CALGARY
– Barack Obama wants to withdraw US troops from Iraq and send
them to Afghanistan, which he calls the real front on the "war
on terror." He also has repeated threats to attack Pakistan
"if necessary."
One understands
Obama’s need to sound macho. Rival John McCain has been beating
his chest, proclaiming, "I know how to win wars."
Polls show Americans trust McCain three to one over Obama as
a war leader. Unfortunately, recent US presidents seem to require
small military conflicts to prove their political virility.
But Obama
has long called the US-led occupation of Afghanistan a "good
war," a view most Americans and Canadians share. They see
Afghanistan – and now Pakistan – as hotbeds of al-Qaida and
Taliban terrorists that must be eradicated.
It is distressing
to see Obama succumb to the blitz of war propaganda over Afghanistan
and adopt George Bush’s faux terminology of terrorism. Before
Obama urges widening America’s war there, he should consider:
-
Al-Qaida
never numbered more than 300 men. There are hardly any left
in Afghanistan. Survivors scattered into Pakistan. Finding
them is police and intelligence work, not a job for thousands
more western troops.
-
US
policy towards Afghanistan is driven by energy geopolitics.
Pacification of rebellious Pashtun tribesmen is necessary
in order to build energy pipelines south from the Caspian
Basin. That is the primary strategic mission of US and Canadian
troops.
-
Taliban
fighters are not "terrorists." Taliban was founded
as a fundamentalist Muslim religious movement of Pashtun
tribesmen to fight banditry, rape, drugs, and Afghan Communists.
Taliban received millions in US aid until four months before
9/11. It had no part in 9/11 and knew nothing about them.
The US overthrow of Taliban resulted in the Communists resuming
control over half of Afghanistan. Under US occupation, Afghanistan
has become a narco-state that supplies over 90% of the world’s
heroin.
-
Pashtun
tribes comprise half of Afghanistan’s population, and 15%
of neighboring Pakistan’s people. The western powers are
involved in an old-fashioned, colonial-style pacification
campaign against the Pashtun Taliban. Imperial Britain,
the Soviets, and now the US and its allies all employed
the same classical colonial strategy: using puppet rulers,
local mercenary troops, and lavish bribes to enforce their
will. Afghans who resist get bombed.
-
Before
urging expansion of the Afghan war, Obama should total up
the bill for America’s military misadventures. As of last
January, according to the Pentagon and data revealed under
the Freedom of Information Act, the Iraq and Afghanistan
wars cost 72,043 American battlefield casualties. Veteran’s
Administration hospitals have treated 263,909 veterans from
these wars and registered over 245,000 disability claims.
No
one knows how many Iraqis and Afghans have been killed. The
number could be over one million. Just last week over 50 Afghans
in a wedding party were killed by a US air strike. But without
the constant use of massive air power, including B-1 bombers,
the US could not maintain its occupation of Iraq or Afghanistan.
- According
to a Democratic Congressional committee report, the two wars
will cost $1.6 trillion by the end of 2008, or $16,500 per
US family of four – not counting the cost of borrowing money
to pay for the wars.
Obama and
McCain believe Afghan resistance can be crushed by more brute
force. They are wrong. More western troops and more bombed villages
will mean fiercer Afghan resistance.
The
war is now seeping into Pakistan, a nation of 165 million. Obama’s
threats to attack Pakistan and go after its nuclear arsenal
are reckless and extremely dangerous. He appears headed over
the same cliff as those would-be "war presidents, Bush
and McCain. As the head of NATO recently admitted, political
settlement, not bombs, is the only way to end the unnecessary
Afghan war.
Is Obama
beginning to fall under the influence of the same military-petroleum
complex that guided Bush’s imperial-minded presidency? Could
Pakistan become a disaster for the Democrats as Iraq was for
Republicans?