The Other War
by
William S. Lind
by William S. Lind
As rising U.S.
and NATO casualty counts attest, the war in Afghanistan is heating
up. It is doing so on Afghan time, which is to say slowly. When
you have all the time in the world, why hurry?
An April 7,
2006 study by the London-based Senlis Council, "Insurgency
in the Provinces of Helmand, Kandahar and Nangahar," paints
a somewhat alarming picture. I do not know who or what the Senlis
Council represents, or what axes it may grind. The style of the
report suggests English is not the first language of those who wrote
it. But facts are still facts, and its report tracks with what I’ve
seen elsewhere. The study states,
The Insurgency
Assessment Report collates notes, evidence and facts gathered
during a field visit of the three provinces…during the months
of February/March 2006.
The visit
was conducted by an independent field team, which met with civil,
military and religious leaders in each of the provinces but also
gained access to farming communities and other grassroots actors,
with whom interviews and group meetings were conducted.
Speaking of
all three provinces, the study says in its Executive Summary,
government
control over the Pashto Belt, even at a limited level, is rapidly
diminishing, with political volatility now reaching urban areas.
Volatility
indicators – such as the free movement of insurgent groups in
daylight and in the main cities – reveal that increasingly large
areas of the South are falling under the influence of non-state
actors.
At the core
of this failure by the U.S., NATO and the Afghan government is a
common and often fatal military phenomenon: conflicting objectives.
On the one hand, the U.S. and its allies want to defeat the Taliban
and other "terrorists." But at the same time, they also
want to stop opium production. If the Senlis Council’s analysis
is accurate, attempts to pursue the second objective are pushing
us away from attaining the first.
Looking at
Helmand province, the report says,
In eliminating
the sole survival strategy of many of the farming families, eradication
in Helmand is fueling the insurgency. Anti government forces are
winning over the dilapidated farmers by offering economic assistance
including the cancellation of debts and providing military protection
from eradication.
The Coalition
forces mandate covers counter insurgency and support to counter
narcotics activities. It is being widely reported that eradication
activities are being supervised by the US and British military…
Eradication
is blunting counter insurgency efforts by pushing the local population
toward the extremists…
The local
population has now come to identify international troops with
eradication activities rather than with reconstruction efforts.
The situation
in the other two provinces is similar. Speaking of Kandahar province,
the report states,
The majority
of the Kandahar population are farmers living in rural areas.
The farming communities of Kandahar are very actively involved
in the cultivation and production of opium. The soil, weather
patterns and limited water supply make opium one of the few viable
crops in the region, and Kandahar farmers admitted that (they)
would rather die than forgo their families’ only means of survival…
According
to many farmers, the US and Canadian alternative livelihoods plans
are farcical…
Determining
strategic objectives, and ensuring that those objectives are not
contradictory, is the job of the most senior level of command, in
this case the White House. By demanding that U.S. and allied troops
pursue two conflicting objectives simultaneously, the Bush administration
has created a no-win situation. Efforts to defeat the Taliban only
work if they can gain the support of the rural population, but poppy
eradication pushes the rural population toward the Taliban and its
allies. (One could add a third incompatible objective, promoting
women’s rights in a conservative Islamic culture.)
President George
W. Bush likes to say, "I’m the decider; I decide." The
role of being the "decider" includes making sure that
decisions are logically consistent. Mr. Bush is, from that perspective,
a failed "decider" in Afghanistan. He failed similarly
in deciding to invade Iraq as part of a global war against "terrorism,"
when the destruction of the Iraqi state proved, predictably, to
work in favor of the "terrorists." He is failing yet again
in picking quarrels with Russia and China when we need an all-states
alliance against anti-state forces.
President
Harry S. Truman said, "The buck stops here," in the Oval
Office. When it comes to deciding on strategic objectives, President
George W. Bush has torn the buck into confetti and tossed it to
the winds of chance.
May
10, 2006
William
Lind [send him mail]
is Director of the Center for Cultural Conservatism at the Free
Congress Foundation. The views expressed in this article are those
of Mr. Lind, writing in his personal capacity.
Copyright
© 2006 William S. Lind
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