Aaugh!
by
William S. Lind
by William S. Lind
This Sunday’s
sacred ritual of Mass, bagels and tea with the Grumpy Old Men’s
Club was rudely disrupted by the headline of the day’s Washington
Post: "U.S. Airstrikes Rise In Afghanistan as Fighting
Intensifies." Great, I thought; it’s probably cheaper than
funding a recruiting campaign for the Taliban and lots more effective
at creating new guerrillas.
Getting into
the story just made the picture worse:
As fighting
in Afghanistan has intensified over the past three months, the
U.S. military has conducted 340 airstrikes there, more than twice
the 160 carried out in the much higher-profile war in Iraq, according
to data from the Central Command…
The airstrikes
appear to have increased in recent days as the United States and
its allies have launched counteroffensives against the Taliban
in the south and southeast, strafing and bombing a stronghold
in Uruzgan province and pounding an area near Khost with 500-pound
bombs.
One might add,
"The Taliban has expressed its thanks to the U.S. Air Force
for greatly increasing its popular support in the bombed areas."
At present,
the bombing is largely tied to the latest Somme-like "Big Push,"
Operation Mountain Thrust, in which more than 10,000 U.S.-led troops
are trying another failed approach to guerrilla war, the sweep.
I have no doubt it would break the Mullah Omar Line, if it existed,
which it doesn’t. Even the Brits seem to have drunk the Kool-Aid
this time, with the June 19 Washington Times reporting that
"British commanders declared for the first time yesterday that
their troops were enjoying success in the restive south of Afghanistan
after pushing faster than expected into rebel territory." Should
be in Berlin by September, old chap.
Of course,
all this is accompanied by claims of many dead Taliban, who are
conveniently interchangeable with dead locals who weren’t Taliban.
Bombing from the air is the best way to drive up the body count,
because you don’t even have to count bodies; you just make estimates
based on the claimed effectiveness of your weapons, and feed them
to ever-gullible reporters. By the time Operation Mountain Thrust
is done thrusting into mountains, we should have killed the Taliban
several times over.
Icing this
particular cake is a strategic misconception of the nature of the
Afghan war that only American generals could swallow. According
to the same Post story,
U.S. officials
say the activity is a response to an increasingly aggressive Taliban,
whose leaders realize that long-term trends are against them as
them as the power of the Afghan central government grows.
"I think
the Taliban realize they have a window to act," Army Maj.
Gen. Benjamin Freakley, commander of the 22,000 U.S. troops in
the country, said in a recent interview. "The enemy is working
against a window that he knows is closing."
Except that
the power of the U.S.-created Afghan government is receding, not
growing, and the Taliban’s "window" only closes when Christ
comes again.
Aaugh!
The last time a nation’s civilian and military leadership was this
incapable of learning from experience was under the Ching dynasty.
Perhaps
it’s time to offer a short refresher course in Guerrilla War 101:
- Air power
works against you, not for you. It kills lots of people who weren’t
your enemy, recruiting their relatives, friends and fellow tribesmen
to become your enemies. In this kind of war, bombers are as useful
as 42 cm. siege mortars.
- Big, noisy
offensives, launched with lots of warning, achieve nothing. The
enemy just goes to ground while you pass on through, and he’s
still there when you leave. Big Pushes are the opposite of the
"ink blot" strategy, which is the only thing that works,
when anything can.
- Putting
the Big Push together with lots of bombing in Afghanistan’s Pashtun
country means we end up fighting most if not all of the Pashtun.
In Afghan wars, the Pashtun always win in the end.
- Quisling
governments fail because they cannot achieve legitimacy.
- You need
closure, but your guerilla enemy doesn’t. He not only can fight
until Doomsday, he intends to do just that – if not you, then
someone else.
- The bigger
the operations you have to undertake, the more surely your enemy
is winning.
The June 19
Washington Times also reported that
The ambassador
from Afghanistan traveled to America’s heartland to promote his
war-torn country as the "heart of Asia" and a good place
to do business…
In his region,
"all roads lead to Afghanistan," he said…
Asia
doesn’t have any heart, and Afghanistan doesn’t have any roads,
not even one we can follow to get out.
June
20, 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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