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War, War, War See other War, War, War Articles Title: Throttling Back on Afghanistan It was encouraging to see White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel throwing elbow punches in the Sunday political gabfests, defending the Obamas decision to hold off on its decision on what to do about McChrystals flying-pie proposal to "Go Big" in a pseudo-classic counterinsurgency effort in Afghanistan. It would be "reckless," he told CNN, to pour more American blood into Afghanistan without knowing what the sneeze is going on with the government were supporting. Journalist Gareth Porter brings news of another encouraging development. A paper on Afghanistan strategy by Daniel L. Davis, U.S. Army light colonel, offers an alternative to McChrystals plan that is receiving attention in important circles. Davis "Go Big or Go Deep" [.pdf] argues that the massive, lengthy, costly counterinsurgency operation that McChrystal and his supporters in the neoconservative cabal insist we need to implement yesterday is unlikely to work. For starters, Davis notes, 40,000 additional U.S. troops would not be enough. Hes not certain 100,000 additional troops would be enough. Hes right. The Afghan population will never support our counterinsurgency efforts, not if we send a billion troops to their rock-and-desert-heinied country. Afghan cabinet ministers are openly corrupt. It will be mid to late spring of 2010 before additional troops will arrive in Afghanistan, and that causes a logistical nightmare. The troops will be going into Afghanistan in the same time frame that well be trying to remove the bulk of our troops from Iraq. Hoping for an enlightened ruling class to emerge in Afghanistan is a pipe dream. "The men who rule today have in most cases risen to power either through the application of violence or the application of money," Davis writes. "[T]here are virtually no potential leaders in the education pipeline with which we could have near-term hope for meaningful change in how Afghanistan is governed." McChrystals notion of training 400,000 Afghan troops is delusional. You can put that many folks in uniform and teach them to carry a rifle, but they need to be led, and as Davis notes, there is no potential for real leadership to sprout in Afghanistan. It is already too late to win the hearts and minds of the Afghan people. They like the insurgents better than they like us and the crooked government that exists by virtue of us having our hand up its back. Davis plan calls for withdrawal of the bulk of U.S. and NATO forces over the next 18 months. It leaves U.S. special force units and their support behind, and other troops for security and for training Afghan forces. Davis himself alludes to the problem with his idea. As Porter notes, Davis "was surprised to hear from one official in a high position in Washington whose reaction to his paper was that what he is proposing in place of the Go Big option is still too big." Thats good news too. Whoever this official in a high position was is thinking along sane lines. An Oct. 19 AP story opened with "NATOs 28 member states must quickly endorse U.S. Gen. Stanley McChrystals recommendation to send reinforcements to deal with the escalating insurgency in Afghanistan because time is not on the alliances side, its chief said Monday." It then added that Secretary-General Anders Fogh Rasmussen says it "makes sense to delay such decisions until the final results of Afghanistans disputed presidential elections are known." This is typical of the lunacy thats dancing laps around the body politic on the subject of Afghanistan these days. President Barack Obama needs to get a handle on this situation very quickly. As journalist Seymour Hersh told an audience in North Carolina recently, the military is in a "war with the White House." The five-sided arms-sales generator has been running an information warfare campaign against Obama since mid-September, when a McClatchy article first suggested that petulant McChrystal might resign if he didnt get every little and large thing he wanted. The military feels it has Obama "boxed in," says Hersh. The military has everybody boxed in. It has been running a political and propaganda campaign to justify its existence since the end of the Cold War. The project it has been running to keep the Afghanistan war going has been Herculean. We had the McChrystal resignation talk, then we had the leaked McChrystal "assessment," then we had more sanctioned leaks that you can take a leak at about how unnamed military and civilian experts and officials say that Obama needs to bow down to his generals or Michael Rennie will step off his spaceship and give us a thorough spanking with his ray paddle. Its time for us to get Washingtonian in our foreign policy. Cramming a bunch more kids into a foreign country dressed in uniforms and armed with weapons that make them look like Germanys Waffen SS is not the way for the United States to conduct global business.
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#1. To: Ada (#0)
What mixed feelings it would engender on this forum if General Stanley McChrystal (perhaps the Scottish offspring of the late, great neocon Irving Kristol who just passed on to the Greater Israel in the sky) just went ahead and overthrew Obama and declared himself dictator of the new country of "Stanistan" and then poured in several hundred thousand new GIs and mercs (mostly the latter, since they are a more lucrative way to rob the taxpayers blind). The Pentagon wants it ALL and they want it NOW! While codgers cry "socialism" at rallies and town hall forums, they make an exception for the largest socialistic enterprise on the planet the U.S. military and its manifold corrupt contractors.
I would give no thought of what the world might say of me, if I could only transmit to posterity the reputation of an honest man. - Sam Houston
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