nd eating dinner at 5-star hotels everyday... the soldiers are only pawns being used in search of a greater victory... but whatever can it be???
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
omobob
left coast, usa
11:10 AM on 10/09/2010
"War is an expression of politics by other means" von Clausewitz
03:54 AM on 10/10/2010
There's an old World War song that starts out:
If you want the general, I know where he is, he's at the Folies Bergere.
And ends with:
If you want the private, I know where he is, he's hanging on the old barb wire.
06:58 AM on 10/09/2010
I've never quite understood the immaturity associated with anti-war activists. I understand college age kids are looking to be a part of something bigger than themselves, and to facilitate this they jump on the bandwagon that is hardest to fall off of, however; it still makes me wonder why the spitting, yelling, and cursing at the Soldiers returning from deployment. Pick up a weapon, you might find that you like it.....I know I do. :)
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Regenleif Ali
We promote peace.
07:39 AM on 10/09/2010
a weapon is not be liked...true it gives u sense of power, the exhileration at holding such a powerfull object in ur hand...but does the weapon define its actions..it should be used as a means of defense not tht of offense....use of weapons without moral values is going to lay the world in cinders.... mark my words for it......
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omobob
left coast, usa
11:16 AM on 10/09/2010
"it still makes me wonder why the spitting, yelling, and cursing at the Soldiers returning from deployment."

That has not happened since the Viet Nam War?
There is also a volunteer service. One may serve ones country with a hammer and nails as easily as a rifle and ammunition.
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Lahonda
Bynocent Instander
01:10 AM on 10/09/2010
The future is certain if one were to stay...

President Obama has made the proper choice.

Get out!
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Regenleif Ali
We promote peace.
04:46 AM on 10/09/2010
he can't...not until the hold on him of those who "sponsred" his election, lose their influence over him...and mainly they may be the companies tht stand to gain from a war in Afghanistan (weapons dealers maybe)...
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Lahonda
Bynocent Instander
12:20 PM on 10/09/2010
Not really... in order to leave, they can't leave millions of pieces of ordinance, vehicles, etc. out of the countries in question. You can't just switch off the lights on a real war, you know.

Leaving the field of battle takes planning as well.

You just see it as something else. Raised in a movie theater, perhaps?
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Josh Rushing
Co-host of Fault Lines on
09:38 PM on 10/08/2010
For some of the troops' perspective check out:

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/josh-rushing/afghanistan-9th-anniversa_b_756550.html
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roninroshi
Oni ni Kanabo (鬼に金棒 )
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MissingAmerica
01:55 AM on 10/08/2010
How tragic that one man, Osama Bin Laden, was able to mastermind one heinous insane act that could spur a pathetic little misfit to wage a war that has, in ten years, destroyed families, lives, countries and so much more. This war to get Bin Laden turned into a war that kills hundreds of innocent Afghan people every day. This was to be a war to find Bin Laden; it has now become a war against the people of Afghanistan and is killing this country as well. It is time to pull out of the Middle East and focus our attention and our resources back on this country while we still have a country to save.
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06:23 PM on 10/09/2010
OBL is an evil genius.
He was hoping to get Bush to go off half-cocked and invade the Middle East without a plan, and Dubya, dumb as he is, was only too happy to oblige. The rest, as they say, is history.
01:34 AM on 10/08/2010
This war has been such a godsend to the MIC & especially Blackwater...going on 10 years not having to search for an angry fix. Just the good stuff -- drone attacks, poppies, overcharging & overbilling as usual. A shark feeding frenzy...
Bernique
Solar is clean, cheap and plentiful
09:39 PM on 10/07/2010
H*mas=Hezb*llah=Talib*n=Al*qada=regimes the people chose to represent them. Why are WE there?
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brooklyncitizen
Soror quaerens lucem
07:20 PM on 10/07/2010
Sigh. Just long enough to forget why this quagmire was even started.Talk about screwing up a country, the US is an expert!
09:35 PM on 10/07/2010
The invasion of Afghanistan was justified. Bush and Cheney stupidly pulled resources out. Make no mistake, this country, if that's what you call it, is a safe-haven for those who would love nothing more than to launch terrorists attacks on the US. Being nice is not an option.
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brooklyncitizen
Soror quaerens lucem
09:40 PM on 10/07/2010
Wrong.
Where is Osama been hiding? Te terror that AMericans face is the economy, not AL Kaeda
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Regenleif Ali
We promote peace.
02:16 PM on 10/08/2010
The invasion would have been justified if it had been approved by the UN SC... the US Patriot Act had enabled the US to launch the invasion alone with NATO following shortly afterwards.....it was not so much as a justified act but retribution for the 3,000 lives that were lost in the 9/11.....many of which were Muslims who were taking part in rescue operations.... an issue whose cause is now in great doubt