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Why is our government sending an additional 30,000 US soldiers to Afghanistan? So far, not even members of the Obama administration seem able to answer this question. Last week, The Nation's Robert Dreyfuss had a chance to ask Secretary of Defense Robert Gates and Admiral Mike Mullen why they're pushing to double our troop presence in Afghanistan. Both Gates and Mullen said that while they're thinking about the war in Afghanistan in terms of a 3-5 year time frame, their immediate goals are unclear. What's more, a final decision has not been made yet to commit those additional brigades.
Like Dreyfuss says, the fact that a final decision hasn't been made is key, because it opens the door slightly for a much-needed public debate about what 30,000 more soldiers can possibly achieve. Some of the big questions that must be addressed include whether those extra troops alone will be able to secure a lasting peace for Afghanistan, Pakistan, and the United States? That seems highly unlikely, considering each military operation targeting insurgents--like the one yesterday that killed 15 militants and 16 innocent civilians (including two women and three children)--only fans the flame of Afghan fury toward the United States.
Just as important, we must ask how are we planning to pay for this escalation, considering our economic crisis at home and the fact that so much of this war has been paid with borrowed money. And is committing tens of thousands more troops really the best way to help a war-torn nation with 40 percent unemployment and some 5 million people living below the poverty line? Proponents of escalation like Karin von Hippel, an Afghanistan expert at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, suggest that 30,000 more troops will make a psychological impact. But wouldn't a more profound psychological impact come from to sending humanitarian aid, creating jobs, and getting Afghanistan away from what Secretary of State Clinton recently called a "narco state?"
Perhaps Andrew Bacevich, an international relations professor at Boston University, and author of The Limits of Power: The End of American Exceptionalism, put it best in yesterday's NY Times when he said,
"There's clearly a consensus that things are heading in the wrong direction. What's not clear to me is why sending 30,000 more troops is the essential step to changing that. My understanding of the larger objective of the allied enterprise in Afghanistan is to bring into existence something that looks like a modern cohesive Afghan state. Well, it could be that that's an unrealistic objective. It could be that sending 30,000 more troops is throwing money and lives down a rat hole."
Throwing money and lives down a rat hole is exactly what Derrick Crowe found on Daily Kos recently, when he did the math to figure out how many troops might actually be called for in Afghanistan. Crowe points out that by the military's own standards, a successful counterinsurgency could require 655,000 troops throughout Afghanistan, or, if the military simply wants to go after surge proponents like the 14 million Pashtuns, we're still talking 230,000 troops.
If that's the case, then why send 30,000 soldiers at all? Is it to get us used to the idea that this is just the beginning of a long, drawn out, unwinnable quagmire of Vietnam proportions? Vice President Biden has grimly assessed there will be "an uptick" in casualties from the initial military escalation in Afghanistan. Already we have lost over 600 US soldiers--155 of which died in 2008 alone--to say nothing of the thousands of Afghan civilian casualties. Imagine how many more will die in this "uptick." Imagine what escalation will cost on every level, and then let the debate begin to rethink a solution.
Arianna Huffington: Sartre Meets Afghanistan: Obama's "No Exit" Strategy
In his West Point speech, President Obama laid out an exit strategy for Afghanistan, setting July 2011 as the date on which troops will begin withdrawing. The president, through Robert Gibbs, later described this date as "locked in," "etched in stone," and having "no flexibility." Sounds pretty definite. But just four days later, members of Obama's cabinet were directly contradicting their boss. "We're not talking about an exit strategy," said Hillary Clinton. "What we're talking about is an assessment." "We're talking about something that will take place over a period of time," said Robert Gates. "We will have 100,000 troops there. And they are not leaving in July of 2011." This White House clearly has a credibility crisis. They need an exit strategy for their rollout of an exit strategy.
David Bromwich: America's Wars: How Serial War Became the American Way of Life
For two centuries, Americans were taught to think war itself an aberration. Younger generations of Americans, however, are now being taught to expect no end of war -- and no end of wars.
Allison Silver: Afghanistan: The Indispensable Nation?
No occupying power has been able to exercise full control in Afghanistan. When did this become Washington's essential, indispensable aim?
Katie Couric: Middle East Trip: Day One
I arrived in Cairo this afternoon. Secretary Gates will be meeting with President Mubarak about Egypt's role in the Arab-Israeli conflict and about the problem of smuggling supplies into Gaza through underground tunnels.
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Let's Hurry Military Escalation in Afghanistan Before It's Too Late
Excellent article. A question: who would we send the humanitarian aid to? There is no national government in Afghanistan. The international community has only refined its stealth mechanism for stealing humanitarian and development aid. So you’ll end up handing the funds over to war lords who are the other powers in the rural areas. I don’t think strengthening war lords will enhance the cause of peace in Afghanistan.
George Bush (said he) wanted a full-blown democracy, but he would not supply the necessary security troops and the aid. The evolving Obama Administration thinking seems to be a goal of a minimum democracy with some economic development along with more 30 thousand-some troops.
Yet, as you point out, the “why” has not been sufficiently answered. And I wonder: why is Afghanistan crucial for the security of the United States? There is the Taliban, there is one of the world’s poorest countries, and there is al Qaeda on the border. If we want to eliminate the leadership of al Qaeda, do we need to fight the Taliban? Is it realistic to believe we can develop Afghanistan to the point it will not be used as a launching pad for terrorism? Does our national security require more resources at home and maybe less in South Asia?
There are lots of questions, yet not much though, and fewer answers.
"If we want to eliminate the leadership of al Qaeda, do we need to fight the Taliban?"
There was no way to get at Al Qaeda without taking out the Taliban in 2001.
Taliban should've given up AQ leadership. They refused.
If they had, they'd still be in power now.
Not just Afghanistan, but bring all of the U.S. miltary home. We do not need to police the war. Protect our borders!
Lead by example. And if anyone attacks, make them examples.
Like those who led the inside job on 9/11 and other crimes of the Bush Crime Family.
The Afgan exit strategy in being baked together with the one for Iraq, Iran, Israel and it will require some time. Sending more troops is probably not the answer but not clear yet how everything will fit together. Ask NATO, China, India, Pakistan, etc. And leave behind the paranoia about terrorists.
Move the GIs from Iraq and put them in Afganistan. After all, Iraq bad, Afganistan good. I never quite understood that mindset. Let Iraq fail and let's throw everything into the poppy fields.
Obama needs a war, just not Bush's war.
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