Stick to the Deadline in Afghanistan

by: Eugene Robinson, Op-Ed

Eugene Robinson | Stick to the Deadline in Afghanistan
(Image: Lance Page / t r u t h o u t; Adapted: isafmedia, The National Guard)

Washington - When he ordered his escalation of the war in Afghanistan, President Obama pledged that U.S. troops "will begin to come home" in the summer of 2011. Discouraging reports from the war zone should make him more determined to keep his promise -- and Americans more insistent on holding him to it.

In his Capitol Hill testimony this week, Gen. David Petraeus -- the godfather of Obama's 30,000-troop Afghanistan surge -- sought mightily to carve out some wiggle room. "We have to be very careful with timelines," he told the Senate Armed Services Committee. The July 2011 deadline for beginning a troop withdrawal depends on the assumption that "conditions" are favorable, Petraeus said.

But wait a minute. Another way to describe a withdrawal deadline that is based not on the calendar but on an amorphous and elusive set of "conditions" would be to call it an open-ended commitment. This is precisely what Obama said he was not giving to Afghanistan's corrupt, feckless and increasingly unreliable government.

There were basically two reasons for establishing a firm timeline in the first place. One was to mollify skeptical U.S. public opinion, which had begun to associate the war in Afghanistan with such concepts as "quagmire" and "Vietnam." The other was to apply maximum pressure on Hamid Karzai, the mercurial president, to shape up and get with the program.

Which he has not done. Karzai, who seems not to have gotten the memo on how a U.S. puppet should behave, alternates between grudging cooperation and petulant defiance. Most alarming is that Karzai is effectively sabotaging the effort to win hearts and minds in Kandahar, the heartland of the Taliban insurgency, by leaving the local power structure in the hands of his thuggish and corrupt half-brother, Ahmed Wali Karzai.

In Washington, the hawkish interpretation of events is that the timeline itself is now the problem -- that, in the words of Sen. John McCain, it tells "the key actors inside and outside of Afghanistan that the United States is more interested in leaving than succeeding in this conflict."

This sounds like a reasonable argument until you think about it. Karzai, the Taliban, the warlords and the Afghan public already know that the U.S. and NATO forces will leave someday. The only way to convince them otherwise would be to announce that we intend to stay forever -- and clearly that's not the case. From the Afghan point of view, it doesn't make much difference whether the interlopers depart in one year or in five.

It might make a difference, of course, if there were an honest, capable Afghan government that could use more time to build its capacity and earn the people's trust. Everyone knows, however, that such a government does not exist.

McCain complains that all the competing Afghan factions are "making the necessary accommodations for a post-American Afghanistan." But this outcome is not only inevitable, it's what we claim to want. Sooner or later, there will be a "post-American Afghanistan," and some measure of power and influence will be held by Afghans who now consider themselves loyal to the Taliban. Corruption will not vanish, nor will the poppy and marijuana fields, nor the system of clan-based loyalties that has survived a millennium's worth of foreign invasions.

It's not that Afghanistan is some sort of hopeless case. It's just that thinking a U.S.-led experiment in nation-building -- and that's what we're attempting, even if we call it counterinsurgency -- can impose a whole new organizational template on the place in a year or two, or even 10, is pure fantasy.

Whether or not Obama adheres to his announced deadline matters less to the Afghans than it does to us. U.S. casualties are increasing, as was anticipated; Obama has tripled U.S. troop levels since he took office, and the battle for Kandahar will be bloody. Our European allies are squirming, balking, complaining and looking for the exit. As time goes on, this will become even more of an exclusively American war.

The question is how much more the war will cost in precious young lives and in scarce resources. Obama won the nation's forbearance by making a promise that the inevitable withdrawal of U.S. troops would begin next year. Americans should expect him to keep his word -- and insist that he does.

Eugene Robinson's e-mail address is eugenerobinson(at)washpost.com.

(c) 2010, Washington Post Writers Group 

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Well, I INSIST! But why

Well, I INSIST! But why would anyone believe he'll not renege, as on Every Other "PROMISE"!



1 trillion dollars in

1 trillion dollars in mineral reserves found. We aren't going anywhere.



Fascist amerika will keep

Fascist amerika will keep its imperialistic boots in Afghanistan, Iraq and Pakistan as long it can still borrow gadzillions for its terrorist acts ! obomber will continue with his murderous lies, until the amerikan empire slides into the abyss of failed empires ! Those who cause the most suffering WILL suffer the most...amerika is way ahead !



@ 15:18, my thoughts too.

@ 15:18, my thoughts too. And I bet they've known about this for a while.

I'm perfectly willing to keep asserting they should stick to the deadline, but everyone knows our government has absolutely no accountability any more to the American people.

The military voting with the Democrats, year after year, and in spite of what they were initially sent into Congress to do -- i.e. get out of Iraq -- with all the so-called more progressive voices doing so, as well, should make clearly evident to all the nature of this government -- which I will no longer call "ours."

They have done the same thing on health care, which is really a very simple matter to redress -- as indicated by numerous studies by the Congressional Budget Office, just as one example, that we can move into the 21st century with our allies by opening up Medicare to all Americans and improving upon it, as it already exists.

We're not a nation anymore. We're a landmass outlined with "borders" as a "United States" no different in the eyes of these corporations as an "India" or a "Mexico" or "Afghanistan" or "Iraq".

Yes, we should get of Afghanistan. But it's almost *ridiculous* saying it as if we really had any voice in the matter, and although I'll wager this is what most Americans want.

If you think it's scary, what's going on right now with these corporations -- way beyond "America" and Congress, you should be scared.



When they don't come home as

When they don't come home as promised, there will be no more dreams to hold on to as far as Obama being any different from any other American president.

That should be the last straw for any thinking person.

Our election system is a farce.



Afghanistan Has Long Been

Afghanistan Has Long Been Known to posess great mineral wealth. This was documented by the Soviets around 1960 and almost a hundred years earlier by others. A 'game changer' would have been discovery of enough water to enable mining the rich resources there. This is BS spin - it is just propaganda nonsense. If it ever was a factor, it was a factor long before we attacked them and that would be something to ponder, wouldn't it?

O's rhetoric before the war was "we must 'finish' the war on terror" - brilliant double-speak - people heard what they wanted to. The right wing Israeli Haaretz publication gave him a ringing endorsement back then, complete with quotes to the effect of 'no options left off the table to prevent Iran from acquiring Nukes'. This is not and never was a 'peace' president. He was groomed by Kissinger, for God's sake.



Shucking False

Shucking False Paradigms.

It's time to shuck the Left Right paradigm - if TruthOut grows up begins to analyze events without the 'liberals vs conservatives' theme, they might not have so much trouble raising money. How about recognizing that there is a move afoot by globalists who are using every kind of disaster to consolidate power - how about examining events through the lens of the inexorable move towards Federal and Worldwide centralized control of everything from energy to food and medicine, as opposed to state and local control? Now that would be some interesting news.