Obama's
War
by
Patrick
J. Buchanan
by
Patrick J. Buchanan
DIGG THIS
Just two months
after the twin towers fell, the armies of the Northern Alliance
marched into Kabul. The Taliban fled.
The triumph
was total in the "splendid little war" that had cost one U.S. casualty.
Or so it seemed. Yet, last month, the war against the Taliban entered
its eighth year, the second longest war in our history, and America
and NATO have never been nearer to strategic defeat.
So critical
is the situation that Defense Secretary Robert Gates, in Kandahar
last week, promised rapid deployment, before any Taliban spring
offensive, of two and perhaps three combat brigades of the 20,000
troops requested by Gen. David McKiernan. The first 4,000, from
the 10th Mountain, are expected in January.
With 34,000
U.S. soldiers already in the country, half under NATO command, the
20,000 will increase U.S. forces there to 54,000, a 60 percent ratcheting
up. Shades of LBJ, 1964–65. Afghanistan is going to be Obama's War.
And upon its outcome will hang the fate of his presidency. Has he
thought this through?
How do
we win this war, if by winning we mean establishing a pro-Western
democratic government in control of the country that has the support
of the people and loyalty of an Afghan army strong enough to defend
the nation from a resurgent Taliban?
We are
further from that goal going into 2009 than we were five years ago.
What are
the long-term prospects for any such success?
Each year,
the supply of opium out of Afghanistan, from which most of the world's
heroin comes, sets a new record. Payoffs by narcotics traffickers
are corrupting the government. The fanatically devout Taliban had
eradicated the drug trade, but is now abetting the drug lords in
return for money for weapons to kill the Americans.
Militarily,
the Taliban forces are stronger than they have been since 2001,
moving out of the south and east and infesting half the country.
They have sanctuaries in Pakistan and virtually ring Kabul.
U.S. air
strikes have killed so many Afghan civilians that President Karzai,
who controls little more than Kabul, has begun to condemn the U.S.
attacks. Predator attacks on Taliban and al-Qaida in Pakistan have
inflamed the population there.
And can
pinprick air strikes win a war of this magnitude?
The supply
line for our troops in Afghanistan, which runs from Karachi up to
Peshawar through the Khyber Pass to Kabul, is now a perilous passage.
Four times this month, U.S. transport depots in Pakistan have been
attacked, with hundreds of vehicles destroyed.
Before
arriving in Kandahar, Gates spoke grimly of a "sustained commitment
for some protracted period of time. How many years that is, and
how many troops that is ... nobody knows."
Gen. McKiernan
says it will be at least three or four years before the Afghan army
and police can handle the Taliban.
But why
does it take a dozen years to get an Afghan army up to where it
can defend the people and regime against a Taliban return? Why do
our Afghans seem less disposed to fight and die for democracy than
the Taliban are to fight and die for theocracy? Does their God,
Allah, command a deeper love and loyalty than our god, democracy?
McKiernan
says the situation may get worse before it gets better. Gates compares
Afghanistan to the Cold War. "[W]e are in many respects in an ideological
conflict with violent extremists. ... The last ideological conflict
we were in lasted about 45 years."
That would
truly be, in Donald Rumsfeld's phrase, "a long, hard slog."
America,
without debate, is about to invest blood and treasure, indefinitely,
in a war to which no end seems remotely in sight, if the commanding
general is talking about four years at least and the now-and-future
war minister is talking about four decades.
What
is there to win in Afghanistan to justify doubling down our investment?
If our vital interest is to deny a sanctuary there to al-Qaida,
do we have to build a new Afghanistan to accomplish that? Did not
al-Qaida depart years ago for a new sanctuary in Pakistan?
What hope
is there of creating in this tribal land a democracy committed to
freedom, equality and human rights that Afghans have never known?
What is the expectation that 54,000 or 75,000 U.S. troops can crush
an insurgency that enjoys a privileged sanctuary to which it can
return, to rest, recuperate and recruit for next year's offensive?
Of
all the lands of the earth, Afghanistan has been among the least
hospitable to foreigners who come to rule, or to teach them how
they should rule themselves.
Would Dwight
D. Eisenhower – who settled for the status quo ante in Korea, an
armistice at the line of scrimmage – commit his country to such
an open-ended war? Would Richard Nixon? Would Ronald Reagan?
Hard to
believe. George W. Bush would. But did not America vote against
Bush? Why is America getting seamless continuity when it voted for
significant change?
December
20, 2008
Patrick
J. Buchanan [send
him mail] is co-founder and editor of The
American Conservative. He is also the author of seven books,
including Where
the Right Went Wrong, and A
Republic Not An Empire. His latest book is Churchill,
Hitler, and the Unnecessary War.
Copyright
© 2008 Creators Syndicate
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