|
The Specter of Defeat Haunts Lisbon
by
Eric Margolis
by Eric Margolis
Recently
by Eric Margolis: China
Scorns US Funny-Money
According to
the US government, 41.8 million Americans now receive food stamps.
Meanwhile, Washington is spending $7 billion monthly on its nine-year
old occupation of Afghanistan, not to mention billions more on trying
to build an obedient Afghan army and to pay of Pakistani politicians
and general.
Last weekend,
the US and its NATO allies met in Lisbon to try to hammer out a
contradictory strategy that will keep western troops in Afghanistan
indefinitely while assuaging public opinion in North America and
Europe that wants the war to end. Most observers failed to note
the historical irony that in the 1960’s and 70’s, Portugal had waged
a long, debilitating colonial war to preserve its crumbling African
empire that ended up nearly bankrupting the mother nation and ending
for good its imperial pretensions.
All the platitudes,
doubletalk, synthetic optimism and fudging at the NATO summit could
not conceal the fact that for all their soldiers, fighter aircraft,
heavy bombers, tanks, helicopter gunships, armies of mercenaries,
and wizardly electronic gear, the western powers are being slowly
beaten by a bunch of lightly-armed Afghan farmers and mountain tribesmen.
President Barack
Obama again painfully showed he is not fully in charge of US foreign
policy. His pledge to begin withdrawing some US troops from Afghanistan
next July has been scornfully contradicted by US generals and resurgent
Congressional Republicans.
Claims by other
NATO nations that they will pull out by 2014 must also be taken
with much salt. As in Obama’s bait and switch in Iraq, the US and
its reluctant allies are likely to simply rebrand their combat forces
"trainers" and keep them in Kabul propping up the US-installed
regime of Hamid Karzai. Remove NATO’s garrison and Taliban would
be in Kabul in days.
Obama came
fresh to Lisbon from groveling before Israel’s Prime Minister, Benjamin
Netanyahu, pleaded with Israel for a token three-month freeze on
settlement building in exchange for a huge bribe from Washington
of advanced US F-35 stealth warplanes, promises of UN vetoes, and
raising to $1 billion US arms stockpiled for Israel’s use.
Israel will
likely accept Obama’s huge bribe, but with even more sweeteners,
and not before rubbing his face in the dirt to show who really calls
the shots in US Mideast policy. George H.W. Bush, the last president
to tangle with Israel, came out far the worse for the experience
and was not re-elected.
Obama appears
to want out of the Afghan War, but lacks the courage to implement
withdrawal. His final gamble of sending 30,000 more troops into
the war has so far failed to produce the hoped-for decisive victory.
But powerful pro-war groups, including the Pentagon, the arms industry
and rightwing Republicans, are thwarting his attempts to wind down
the war.
Those American,
Canadian and European politicians who eagerly backed the Afghan
War now fear admitting the conflict was a huge waste of lives and
treasure. Their political careers hang in the balance.
As a group
of Republican congressmen told me in a private meeting in Washington,
they dared not oppose the Afghan War lest their political opponents
accuse them of treason, betraying the troops, and appeasing terrorism.
Having demonized Taliban, who were former US allies, it is now impossible
for official Washington to deal with the movement in a rational
manner and achieve a sensible negotiated settlement to the conflict.
Rep. Ron Paul
is one of the few politicians in Washington who has the courage
to tell Americans the hard truth.
While the US
heads deeper into war and debt, its dragooned European allies are
fed up with what was supposed to have been a limited "police
action" to eliminate al-Qaida bases.
Instead, Europe
got a full-scale war against Afghanistan’s Pashtun tribes raising
uneasy memories of its 19th-century colonial "pacifications."
This is Britain’s fifth invasion of Afghanistan.
France’s influential
new defense minister, Alain Juppé, openly described the Afghan
conflict a "trap" for NATO and demanded an exit strategy.
It took the
great Charles DeGaulle to pull a reluctant France out of its ugly
Algerian War. America awaits similar courageous leadership to end
the disasters in Iraq and Afghanistan. Instead, we get groins searches
and dangerous x-rays at US airports.
In a moment
of unusual candor, British Defense Chief Gen. Sir David Richards,
warned, "NATO now needs to plan for a 30 or 40 year role."
In short, permanent occupation. It’s worth recalling that US forces
have been implanted in South Korea and Japan since the end of World
War II.
Afghan president
Hamid Karzai is demanding the US scale back military operations,
including night raids and death squads, that inflict heavy civilian
casualties. Washington counters that Karzai is mentally unstable.
America’s rational
for invading Afghanistan was to destroy al-Qaida. But CIA chief
Leon Panetta recently admitted there were no more than 50 al-Qaida
operatives left in Afghanistan. The rest – no more than few hundred
- fled to Pakistan years ago.
So what are
110,000 US troops and 40,000 NATO troops doing in Afghanistan? Certainly
not nation-building. Most reports show Afghanistan is in worse poverty
and distress than before the US invasion.
While the delegates
at Lisbon exchanged toasts and spoke of rebuilding Afghanistan,
giant US Army bulldozers, demolition teams and artillery were busy
leveling wide swathes of Afghan homes around the Pashtun stronghold,
Kandahar. In 2006, US Marines conducted a similar ruthless campaign
to crush the rebellious Iraqi city of Falluja, razing a third of
it and using white phosphorous shells.
The US is using
the same punitive tactics in Afghanistan and Iraq as Israel employs
on the occupied West Bank: targeted assassinations, death squads,
demolishing buildings or whole neighborhoods. Now, the US is sending
heavy tanks to Afghanistan to crush resistance. A proud moment for
our republic that recalls Soviet tanks in Budapest in 1956.
The US military
establishment is determined the mighty US armed forces must not
be defeated by Afghan tribesmen. Defeat in Afghanistan would bring
demands for major cuts in the bloated US military, which consumes
50% of world military spending, and ending major arms systems.
Failure in
Afghanistan would also threaten the entire NATO alliance.
Europe
is slowly re-emerging as a world power, however fitfully and painfully.
NATO has been the primary tool of US geopolitical control of Western
Europe since the late 1940’s. The post-war US-Japan Security Treaty
plays a similar role by allowing the US to militarily dominate North
Asia.
If the US loses
the Afghan War, its reluctant allies would call into question the
reason for the alliance. Europe would hasten building an integrated
military independent of US control.
Taliban and
its allies are not about to defeat the US and its allies on the
battlefield, but they already control half of Afghanistan and intend
to inflict the death of a thousand cuts on the financially strapped
western powers until public opinion demands an end to this pointless
conflict.
That is why
Afghanistan so unnerves Washington’s right wingers. The defeat of
Soviet armies in Afghanistan in 1989 began the collapse of the Soviet
Empire. Could the same fate be in store for the American Raj?
November
23, 2010
Eric
Margolis [send
him mail] is the author of War
at the Top of the World and the new book, American
Raj: Liberation or Domination?: Resolving the Conflict Between the
West and the Muslim World. See his
website.
Copyright
© 2010 Eric Margolis
The
Best of Eric Margolis
|