Saturday, November 21, 2009

Iraq and Afghanistan

Obama Doubles Down His Bet on Winning the War in Afghanistan

Posted February 18, 2009

During his first prime-time news conference, President Obama described "the most sobering moment" of his young presidency. It was when he sat down to sign letters to the families of fallen soldiers. "It reminds you of the responsibilities that you carry in this office," he said, "and the consequences of the decisions that you make."

This week, Obama unveiled his first major decision as commander in chief—one that carries with it the knowledge that he will have to send more such letters. Some 17,000 troops now have orders to deploy to Afghanistan in a few weeks, a move that will increase U.S. force strength there by about 50 percent by midsummer.

This falls short of the 30,000 troops requested by Gen. David McKiernan, the commander of U.S. forces in Afghanistan, which would have doubled current U.S. force levels in the country. But this week's announcement may mark the first part of a larger wave of troops to come.

Officials say that they will make no further deployment decisions until the White House completes its Afghanistan strategy review, which they estimate will happen in late March. In the meantime, McKiernan noted this week that "even with these additional forces, I have to tell you that 2009 is going to be a tough year."

There is clear consensus about that around the halls of the Pentagon. Even as units rapidly prepare to depart, senior military officials are struggling to respond to a series of dangerous twists in the troubled region, some of which have led them to doubt whether troops will be able to blunt an increasingly brutal insurgency without a clearer sense of what, exactly, victory in Afghanistan resembles.

The U.S. strategy as it stands now is a losing one, some U.S. military officials say. Though most agree that more troops are necessary to halt advances by the Taliban and al Qaeda, the war itself won't be won, they add, without realistic, and clearly defined, short-term goals. "The goals we've had for Afghanistan are too broad and too far into the future," Secretary of Defense Robert Gates acknowledged during a news conference earlier this month. That is, he added, a conclusion the Bush administration had reached as well.

Now that Obama has elevated the Afghan war to a leading position among his foreign policy priorities, the U.S. strategy there is under intense re-evaluation. What is clear, says Gates, is that there needs to be a three- to five-year plan for "re-establishing control in certain areas, providing security for the population, going after al Qaeda, preventing the establishment of terrorism, better performance in terms of delivery of services to the people—some very concrete things."

This is a tall order, and by no means an all-encompassing one. A dismal report to Congress released by the Office of the Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction last month noted that even after spending $32 billion in American aid, efforts to rebuild the country "lack coherence." The Afghan government is corrupt and ineffectual, and drug production continues to skyrocket.

But chief among their concerns, senior Pentagon officials say, is the need for a more holistic approach to Afghanistan and Pakistan, where insurgents use ungoverned territories as bases to launch increasingly complex attacks on U.S. forces and their supply lines.

This point is at the heart of a recently completed review by the Joint Chiefs of Staff. There is growing concern among top military officials that , while Predator drone strikes conducted by the CIA in Pakistan have killed some top insurgent leaders, they are also destabilizing the country, causing civilian casualties, and turning both Afghans and Pakistanis against America. One top U.S. military official recently expressed doubt that the war in Afghanistan could be won at all. It would be better, he said, to concentrate efforts on stabilizing a nuclear-armed Pakistan and keep a skeletal U.S. rapid reaction force in Afghanistan to tamp down problems as they arise.

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Reader Comments

Wars in Iraq and Afghanistan

The continuation of these two wars is criminal against our kids dying there, innocent populations and our own population here who has to continue suffering an economic crisis affecting their livehoods, their education and their health. Lets stop this madness and put all those billions of dollars to work here. Lets leave a small force to train those countries armies to regain control of their countries, lets put some money in projects to help those countries rebuilt in pay for all the destruction and killings we have caused. Isn't it enough revenge for 911?

war on terror

War on terror is unwinnable by mere force.We are not fighting regular armies and well identified enemies.We are fighting individuals or small groups of individuals whom we can neither detect nor identify.Sleeping cells of such terrorists have already been deployed all over the whole world. Such type of war could go on and on for many decades without any definite outcome. However,we can win this war very easily by finding out the real cause behind such terrorist formations and trying to eliminate it. The short sighted step of creating Israel on the ruins of Plaestine and its innocent people has led to the creation of such terrorist groups who are ready to sacrifice their own bodies in a holy war against Israel and the countries that suport its apartheid regime.Once we stop our unlimited support to the Israeli military gangs whose only game is to kill as many Palestinian women and children as they can everyday,once all Palestinian refugees return home to their stolen land and belongings under un resolution 194 which Israel arrogantly refuses to implement, once a secular state is established on all the land of Historical Palestine for Jews,Moslems and Christians with equal rights and responsibilities and without any kind of descrimination, all terror in the world will defintely disappear for ever.

Why is the West in Afghanistan?

Why this war? And why this war in Afghanistan. Clearly, the West is now 'there' in the same manner that the Soviet Union was there, but the question remains, why?

I do not for a second believe that the War in Afghanistan is a war in support of democracy or freedom for the Afghan people, women in particular, nor do I believe that the West is there to defeat al Queda -- whatever that is, whoever they are.

Nor do I for a second believe that the War is about drug-abuse or the cultivation of Opium, even though opium is the real currency of Afghanistan.

My concern extends to the hundreds and thousands of people who have died in this protracted conflict and the continuing tragedy of the 'War' and the West's inability to deal properly with it.

As the West continues to escalate its presence in Afghanistan and hundreds of soldiers continue to lay down their lives for 'missions that they strongly believed in', as the official statements of the military always seem to say, it's important for us to consider what the real reasons for our presence in Afghanistan actually are. We are not there for the people, to fight the war on drugs, or even to root out al Queda. We are there to send a clear message to the Chinese that any thought of gaining access to Persian Gulf Oil through Afghanistan is completely out of the question.

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