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War, War, War See other War, War, War Articles Title: More troops are all very well, but what exactly are they going to do? General Stanley McChrystal, the coalition commander in Afghanistan, yesterday gave a convincing pitch that without more troops, soon, the eight-year war could be lost. The situation is in some ways deteriorating, he said. This effort will not remain winnable indefinitely. Public support will not remain indefinitely. McChrystal, in Britain to make that pitch privately to politicians and military before yesterdays speech at the International Institute for Strategic Studies, is the kind of sophisticated communicator and articulate strategist who sometimes emerges from the top of the US Army. Some of them even run for the presidency. He has arrived here after a summer of heavy casualties and rising public alarm, while Britain, like the USs 40 other coalition partners, waits to see if President Obama will buy the call for more forces. Its hard to see how Obama wont. McChrystals much leaked assessment is, as the general says, as blunt as I know how to be. It says the US lagged in the years while the Taleban regrouped. In calling for more troops, to stop the slide, it doesnt encourage thoughts of a Plan B. But there is a worrying aftertaste, a muddy sense of impossibility that comes from his emphasis on the unfathomable complexity of Afghanistan. It did not help that his speech avoided any mention at all of President Karzai, the recent disputed elections, or the drug trade, all central to the coalitions dilemmas. Asked about narcotics, he made a thoughtful case that it was more damaging in fostering corruption than in funding the Taleban. But asked about Karzai, whose team is surrounded by allegations of fraud, he said merely that he operates in a complex environment. After this intelligent respect for the difficulty of the problem, McChrystal didnt show that he could define a mission that was achievable. Its unfair to hold his own joke against him, yet he began with an unsettling quip: that his aim was to speak so convincingly that there would be only applause at the end, no questions. But hed be happy to answer those, he added, if that plan fails, and most of mine do. Theres such a thing as taking humility too far if youre a general deployed to rescue a disintegrating mission. Humility, however, is his guiding theme for approaching, as he puts it, a society at constant war for 30 years. He told a devastating anecdote of wanting to build a well for altruistic purposes, not realising how it would destabilise the balance of power within a village. Every time someone came to him, raising a forefinger and saying: This is what you do, he thought: You dont understand. Of course, hes right. Who wouldnt grant him that point, and gratefully? But he also made a case that he may not have intended: that its all but impossible to act and be sure of the consequences. Similarly, his prescriptions imply a level of immersion in Afghan culture that seems out of reach for foreign forces, even if they stayed for ever, and they cant. He wanted to get young soldiers whove been trained to protect themselves and their vehicles to talk to villagers, not to point guns at them as they ride through. That is a radical change, and demands language and cultural skills few will have. His best point, not much more than an assertion, but powerfully made, was that Afghanistan is worth it, because of the threat that it still posed, and for the sake of its people. His second-best was the need for more troops. His weakest was what, exactly, he thinks those troops should do.
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#5. To: Horse (#0)
No mention of where the troops are going to come from? Are they counting on the troop ferry to come through or pondering a draft? They don't want millions of unemployed, angry and armed young people here on US soil when this house of cards falls apart. This fight for democracy has already been exposed as a complete sham with the backing of Karzai. So has this excuse of fighting drugs while opium production soars. What a pant load!!
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