SYNDICATED COLUMN: Afghanistan—A War We Can’t Believe In

Why Obama’s Favorite War is Less Winnable Than Iraq

Five years after the Republicans got us into war against Iraq, Democrats want to double down on a war that’s even more unjustifiable and unwinnable–the one against Afghanistan.

By any measure, U.S. troops and their NATO allies are getting their asses kicked in the country that Reagan’s CIA station chief for Pakistan called “the graveyard of empires.” Afghanistan currently produces a record 93 percent of the world’s opium. Suicide bombers are killing more U.S.-aligned troops than ever. Stonings are back. The Taliban and their allies, “defeated” in 2001, control most of the country–and may recapture the capital of Kabul as early as this summer.

“So,” asks The New York Times, “has Afghanistan now become a bigger security threat to the United States than Iraq?” Barack Obama’s answer is yes. He spent last year parroting the DNC’s line that Bush “took his eye off the ball” in Afghanistan when we invaded Iraq. Thankfully, he abandoned that hoary sports metaphor. Iraq, he says now, “distracted us from the fight that needed to be fought in Afghanistan against Al Qaeda. They’re the ones who killed 3,000 Americans.”

Sorta. But not really.

Osama bin Laden bragged about ordering the East Africa embassy bombings in 1998, yet has repeatedly denied a direct role in 9/11. He’s probably telling the truth. The hijackers were mostly likely recruited by Islamic Jihad, which is based in Egypt. Saudis, including members of the royal family, financed the strikes against New York and Washington. Pakistani intelligence funded and supervised the camps where some of them trained.

Al Qaeda may have been peripherally involved in 9/11; its leadership certainly knew about the plot ahead of time. They may have fronted some of the expense money. But 9/11 wasn’t an Al Qaeda operation per se.

Afghanistan’s connection to 9/11 was tertiary. At the moment the first plane struck the South Tower of the World Trade Center, most of Al Qaeda’s camps and fighters were in Pakistan. As CBS News reported on January 29, 2002, Osama bin Laden was in a Pakistani military hospital in Rawalpindi on 9/11. The Taliban militia, which provided neither men nor money for the attacks, controlled 90 percent of the country.

It has long been an article of faith among Democrats that Afghanistan is the “good war,” a righteous campaign that could be won with more money and manpower. But the facts say otherwise. The U.S. Air Force rained more than a million pounds of bombs upon Afghanistan in 2007, mostly on innocent civilians. It’s twice as much as was dropped in Iraq–and equally ineffective.

Six years after the U.S. invasion of 2001, according to Director of National Intelligence Michael McConnell, the U.S./NATO occupation force has surged from 8,000 to 50,000. But the Americans are having no more luck against the Afghans than had the Brits or the Soviet Union. The U.S.-backed government of Hamid Karzai controls a mere 30 percent of Afghanistan, admits McConnell. (Regional analysts say in truth it is closer to 15 percent.) Most of the country belongs to the charming guys who gave us babes in burqas and exploding Buddhas: the Taliban and likeminded warlords.

“Afghanistan remains a failing state,” says a report by General James Jones, former NATO Supreme Allied Commander. “The United States and the international community have tried to win the struggle in Afghanistan with too few military forces and insufficient economic aid.”

If he becomes president, Obama says he’ll “ask more from our European allies” to win in Afghanistan. But he won’t get it. As The New York Times puts it: “Why help the United States in Afghanistan, the European logic goes, when America would be able to handle Afghanistan much more easily if its GIs weren’t bogged down in Iraq?”

Obama says he would send two more American combat brigades–between 3,000 and 8,000 troops. If 158,000 troops can’t subdue Iraq, how can 58,000 do the job in Afghanistan?

They can’t.

Afghanistan’s population is 19 percent larger than that of Iraq. Its area is 49 percent bigger, with infinitely rougher terrain. Obama’s proposed “surgelet” would result in troop strength of less than one sixth of the 400,000 dictated by official U.S. counterinsurgency doctrine for a nation the size of Afghanistan.

Afghans say spring could mark the beginning of the end of the United States’ first experiment in post-9/11 regime change. For more than a year, Taliban commanders have controlled the key Kabul-to-Kandahar highway. “On one convoy last year we were 40 vehicles and only 12 got through,” Sadat Khan, a 25-year-old truck driver explained to the UK Telegraph as he pointed to “roughly patched bullet holes in the cab of his truck.” Cops loyal to Karzai expect to be massacred. “Maybe we will lose 30 per cent of us this spring, maybe 60 per cent,” police commander Mohammad Farid told the paper. He’d already been shot.

The Taliban say they’ll retake Kabul this year and reestablish the Islamic fundamentalist government led by Mullah Omar. No one knows whether they’ll succeed. But they’ve already begun to strangle the city of Kabul. They’re destroying its nascent telecommunications infrastructure, driving out foreign NGOs and businesspeople with terrorist attacks, and cutting off access to the remaining highways. Talibs promise to continue to target NATO troops, betting that Canada and other members of the coalition will pull out under pressure from antiwar voters. Bogged down in Iraq, the U.S. won’t be able to send more soldiers to Afghanistan. Karzai’s puppet regime won’t last long.

If Obama is so eager to keep fighting Bush’s wars, he’d be smarter to focus on the more winnable of the two: Iraq.

COPYRIGHT 2008 TED RALL

13 Comments.

  • Hey…you're just assuming that Obama will get the nomination…Mike Gravel is still in the race. (I think)

  • Ted,

    Whats your take on the recent Pakistani election which (admittedly) bought back to power the corrupt Asif Zardari and also Nawaz Sharif (who you seem to like; relative to Mush) , and the thrashing the Mullahs got in the North West Frontier Province at the hands of Pashtun Nationalists and the Pakistan People's Party?

  • One question: Mr. Rall, where did you get your source on Islamic Jihad being the group behind 9/11?

    – Strelnikov

  • Ted said that 9/11 terrorists were
    recruited by Islamic Jihad and
    not by Al-Quaida. But Islamic
    jihad has allied its self with
    Osama Ben Ladend to to form Al-Quaida in the late eighties. So the terrorists were recruited by
    Al-Quaida.
    Your keep harping about Egypt, Saudi Arabia and Pakistan.
    So you are condemning the attacks agianst Afghanistan and Iraq which is already a done deal but
    calling for attacks against Egypt,
    Saudi Arabia and Pakistan which
    make me wonder!! Are you a closeted
    neo-con??!!

  • Ted, or whoever, can you site the evidence for your claim here that Bin Laden didn't have a direct role in 9/11? That's a pretty big claim. I normally trust your facts and respect your insight but that's something I find hard to accept on faith alone.

    Thanks

  • Ted, or whoever, can you site the evidence for your claim here that Bin Laden didn't have a direct role in 9/11? That's a pretty big claim. I normally trust your facts and respect your insight but that's something I find hard to accept on faith alone.

    Nor should you.

    I wrote about this subject after 9/11, as did various mainstream media outlets. I have neither the time nor the inclination to revisit previous columns and books.

  • Ted said that 9/11 terrorists were
    recruited by Islamic Jihad and
    not by Al-Quaida. But Islamic
    jihad has allied its self with
    Osama Ben Ladend to to form Al-Quaida in the late eighties. So the terrorists were recruited by
    Al-Quaida.

    Allied with does not equal the same group. The U.S. is allied with Israel. Does that mean that, when Israel bombs Gaza, it is accurate to say that the U.S. bombed Gaza? No, it doesn't. One can point out the U.S.-Israeli alliance, as do Palestinians, as part of an argument that the U.S. is tarnished by such an attack. But that's different.

  • Ted-
    " I have neither the time nor the inclination to revisit previous columns and books."
    It doesn't take much time to embed links and refs into your columns. We don't have all day either.

  • Ted, or whoever, can you site the evidence for your claim here that Bin Laden didn't have a direct role in 9/11? That's a pretty big claim. I normally trust your facts and respect your insight but that's something I find hard to accept on faith alone.

    If you accept that Bin Laden did have direct involvement "on faith alone", why can't you accept he did not?

    You need only to look at his so-called video tape confession.

    "…we calculated in advance the number of casualties from the enemy, who would be killed based on the position of the tower," he says, according to the transcript. "We calculated that the floors that would be hit would be three or four floors. I was the most optimistic of them all. (…Inaudible…) due to my experience in this field, I was thinking that the fire from the gas in the plane would melt the iron structure of the building and collapse the area where the plane hit and all the floors above it only. This is all that we had hoped for."

    This cast doubts not only on his involvement, but also his supposed engineering expertise. Frankly, I think it casts doubt on his involvement in any serious terrorist attack. As I'm sure Ted is aware, a 100-floor building cannot collapse down to the 50th floor, and then just stop collapsing.
    It looks like he watched CNN to find out about how the jet fuel weakened the steel, but was still unable to come up with a plausible story of his own involvement. Our government knows this, and that is why they have not bothered to catch him. It is also why this tape is not more popular than it is.

  • "I have neither the time nor the inclination…"

    Sounds like someone's channeling his DVD of A FEW GOOD MEN!

  • Ok, Timothy, there's
    the FBI
    , for one, with a
    follow-up that you could scan for another.

    The follow-up is thought-provoking, but not authoritative, of course. But the FBI certainly ought to be.

  • bold avante guard position on the most crucial issue before us.

    well done, lad! well done.

    ………………………

    we must be frugale. cut back to only one war. (we're so fucked.)

    hedge funds. hedge funds, not "sub prime loans" … hedge funds.

    +p0sitrakd

  • Timothy?

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