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June 20, 2013
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The Forgotten WarPosted on Mar 13, 2007By Marie Cocco WASHINGTON—The first and most unfortunate orphan of the Iraq war is Afghanistan. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi calls Afghanistan “a war that is unfinished and nearly forgotten.” For all the political drama that is unfolding over the Democrats’ decision to use the upcoming debate over war spending to challenge President Bush’s policies in Iraq, the Democratic congressional caucus is also using the spending measure for a purpose equally crucial. It is redirecting funds toward Afghanistan in a last-ditch effort to rescue the country that was the original “central front” in the war on terror. “It’s not lost,” says Mark Schneider, senior vice president of the International Crisis Group, a nonpartisan research organization that studies conflicts around the globe. “There’s still a much greater opportunity than in Iraq to strengthen the beginnings of institutions in Afghanistan.” Afghanistan is being sucked back into civic chaos by extremist violence, factional warfare, rampant government corruption and unchecked opium production that helps finance the Taliban and other militants. The country is assaulted from across the Pakistan border by Taliban forces and an emboldened al-Qaida. The terrorists operate with impunity, despite the Bush administration’s long-standing alliance with Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf, a strongman to whom the White House gives aid and often praise, although he has persistently failed to clean out and control the border area. Only two weeks ago, as Vice President Dick Cheney was ensconced for meetings at a heavily fortified U.S. air base in Afghanistan, a suicide bomber detonated explosives outside the gates, killing 23 people and providing a newsreel, of sorts, that advertised the terrorists’ growing strength. Advertisement Afghanistan continues to be a dusty and demoralized terrorist proving ground. And why not? The United States and its allies never fully stepped up to the task they began immediately after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks. Security outside the capital of Kabul never was restored—whole regions drifted back under the control of regional warlords and drug kingpins. From the start, Schneider says, the United States underfunded the civic rebuilding effort. Per capita aid to Bosnia and Kosovo in the two years following the end of armed hostilities in the Balkans was $1,400 per person, Schneider says. In Afghanistan, it’s been $52 per capita. The number of peacekeepers in Bosnia was 18.6 per 1,000 people and in Kosovo 20 per 1,000. In Afghanistan, he says, the international force amounts to 0.2 peacekeepers per 1,000. “Remember ‘light footprint, no nation-building?’” Schneider says, referring to the Bush administration’s early theory that the United States should not be heavily involved in rebuilding societies. The result of ineptitude, underfunding and, of course, the calamitous distraction of Iraq, is an Afghanistan that teeters on the brink of becoming what it was before 9/11—a failed state and terrorist sanctuary. Last month, a Canadian parliamentary committee on national security issued a grim report on the situation, concluding that “it is in our view doubtful” the Western mission can be accomplished, “given the limited resources that NATO is currently investing in Afghanistan.” House Democrats intend to add $1.2 billion for Afghanistan in their version of the war spending bill, with $226 million of it dedicated to reconstruction and countering the drug trade. Bush, in announcing on Saturday that he wants still more American troops—beyond his previously announced escalation—sent to Iraq, says he also wants more military personnel in Afghanistan to quell an expected Taliban spring offensive. The good intentions come late. And in any case, a presidential veto of the spending measure—which the White House has promised because of the Democrats’ insistence that Iraq money be tied to clear progress and an eventual withdrawal there—would leave Afghanistan wanting for an unforeseeable number of months. Spring will come and go. The Taliban and al-Qaida will count on American inertia as their ally. And once again, the toxic politics of Iraq will be a root cause of Afghanistan’s catastrophe. Marie Cocco’s e-mail address is mariecocco@washpost.com. © 2007, Washington Post Writers Group New and Improved CommentsIf you have trouble leaving a comment, review this help page. Still having problems? Let us know. If you find yourself moderated, take a moment to review our comment policy. |
By Dennis D, March 13, 2007 at 7:24 pm Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)
There’s not enough room or time to list the failures of the Bu$h administration - this is just another one.
Report thisBy Kol Klink, March 13, 2007 at 5:29 pm Link to this comment
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Ahem…at the expense of repeating myself…The Pashtun have never lost a war.
When the Brits were at the zenith of their colonial power they were whipped twice by the Pashtun in Afganistan. In one defeat the Brits lost an entire army except for one Brit doctor that managed to escape to tell the tale.
They ran Alexander the Great out of Afganistan. If he wasnt the greatest military stratagest of all time he was certainly among the top three.
They ran the Soviet military out of Afganistan.
And, they defeated several other would be occupiers.
The Pashtun fight wars on their own terms. They are patient. They know the mountinous terrain and caves like no one else and use them to their advantage. We have already carpet bombed large areas of Afganistan with B52s, surrounded and blasted the mountains of Tora Bora, blasted entire villages from the map, conducted countless sweeps, and on infinum. We are still getting whipped in a slow and methodical way. That is the way the Pashtun fight. They do not care if it takes them 1 year or 100 years they will not stop fighting untill the invaders are removed from their soil. Pashtun fight wars of slow attrition not based on four year election cycles.
Recently they have incorporated roadside bombs and suicide bombers into their arsenals but they basically have not changed the way they defend their country since Alexander wandered into the area. Alexander believed in genocide and would gladly have wiped out the Pashtun to the last man but he couldnt because of way they disburse, then hit and run.
Bush should try reading some Afgan history prior to sending more troops to Afganistan. Or, he could just pick up the phone and ask Putin how to defeat the Afgans.
Report thisBy Grover, March 13, 2007 at 2:44 pm Link to this comment
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Winning hearts and minds in Afghanistan every other day:
http://www.spiegel.de/international/spiegel/0,1518,471416,00.html
Report thisBy michael krug, March 13, 2007 at 1:51 pm Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)
In all probability the current war in Afghanistan will last for decades if we choose to stay the course, but can anyone seriously believe we’ll do that? The trick, the great difficulty, to occupying a country and imposing your will on it, is to stop the resistance from ever starting. For that you need vast numbers of soldiers on the ground, and, or, the will and capacity to use vast ammounts of violence to crush all opposition. Are we really willing or able to do this in Afghanistan?
Once the insurgency starts up, and begins to gain true momemtum, stopping it, or “winning” requires an enormous effort in both men and materials, and by this time it’s almost too late anyway. Sure, we could in theory send hundreds of thousands of extra troops to Afghanistan, but does anybody really believe we’ll do this?
In truth Afghanistan is just as much a lost cause as Iraq is, only our arrogance and pride stop us from realizing, admitting and facing up to the shear scale of our defeat.
Report thisBy Quy Tran, March 13, 2007 at 12:33 pm Link to this comment
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Iraq has huge oil deposits and Afghanistan has immense fields of opiums. These both luxurious items have seduced Cheney and his Halliburton so could he give in these benefits ? Absolutely no !
Report thisBy Kol Klink, March 13, 2007 at 11:56 am Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)
The Pashtun have never lost a war.
Report thisBy Dale Headley, March 13, 2007 at 10:09 am Link to this comment
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When Bush wrenched away the soldiers that were on the verge of capturing or killing bin Laden and much of his command, he revealed his true purpose for invading Afghanistan: to secure the largest oil pipeline crossing Eurasia. There is now no difference whatsoever between the wars in Iraq and in Afghanistan. Pardon me, I forgot; there is one difference: we managed to increase the heroin output in Afghanistan by many orders of magnitude. These wars are draining our resources, our credibility, and - worst of all - our morality.
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