Back to Letters

FOREIGN AFFAIRS: The next catastrophe - Afghanistan

Recommend Article
Total Recommendations (2)

With the US economy in turmoil, the election campaign nearing the end, and the Iraq war relegated to the back pages, we ignore to our peril a potentially catastrophic US military policy now being implemented in Afghanistan.

The current consensus in higher political circles, including both major-party candidates for president, is that the war in Afghanistan must be escalated, with far more US troops and no negotiation with insurgents. Such unilateral military escalation appears all but inevitable, despite a series of devastating assessments emanating from key quarters.

A draft of the latest National Intelligence Estimate, issued by the entire American intelligence community, concludes that Afghanistan is in a "downward spiral," with little chance to stem the rise of Taliban resurgence. A recent RAND study on Afghanistan found that military force is "too blunt, an instrument" to use in this war, with only a 7 percent chance of success.

Admiral Michael Mullen, chair of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff, told Congress in the past month, "absent a broader international and interagency approach to the problems there, it is my professional opinion that no amount of troops in no amount of time can ever achieve all the objectives we seek in Afghanistan."

"We all know that we cannot win it militarily," the United Nations' special envoy to Afghanistan, Kai Eide, has said. "What we need most of all is a political surge." Britain's commander in Afghanistan, Brigadier Mark Carleton-Smith, has also said that a troop surge would only create more targets for the Taliban. He insists that the war can not be won and that only negotiation would offer "the sort of progress needed to end the insurgency."

The British ambassador to Afghanistan, Sherard Cowper-Coles, noting that "the security situation is getting worse, so is corruption, and the government has lost all trust," forecasts that the NATO-led mission will fail. The historical experience of other outside powers trying to control Afghanistan, most spectacularly the Soviet Union from 1979 to 1989, suggests that even a greatly escalated US-NATO war effort will only multiply the deaths and the suffering, and that continued US-NATO action in the country is a large part of the problem and cannot be the solution.

The US military has increasingly turned to bombing to deal with Afghan insurgents, dangerously spilling into nuclear-armed Pakistan as well. Since January2008, 2,500 people have been killed in Afghanistan, about half of them civilians, and a growing majority of Afghans now want US and NATO forces out.

Meanwhile, after six years of war, women's status has worsened, along with grinding poverty, little food, water and employment, and increasing oppression from the Karzai government's fundamentalist judiciary and resurgent Taliban presence. And the heroin trade, now funding the insurgency and the Taliban, has exploded since the occupation of Afghanistan, reversing the Taliban's prior ban on opium production.

The US war in Afghanistan was never the "good war" it was portrayed to be, but rather a long-planned war for regional control justified by the double pretense (neither accomplished) of ousting the Taliban and killing Bin Laden. But whatever its origins, the current US war and occupation in Afghanistan can lead only in one direction: to increasing devastation of that country and its people, and to yet another avoidable and costly catastrophe for the US.

DOUG NOBLE, ROCHESTER

(Noble is a member of Rochester Against War.)

Blog Responses for "FOREIGN AFFAIRS: The next catastrophe - Afghanistan"

City Newspaper is not responsible for the content of these responses. They are the opinion of their authors.

User Photo

Brian Lenzo wrote a blog response on Oct. 30, 2008 at 10:42am

I think the point is that the war is the problem. Just like the stated reasons for invading Iraq were a total sham, the stated reasons for occupying Afghanistan (Overthrowing the Taliban, "saving"...

Read Full Response

Comments for "FOREIGN AFFAIRS: The next catastrophe - Afghanistan" (4)

City Newspaper is not responsible for the content of these comments. City Newspaper reserves the right to remove comments at their discretion.

User Photo

jaihoon said on Oct. 29, 2008 at 3:09pm

The war in Afghanistan is being mishandled and the U.S strategy is totally flawed. The corrupt and inapt government of Karzai is part of the problem as it has lost trust and confidence of the people of Afghanistan. Mr. Karzai has no vision and is spineless. His only interested to abuse his authority and get himself and his brother more rich. The only strategy that can be successful is one that empowers tribal elders to take on the terrorists--- Pakistani stooges--and effectively handle the Pakistani generals, who are obviously playing double game. Pakistani general are not sincere to cooperate with the Western powers to combat terrorists.
To win the war, a new viable strategy is urgently needed.

User Photo

Brian Lenzo said on Oct. 30, 2008 at 10:01am

I think the point is that the war is the problem. Just like the stated reasons for invading Iraq were a total sham, the stated reasons for occupying Afghanistan (Overthrowing the Taliban, "saving" Afghan women, killing Osama Bin Laden) are total shams as well.

In fact, the US presence in Afghanistan is a road block for a genuine, democratic movement. Lets not forget, that the US funded the Mujaheddin against the Russians, giving the Islamist current money and resources to out organize any secular or moderate alternative. If we're going to claim that the Afghan people are to blame for 9/11, then using such spurious logic, you would have to conclude the US government's funding and training were much more responsible for the rise of Al-Queda than any Afghan farmer or student.

I think we can look at the protests in Pakistan over the firing and manipulation of the courts by Musharraf as an example of a movement that could be built if country's were not under the direct boot of occupation. But in fact, the occupation smothers any attempt at organizing a mass movement and drives people underground, toward the groups who are well armed and organized such as the Taliban.

You can't build water treatment plants with M9's and armored Humvee's, you can't build homes with laser guided missiles. Claming women's liberation as a mission is a cruel joke if Afghani mothers can't send their kids to school, travel to work safely, or even get married without the threat of being bombed from the skies. If we are truly to stand in solidarity with the people of Afghanistan, we should do them a favor and help remove US troops from their soil, immediately.

User Photo

NoBloodForOil said on Oct. 30, 2008 at 3:04pm

THE USA GOV'T AND MILITARY MACHINE ARE THE REAL TERRORISTS! DEFEND AFGHAN SELF-DETERMINATION!

User Photo

Al Brundage said on Nov. 01, 2008 at 10:07am

Let's not forget about the Unocal pipeline. In 2000 Enron (remember them?) constructed a power plant at Dabhol, India. The plant needed gas to operate. The gas needed to be piped across Afghanistan. The Taliban government refused to allow construction even after Cheney threatened them with "a carpet of gold or a carpet of bombs." The Project For A New American Century, of which Cheney, Rumsfeld and George Bush Sr. were all members, had been hollering for years about the need for a cataclysmic event on the order of Pearl Harbor as justification for military action. Shortly after the Bush regime seized power, that "event" occurred. Thanks to the US invasion and occupation of Afghanistan, the pipeline has been completed and is now delivering gas and oil. At least when the locals aren't blowing it up.

http://whatreallyhappened.com/WRHARTICLES/oil.html

Leave A Comment

(This will not be published)

(Optional)

Respond on Your Blog

If you have a City Account you can not only post comments, but you can also respond to articles in your own City Blog. It's just another way to make your voice heard.