Like many, I have been carefully following the war
in Afghanistan since its inception in Oct. 2001. Unlike many, I have devoted
countless hours of research on this lengthy war. Unlike many, I have written a
myriad of articles on the subject over the years. It can be reasonably argued
that I know a great deal about this war. But there is one thing I do not know.
In Heaven's name, why are we fighting it?
Once upon a time long ago there was a very good
reason why the U.S. initiated this war. Al-Qa'ida ruthlessly attacked America
on 9-11 utilizing fuel-laden passenger airliners and turning them into missiles
to assault the World Trade Center and the Pentagon. Al-Qa'ida was based in
Afghanistan, and the ruling Taliban provided them sanctuary. There can be no better
reason for war than to remove Al-Qa'ida from this Earth as well as the Taliban
that shielded them. The vast number of grieving Americans with revenge in their
hearts agreed with this premise " including this writer.
However, that was over nine years ago and much has
changed, including the fact that the Taliban is stronger than ever. Something
far more significant has changed. The original goal of the war was the removal
of Al-Qa'ida from Afghanistan. In the strictest sense of the word that has been
accomplished, just not in the way Washington intended. Al-Qa'ida removed itself
from Afghanistan in late 2001, escaping to the Federally
Administered Tribal Areas of Pakistan along with the leaders of the
Taliban, including Mullah Mohammed Omar, the spiritual leader of the Taliban. Al-Qa'ida now operates in Pakistan, Iraq, Yemen, North
Africa, Somalia, Indonesia (the largest Muslim nation on Earth), and elsewhere.
All of this begs a
question. How did all of this happen? How was the mighty U.S. foiled by an
enemy with no air force, essentially no armor, who largely relied on hand-held
weapons, and basically had little or no technology? There are two reasons, both
almost infantile in terms of military strategy. The first reason is too few
ground troops. The U.S. "invaded" Afghanistan a country about the size of
Texas with less than 1500 ground troops, relying almost exclusively on air
power. How a F-16 or a B-52 bomber is supposed to locate and eliminate the top
Al Qaeda leaders is beyond my comprehension. Ordinarily that type of
mission requires reliable intelligence and troops on the ground. This error in
judgment led to the second folly. The American commanders were forced to use
indigenous troops for ground operations like the Battle of Tora Bora.
So, let's see if I have this straight. An American
strategic military genius envisioned a miniscule ground force to invade
Afghanistan while the American air force was bombing the crap out of the Afghan
countryside, villages, and its cities, than expected Afghans to fight right
alongside these very same Americans against Afghans. If that sounds rather
preposterous, that is because it is. The name of this military genius is Donald
H. Rumsfeld, President Bush's Secretary of Defense.
All that was nine years ago, totally irrelevant, as
is the initial cause of this war. So, again I ask, why are we fighting this war
in 2010? There are plentiful reasons as to why not. Afghanistan has no
strategic relevance to the U.S. Afghanistan has no economic relevance to the
U.S. It is one of the poorest countries on Earth, has few mineral resources,
and what it has cannot be exploited because of its primitive roads and a
transportation system that cannot rival France in the Middle Ages. Its culture
is so diverse from Americans it could be on another planet. Its main cash crop
is poppy, the source of its opium and heroin trade. In view of the factors
mentioned above, the most important reason we should not be fighting this war
is the cost in blood and treasure. The U.S. is borrowing billions to fight this
war, and we are borrowing against future generations with the loss of our young
men and women.
Taking all this into account, there has to be
viable reasons why we are fighting this war today. The alternative is that our
political and military leaders have simply gone insane. They continue to fight
a war, during which our young men and women are being killed or wounded while
costing billions, for no substantial reason? That is a difficult concept to
accept. The stated reasons for this war today will now be closely examined,
once again noting the initial cause of this war has not been relevant for over
eight years.
One reason that is being touted today, even by
President Obama, is that we are fighting in Afghanistan to deny Al-Qa'ida a safe
haven. That sounds reasonable. However, if one takes a closer examination of
this premise, it becomes more of an illusion than reality. It represents an
admission that Al-Qa'ida will be around for an extended period of time. I liked
the idea of eliminating them a lot better. As has been pointed out, Al-Qa'ida
essentially no longer exists in Afghanistan. So, why pick on Afghanistan?
Because of 9/11? That was over nine years ago. It is expected that our leaders
should be able to adjust to reality on the ground a bit quicker than that. It
also implies that a military solution is also required in Yemen, Somalia,
Indonesia, North Africa, etc., etc. to deny Al-Qa'ida safe haven in those
places as well. That, of course, is absurd. To fight terrorism the military is
the absolute worst tool. Fighting terrorism requires comprehensive intelligence
from all nations, including Muslim nations since those nations are more often
in Al-Qa'ida's crosshairs then Western nations. Fighting terrorism also
requires federal, state, and local law enforcement agencies, not armies. It is
easy to conclude this reason for the fighting is farcical.
So, obviously, a third reason was needed for this
war, and the Obama administration complied. We are fighting to prevent the
Taliban from taking back control of their country. The Obama Administration
believes that if the Taliban thrives, Al-Qa'ida will benefit, and Afghanistan
and Pakistan will be imperiled. After all these years, now the stated goal of
the U.S.-led NATO force is regime change. I am going to admit something. I
don't care. I do not care if the Taliban retakes control of Afghanistan. They
can have it. There are extremely serious doubts that a Taliban government in
Kabul would "imperil" Pakistan. That oft-expressed fear has little semblance to
reality.
We now come to the fourth official reason as to why
we are still fighting in Afghanistan in 2010, along with 2011, and 2012 is
pretty good bet, too. Let us hope it is better than the first three. The fourth
official reason is to provide a stable government in Afghanistan. Alas, this
one is even worse than the others. This goal is illusory. Afghanistan has not
had a stable central government in over 3,000 years. Why? Afghanis do not want
one. Afghanistan has a diverse culture consisting of Pashtuns 42%, Tajiks 27%,
Hazaras 9%, Uzbeks 9%, Aimaks 4%, Turkmens 3%, Balochs 2%, and others 4%, and,
for the most part, they do not like or trust each other very much. Moreover,
the prime element in Afghan society is the tribe. Afghans feel that the local
tribe is more relevant to their needs than some far-off central government in
Kabul. Taking into account all aspects of Afghan society, using the corrupt
Karzai government and the cruel and inhumane Taliban government that preceded
it as examples, the Afghani people are probably right. What is wrong in
withdrawing all NATO forces and let the people of Afghanistan decide their own
fate? For better or worse that is what they have been doing for over three
millennia.
Well, according to some circles, there is something
wrong with that. In the view of some, withdrawing our military forces will
cause the U.S. a loss of prestige, perhaps, so-o-o? Anyone out there feel that
right after we withdraw our troops from the Middle East (yes, Iraq too) that would
be a good time for Iran, or North Korea, to attack the United States? Anyone
feel that Russia would launch its ICBM's skyward to attack targets in the U.S.?
Anyone feel that the Red Chinese navy will re-enact the attack on Pearl Harbor?
If so, go back to whatever you were doing. You are not a strategist by any
stretch of the imagination. So, now it comes down to American perseverance.
Pardon me, but 7 years in Iraq and over nine years in Afghanistan goes a long
way to prove perseverance. However, the issue is not perseverance. The issue
is, short of carpet-bombing both Iraq and Afghanistan, the Bush administration
with too few ground troops in both wars gave our military missions it could not
possibly accomplish. Both missions then became pure debacles, and most of the
civilized nations on the planet regard our two extended wars as abject
stupidity. Consequently, withdrawal then becomes a matter of prudence, not
cowardice.
There you have it. Every reason given to the
American people for our continued fighting in Afghanistan is either irrelevant
today, lacking realism, or is just plain nonsense. Therefore, our political and
military leaders have all simultaneously gone insane. But wait, there is
another reason. The reason goes unstated because it is not the least bit
palatable to Americans. There is evidence before our very eyes for this reason
if one looks closely enough. Our politicians in Washington give lip service to
ending the wars. Obama wants to "begin" the withdrawal of American troops from
Afghanistan in July 2011, whatever that means. Lawmakers decry the wars, but
continue to approve appropriations for them.
The reason that the war in Afghanistan goes on and
on is because the Military Industrial Complex wants that to happen. War is big
business with huge profits at the expense of blood and the American taxpayer,
and the MIC has its tentacles in every Congressperson, Senator, governor, and
the American President. This gives rise to the question, who really controls
the purse strings of war, as the Constitution states, Congress, or some other
entity? With prominent generals, McChrystal and Petraeus come to mind, being so
vocal against the President's wishes, serious questions can be asked if the
President is really the Commander-in-Chief of the armed forces " or is it some
other entity? Generals are not stupid. They know which side of the bread gets
buttered.
For the reader to answer the two questions above,
the reader must go back and assess the origin of the issue. In reality why are
we fighting the war in Afghanistan in 2010? There is only one answer the
Military Industrial Complex. All others make no sense.
McClatchy Newspapers recently reported, "The Obama
administration has decided to begin publicly walking away from what it once
touted as key deadlines in the war in Afghanistan in an effort to de-emphasize
President Barack Obama's pledge that he'd begin withdrawing U.S. forces in July
2011, administration and military officials have told McClatchy."
Two reasons were provided by White House Officials
to McClatchy. "U.S. officials realized that conditions in Afghanistan were
unlikely to allow a speedy withdrawal." And, "During our assessments, we looked
at if we continue to move forward at this pace, how long before we can fully
transition to the Afghans? And we found that we cannot fully transition to the
Afghans by July 2011." Sometimes, when covering this war, I feel like I am
living in la-la-land. No one on this planet expected a "speedy withdrawal" from
Afghanistan, and only the most optimistic dreamer thought the U.S. could "fully
transition to the Afghans by July 2011." According to officials, conditions do
not permit any meaningful withdrawal at all that starts in July 2011.
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