In the next few weeks, Barack Obama will make a decision that will define his presidency. Will he escalate the war in Afghanistan, sending 40,000 additional US soldiers to reinforce the 68,000 already there to engage in an open-ended, nation-building counterinsurgency mission? Or will he redefine US objectives and ask his advisers to craft an alternative strategy? Two events intended to bolster the case for the former--Afghanistan's August 20 presidential election and Gen. Stanley McChrystal's August 30 assessment of the war--have instead demonstrated the wisdom of the latter. Perhaps more crucial, the events have raised opposition to and uncertainty about escalation from leaders across the foreign policy and national security establishment, creating a rare opportunity for the administration to shift course and save face.
-
Noted.
Morton Mintz on what Rehnquist would have thought of Citizens United; John Nichols on net neutrality.
-
Howard Zinn, 1922-2010
Remembering the pragmatic radical.
-
Bring on the Filibuster
Let the Republicans actually filibuster something, hour after excrutiating hour, in real time. The public won't like it.
Afghanistan's recent election revealed the fraud, corruption and unpopularity of the US-backed regime. But it is McChrystal's report that raises the gravest doubts. Although it maintains that "success is still achievable," the daunting challenges it identifies should lead foreign policy realists to conclude the exact opposite. Among the obstacles it cites are: "the weakness of state institutions," "widespread corruption and abuse of power," a "crisis of confidence among Afghans," the growing influence of insurgent groups backed by narcotrafficking and/or the Pakistani government, and the operational culture of foreign forces there, which poorly understand Afghan social, political, economic and cultural affairs. McChrystal plans to integrate US troops into Afghan units. With this strategy, he concludes, it "is realistic to expect that Afghan and coalition casualties will increase."
Are Americans willing to pay that price? What is the goal of a counterinsurgency mission? How will "victory" be measured? These are the questions that should dominate the debate. There are, of course, many other moral, political and strategic reasons to oppose escalation, including the hundreds of billions it could cost. And there are plans for withdrawal that would shift US involvement to regional diplomacy and development, targeted counterterrorism and intelligence sharing, such as one offered by William Polk on page 11 and the exit strategy proposed by Representative Jim McGovern, which has garnered ninety-eight supporters in the House. For now, however, the administration should be pushed hard to explain the purpose and logic of increasing US involvement. Until it does, any escalation has failed the very test Obama established: "absolute clarity about what the strategy is going to be."
- Get The Nation at home (and online!) for 68 cents a week!
- If you like this article, consider making a donation to The Nation.
- Reprint this article. Click here for rights and information.

Buzzflash
del.icio.us
Digg
Facebook
Mixx it!
Reddit

RSS