Flight Path to Disaster in Afghanistan
by
Tom
Engelhardt
and Tariq Ali
by Tom Engelhardt
and Tariq Ali
DIGG THIS
One of the
eerier reports on the deteriorating situation in Afghanistan appeared
recently in the New York Times. Journalist John Burns visited
the Russian ambassador in Kabul, Zamir N. Kabulov, who, back in
the 1980s, when the Russians were the Americans in Afghanistan,
and the Americans were launching
the jihad that would eventually wend its way to the 9/11
attacks… well, you get the idea…
In any case,
Kabulov was, in the years of the Soviet occupation, a KGB agent
in the same city and, in the 1990s, an adviser to a U.N. peacekeeping
envoy during the Afghan civil war that followed. "They've already
repeated all of our mistakes," he told Burns, speaking of the American/NATO
effort in the country. "Now," he added, "they're making mistakes
of their own, ones for which we do not own the copyright." His list
of Soviet-style American mistakes included: underestimating "the
resistance," an over-reliance on air power, a failure to understand
the Afghan "irritative allergy" to foreign occupation, "and thinking
that because they swept into Kabul easily, the occupation would
be untroubled." Of present occupiers who have stopped by to catch
his sorry tale, Kabulov concludes world-wearily, "They listen, but
they do not hear."
The question
is: Does this experience really have to be repeated to the bitter
end in the case of the Soviets, a calamitous defeat and retreat
from Afghanistan, followed by years of civil war in that wrecked
country, and finally the rise of the Pakistani-backed Taliban? The
answer is: perhaps. There is no question that the advisers President
Obama will be listening to are already exploring more complex strategies
in Afghanistan, including possible
negotiations with "reconcilable elements" of the Taliban. But
these all remain military-plus strategies at whose heart lies the
kind of troop surge that candidate Obama called for so vehemently
and, given the fate of the previous
2007 U.S./NATO "surge" in Afghanistan, this, too, has failure
written all over it.
If you want
a glimmer of hope when it comes to the spreading Afghan War
American missile-armed drones have been attacking across
the Pakistani border regularly in recent months consider
that Barack Obama has made ex-CIA official Bruce Reidel a
key advisor on the deteriorating
Pakistani situation. And Reidel recently reviewed
startlingly favorably Tariq Ali's must-read, hard-hitting new book
on Pakistan (and so Afghanistan and so American policy), The
Duel: Pakistan on the Flight Path of American Power for
the Washington Post. ("My employers of the past three decades,
the CIA and the Brookings Institution, get their share of blame,"
Reidel wrote. "So do both of the current presidential candidates…")
Ali believes
that there could be a grand, brokered regional solution to the Afghan
War, essentially a military-minus strategy. Let's hope Reidel and
others are willing to listen to that, too; otherwise it will certainly
be "Obama's war," and for anyone old
enough to remember haven't we been through that before?
~ Tom
Operation
Enduring Disaster: Breaking with Afghan Policy
By Tariq
Ali
Afghanistan
has been almost continuously at war for 30 years, longer than both
World Wars and the American war in Vietnam combined. Each occupation
of the country has mimicked its predecessor. A tiny interval between
wars saw the imposition of a malignant social order, the Taliban,
with the help of the Pakistani military and the late Benazir Bhutto,
the prime minister who approved the Taliban takeover in Kabul.
Over the last
two years, the U.S./NATO occupation of that country has run into
serious military problems. Given a severe global economic crisis
and the election of a new American president a man separated
in style, intellect, and temperament from his predecessor
the possibility of a serious discussion about an exit strategy from
the Afghan disaster hovers on the horizon. The predicament the U.S.
and its allies find themselves in is not an inescapable one, but
a change in policy, if it is to matter, cannot be of the cosmetic
variety.
Washington's
hawks will argue that, while bad, the military situation is, in
fact, still salvageable. This may be technically accurate, but it
would require the carpet-bombing of southern Afghanistan and parts
of Pakistan, the destruction of scores of villages and small towns,
the killing of untold numbers of Pashtuns and the dispatch to the
region of at least 200,000 more troops with all their attendant
equipment, air, and logistical support. The political consequences
of such a course are so dire that even Dick Cheney, the closest
thing to Dr. Strangelove that Washington has yet produced, has been
uncharacteristically cautious when it comes to suggesting a military
solution to the conflict.
It has, by
now, become obvious to the Pentagon that Afghan President Hamid
Karzai and his family cannot deliver what is required and yet it
is probably far too late to replace him with UN ambassador Zalmay
Khalilzad. On his part, fighting for his political (and probably
physical) existence, Karzai continues to protect his brother Ahmad
Wali Karzai, accused of being involved
in the country's staggering drug trade, but has belatedly sacked
Hamidullah Qadri, his transport minister, for corruption.
Qadri was
taking massive kickbacks from a company flying pilgrims to Mecca.
Is nothing sacred?
A
Deteriorating Situation
Of course,
axing one minister is like whistling in the wind, given the levels
of corruption reported in Karzai's government, which, in any case,
controls little of the country. The Afghan president parries Washington's
thrusts by blaming the U.S. military for killing too many civilians
from the air. The bombing
of the village of Azizabad in Herat province last August, which
led to 91 civilian deaths (of which 60 were children), was only
the most extreme of such recent acts. Karzai's men, hurriedly dispatched
to distribute sweets and supplies to the survivors, were stoned
by angry villagers.
Given the
thousands of Afghans killed in recent years, small wonder that support
for the neo-Taliban is increasing, even in non-Pashtun areas of
the country. Many Afghans hostile to the old Taliban still support
the resistance simply to make it clear that they are against the
helicopters and missile-armed unmanned aerial drones that destroy
homes, and to "Big Daddy" who wipes out villages, and to the flames
that devour children.
Last February,
Director of National Intelligence Michael McConnell presented a
bleak survey of the situation on the ground to the House Permanent
Select Committee on Intelligence:
"Afghan leaders
must deal with the endemic corruption and pervasive poppy cultivation
and drug trafficking. Ultimately, defeating the insurgency will
depend heavily on the government's ability to improve security,
deliver services, and expand development for economic opportunity.
"Although
the international forces and the Afghan National Army continue
to score tactical victories over the Taliban, the security situation
has deteriorated in some areas in the south and Taliban forces
have expanded their operations into previously peaceful areas
of the west and around Kabul. The Taliban insurgency has expanded
in scope despite operational disruption caused by the ISAF [NATO
forces] and Operation Enduring Freedom operations. The death or
capture of three top Taliban leaders last year their first
high level losses does not yet appear to have significantly
disrupted insurgent operations."
Since then
the situation has
only deteriorated further, leading to calls for sending in yet
more American and NATO troops and creating ever deeper divisions
inside NATO itself. In recent months, Sir Sherard Cowper-Coles,
the British Ambassador to Kabul, wrote a French colleague (in a
leaked memo) that
the war was lost and more troops were not a solution, a view
reiterated recently by Air Marshal Sir Jock Stirrup, the British
Defense Chief, who came
out in public against a one-for-one transfer of troops withdrawn
from Iraq to Kabul. He put it this way:
"I think
we would all take some persuading that there would have to be
a much larger British contingent there… So we also have to get
ourselves back into balance; it's crucial that we reduce the operational
tempo for our armed forces, so it cannot be, even if the situation
demanded it, just a one for one transfer from Iraq to Afghanistan,
we have to reduce that tempo."
The Spanish
government is considering an Afghan withdrawal and there is serious
dissent within the German and Norwegian foreign policy elites. The
Canadian foreign minister has already announced
that his country will not extend its Afghan commitment beyond 2011.
And even if the debates in the Pentagon have not been aired in public,
it's becoming obvious that, in Washington, too, some see the war
as unwinnable.
Enter former
Iraq commander General David Petraeus, center stage as the new CentCom
commander. Ever since the "success" of "the surge" he oversaw in
Iraq (a process designed to create temporary stability in that ravaged
land by buying off the opposition and, among other things, the selective
use of death squads), Petraeus sounds, and behaves, more and more
like Lazarus on returning from the dead and before his body
could be closely inspected.
The situation
in Iraq was so dire that even a modest reduction in casualties was
seen as a massive leap forward. With increasing outbreaks
of violence in Baghdad and elsewhere in Iraq, however, the talk
of success sounds ever
hollower. To launch a new "surge" in Afghanistan now by sending
more troops there will simply not work, not even as a public relations
triumph. Perhaps some of the 100 advisers that General Petraeus
has just appointed will point this out to him in forceful terms.
Flight
Path to Disaster
Obama would
be foolish to imagine that Petraeus can work a miracle cure in Afghanistan.
The cancer has spread too far and is affecting U.S. troops as well.
If the American media chose to interview active-duty soldiers in
Afghanistan (on promise of anonymity), they might get a more accurate
picture of what is happening inside the U.S. Army there.
I learned
a great deal from Jules, a 20-year-old American soldier I met recently
in Canada. He became so disenchanted with the war that he decided
to go AWOL, proving at least to himself that the Afghan
situation was not an inescapable predicament. Many of his fellow
soldiers, he claims, felt similarly, hating a war that dehumanized
both them and the Afghans. "We just couldn't bring ourselves to
accept that bombing Afghans was no different from bombing the landscape"
was the way he summed up the situation.
Morale inside
the Army there is low, he told me. The aggression unleashed against
Afghan civilian often hides a deep depression. He does not, however,
encourage others to follow in his footsteps. As he sees it, each
soldier must make that choice for himself, accepting with it the
responsibility that going AWOL permanently entails. Jules was convinced,
however, that the war could not be won and did not want to see any
more of his friends die. That's why he was wearing an "Obama out
of Afghanistan" t-shirt.
Before he
revealed his identity, I mistook this young soldier a Filipino-American
born in southern California for an Afghan. His features reminded
me of the Hazara tribesmen he must have encountered in Kabul. Trained
as a mortar gunner and paratrooper from Fort Benning, Georgia, he
was later assigned to the 82nd Airborne at Fort Bragg. Here is part
of the account he offered me:
"I deployed
to Southeastern Afghanistan in January 2007. We controlled everything
from Jalalabad down to the northernmost areas of Kandahar province
in Regional Command East. My unit had the job of pacifying the
insurgency in Paktika, Paktia, and Khost provinces areas
that had received no aid, but had been devastated during the initial
invasion. Operation Anaconda [in 2002] was supposed to have wiped
out the Taliban. That was the boast of the military leaders, but
ridiculed by everyone else with a brain."
He spoke also
of how impossible he found it to treat the Afghans as subhumans:
"I swear
I could not for a second view these people as anything but human.
The best way to fashion a young hard dick like myself dick
being an acronym for 'dedicated infantry combat killer'
is simple and the effect of racist indoctrination. Take an empty
shell off the streets of L.A. or Brooklyn, or maybe from some
Podunk town in Tennessee… and these days America isn't in short
supply… I was one of those no-child-left behind products…
"Anyway,
you take this empty vessel and you scare the living shit out of
him, break him down to nothing, cultivate a brotherhood and camaraderie
with those he suffers with, and fill his head with racist nonsense
like all Arabs, Iraqis, Afghans are Hajj. Hajj hates
you. Hajj wants to hurt your family. Hajj children
are the worst because they beg all the time. Just some of the
most hurtful and ridiculous propaganda, but you'd be amazed at
how effective it's been in fostering my generation of soldiers."
As this young
man spoke to me, I felt he should be testifying before the Senate
Foreign Relations Committee. The effect of the war on those carrying
out the orders is leaving scars just as deep as the imprints of
previous imperial wars. Change we can believe in must include the
end of this, which means, among other things, a withdrawal from
Afghanistan.
In my latest
book, The
Duel: Pakistan on the Flight Path of American Power, I have
written of the necessity of involving Afghanistan's neighbors in
a political solution that ends the war, preserves the peace, and
reconstructs the country. Iran, Russia, India, and China, as well
as Pakistan, need to be engaged in the search for a political solution
that would sustain a genuine national government for a decade after
the withdrawal of the Americans, NATO, and their quisling regime.
However, such a solution is not possible within the context of the
plans proposed by both present Secretary of Defense Robert Gates
and President-elect Barack Obama, which focus on a new surge of
American troops in Afghanistan.
The main task
at hand should be to create a social infrastructure and thus preserve
the peace, something that the West and its horde of attendant non-governmental
organizations have failed to do. School buildings constructed, often
for outrageous sums, by foreign companies that lack furniture, teachers,
and kids are part of the surreal presence of the West, which cannot
last.
Whether you
are a policymaker in the next administration or an AWOL veteran
of the Afghan War in Canada, Operation Enduring Freedom of 2001
has visibly become Operation Enduring Disaster. Less clear is whether
an Obama administration can truly break from past policy or will
just create a military-plus add-on to it. Only a total break from
the catastrophe that George W. Bush, Dick Cheney, and Donald Rumsfeld
created in Afghanistan will offer pathways to a viable future.
For
this to happen, both external and domestic pressures will probably
be needed. China is known to be completely opposed to a NATO presence
on, or near, its borders, but while Beijing has proved willing to
exert economic pressure to force policy changes in Washington
as it did when the Bank
of China "cut its exposure to agency debt last summer," leaving
U.S. Treasury Secretary Paulson with little option but to functionally
nationalize the mortgage giants it has yet to use its diplomatic
muscle in the region.
But don't
think that will last forever. Why wait until then? Another external
pressure will certainly prove to be the already evident destabilizing
effects of the Afghan war on neighboring Pakistan, a country in
a precarious economic state, with a military facing growing internal
tensions.
Domestic pressure
in the U.S. to pull out of Afghanistan remains weak, but could grow
rapidly as the extent of the debacle becomes clearer and NATO allies
refuse to supply the shock-troops for the future surge.
In the meantime,
they're predicting a famine in Afghanistan this winter.
November
17, 2008
Tom
Engelhardt [send him mail]
who
runs the Nation Institute's TomDispatch.com, is the co-founder of
the American Empire
Project. His book, The
End of Victory Culture, has recently been updated in a newly
issued edition. He edited, and his work appears in, the first best
of TomDispatch book, The
World According to TomDispatch: America in the New Age of Empire
(Verso), which is being published this month. A brief video in
which Engelhardt discusses American mega-bases in Iraq can be viewed
by clicking
here. Tariq Ali, writer, journalist, filmmaker, contributes
regularly to a range of publications including the Guardian,
the Nation, and the London Review of Books. His most
recent book, just published, is The
Duel: Pakistan on the Flight Path of American Power (Scribner,
2008). In a
two-part video, released by TomDispatch.com, he offers critical
commentary on Barack Obama's plans for Afghanistan and Pakistan,
as well as on the tangled U.S.-Pakistani relationship.
Copyright
© 2008 Tariq Ali
Tom
Engelhardt Archives
|