AUGUST 6, 2010
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In the analysis of a war, the where matters as much as the why. About the reasons for our war in Afghanistan, I am still solid. I am confident that the United States has an urgent interest of national security in suppressing or destroying Al Qaeda and its various affiliates in the badlands of the Hindu Kush. I am also confident that, but for our efforts to cripple them, these forces would be further along in their murderous plans for America and Americans. I remember September 11. And I have no philosophical or political problem with our second objective in Afghanistan, the collateral humanitarianism of liberating the place from the medieval death grip of the Taliban.
But I am losing faith in our war. I am tired of hearing that failure is not an option and that we are in this to win. Failure is always an option and a war is not a football game. I am tired also of the capital’s messianic expectations of General Petraeus: The search for a miracle-worker is an admission that it will take a miracle. But what really rattles my confidence in this war is the where. Recently I read Petraeus’s counterinsurgency manual. It is a work of genuine intellectual sophistication. It describes a conflict between two forces: an insurgency—“an organized, protracted politico-military struggle designed to weaken the control and legitimacy of an established government”—and a counterinsurgency—“military, paramilitary, political, economic, psychological, and civic actions taken by a government to defeat insurgency ... and sustain the established or emerging government.” The arresting thing about this military manual is that it denies the centrality of the military means to the strategic end. “Armed Forces cannot succeed in coin [counterinsurgency] alone.” Quite the contrary. “Cultural knowledge is essential to waging a successful counterinsurgency.” And “political factors have primacy in coin.” Here is the heart of the matter: “U.S. forces committed to a coin effort are there to assist a HN [host-nation] government. The long-term goal is to leave a government able to stand by itself. In the end, the host nation has to win on its own.”
I do not doubt the wisdom of all this: the recognition of the indigenous and autonomous character of peoples, the candidly anti-imperialist spirit. (Interventionism and imperialism are decidedly not the same thing.) But these days it looks to me like a warrant not for hope but for despair. For in truth there are not two, but three, forces in this conflict: the insurgency, the counterinsurgency, and the country in which the struggle between them is taking place. As Petraeus says, what will determine the outcome is the host nation. But behold this host nation! I am losing faith in the war in Afghanistan because I am losing faith in Afghanistan. Perhaps there is good news about the HN that is not getting out, but a lot of bad news about it certainly is. I do not see that Afghanistan is either a ready nation or a ready state. (Compared to Afghanistan, Iraq is Sausalito.) The national government in Kabul—the stipulated beneficiary of coin, in theory and in practice— is local and weak and corrupt and, in its regional strategy, cynical. The political culture of the country seems determined almost entirely by tribal, ethnic, religious, cultural, and geographical factors. The civic means recommended by our war doctrine would appear to involve nothing less than the renovation of an entire society and its encrusted patterns of power and influence. The United States cannot accomplish this, and Afghanistan does not seem to want it accomplished. All the consensus in the world at the highest levels of American government will not alter this fact, if a fact it is. In counterinsurgency warfare, we are in their hands. It is foolhardy to make our security contingent upon the creation of a wholly new order for another people.
The bright new idea—the strange child of the cunning of Karzai and the complexity of Petraeus—is that we negotiate with the Taliban. Many knowledgeable people think that this will work. I imagine that some of the Taliban’s ranks may indeed be persuaded or bribed or protected away, but I am not inclined to give the Taliban the benefit of any doubt. They will negotiate with Kabul, and maybe even with Washington, only as a step on their march back to Kabul. Like all millenarian movements, their salvific conception of themselves demands the attainment of political power. And so I believe that the Taliban must be fought. But it must be fought by the people whom it aspires to oppress—and those people seem to want us to fight it for them. They complain, rightly, about Bush’s indifference and Obama’s impatience, but they have not yet risen up together, in a larger union, historically, with a widespread belief in the possibility of a new Afghanistan, to stamp out the fiends in their midst. If Afghanistan has often been the graveyard of empires, it has often been also the graveyard of itself—at least from the standpoint of the liberalization that we seek as the condition of security. Are we supposed to support the Afghans or invent them? The promotion of democracy, which deserves to be rehabilitated in American foreign policy, requires a plausible object. The pace of the “Afghanization” of the war, the dawning of self-reliance, has been discouragingly sluggish. Henry Kissinger, in a sharp dissent (perish the thought) from the president’s policy in The Washington Post last month, proposed that we conceive of our counterinsurgency not nationally but provincially, and operate not above but within the internal divisions of the country, and seek local victories that add up. This means the abandonment of the focus on the central government that is the essence of the Petraeus doctrine. For the purpose of turning back the Taliban—but certainly not for the purpose of a democratic Afghanistan—this might work. I don’t know. But in the provinces, too, the Afghans seem narrowly self-interested and afraid. Their fear is perfectly understandable, but it is their country.
After September 11, the Bush administration adopted the “root causes” analysis of terrorism that the American right once despised, and the war in Afghanistan was the implementation of that analysis. The new coin doctrine is an amplification of it. I agree that there is the problem of terrorists and the problem of terrorism, and that the destruction of terrorists is not the destruction of terrorism. But security cannot wait upon peace, even if peace is the surest form of security. Biden may have been correct: Our security may require no more of us than a relentless drone war, occasionally supported by special operations, against the groups and the planners who threaten us. Most of those enemies are anyway in Pakistan, and in Yemen and Somalia. Let us use force, but let us use it where it will work. I confess that such realism nauseates me, because I would be ashamed for my country to abandon the people of Afghanistan, the women especially, to their once and future theocratic hell. But if Afghanistan does not significantly resist that darkness for itself—“on its own,” in Petraeus’s haunting words—its people will vanish into it anyway. For as long as Afghanistan will be ambiguous, our war will be ambiguous.
Leon Wieseltier is the literary editor of The New Republic.
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21 comments
Well said.
- AaronW
July 26, 2010 at 11:41pm
The Taliban are not Al Qaeda. They are nasty rulers. But nastier than 20 other despotic regimes?? Come off it. At $100-200B/year we get much more bang for our buck spent elsewhere (especially in the US) in desperte economic times. Our Iraq and Afghanistan military occupation almost certain create many more to Al Qaeda than we eliminate every month we stay. I can't recall---tell me again what we accomplished propping up a corrupt regime in Vietnam to prevent a south Asian dominp effect every year we stayed after TET...
- drofnats1
August 6, 2010 at 2:46am
Staying makes sense if you think the Taliban and Al Qaeda are the same and Afghanistan will be used as a base for terror ops as soon as US troops leave. But there is ample evidence to suggest that the Taliban tried to surrender Bin Laden or set him up for a cruise missile strike and even kill him themselves, long before 9/11 and after 9/11. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kabir_Mohabbat The Taliban want power, let them have it. They represent a sizeable chunk of the population anyway. There is evidence to suggest that they would mind their own business and resist any Al Qaeda influence in their country. Saving 200 Billion for the US in the meantime.
- IggyPop
August 6, 2010 at 6:28am
"Why do you look at the speck of sawdust in your brother's eye and pay no attention to the plank in your own eye?" I think of this often as we attempt to liberate, to humanize, others, in Afghanistan and elsewhere. I can imagine the discussions, 150 years ago, among the civilized, who favored "interventionism" in the humanitarian struggle of the era in order to "stamp out the fiends" who would spread their "once and future hell" among an entire race of people. What would have been the outcome of such interventionism? And I wonder if we devote so much of our resources on liberating others in order to pay no attention to the plank that exists in our own eye.
- rayward
August 6, 2010 at 7:43am
For information about Afghanistan and what I recommend following Terry Glavin's blog: http://transmontanus.blogspot.com/ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Terry_Glavin Unlike Wieseltier and his moral weariness as exemplified in "But I am losing faith in our war. I am tired of hearing that failure is not an option and that we are in this to win.", Terry knows what failure in Afghanistan will actually look like. He has actually been to the place a few times for extended stays. He meets and talks with the people of Afghanistan. Read his blog, if you dare.
- noga1
August 6, 2010 at 10:45am
noga1. Is your point that Afghanistan's failure will be worse than other failures? If so, do you know what it looks like to fail in Yemen, Somalia, Nigeria, Bangladesh, Nicaragua..... add 30-50 other countries. Go read books on each. Is your point that Afghanistan failure is disastrous for the US?? On what grounds? International relations. Pure BS. At what cost, if not lives than $100-300B/year and what that $ could do if spent wisely in the US?? Do you know what failure looks like in America?? No need to read a book-- get off your couch and go drive around.
- drofnats1
August 6, 2010 at 12:13pm
The purpose of the armed forces of the United States is to defend the United States. The American lives and treasure expended in warfare, if any are to be expended, must have as their purpose the protection of the United States. This does not preclude coalition warfare or the defense of another state where doing so protects the United States. We cannot police the world, we have no right to police the world, and we should not send American children to die or suffer grievous injury to do so. There should be but one exception to the principle of self-defense: To the extent that there exists international consensus for humanitarian intervention to protect civilians, we should be willing to participate with other nations as our contribution to world peace and security. Oddly enough, these two bases for the use of armed force pretty much conform to international law in its current state.
- roidubouloi
August 6, 2010 at 6:18pm
roi. What's your point?? And whatever your point, does International consensus really apply to Afghanistan, Iraq, Vietnam in 1970, Cambodia... and all sorts of other conflicts.
- drofnats1
August 6, 2010 at 8:24pm
My point, drofnats, is that the illiberalism that will likely descend upon Afghanistan once we leave is not adequate justification for being there, killing Afghans, and sacrificing American children. The justification for sending our soldiers to war is defense of the United States. Even if that was adequate justification for the war when it began, and I believe that it was, the opportunity for decisive victory was squandered when, instead of prosecuting the Afghan war to its conclusion, we stupidly invaded Iraq. That the Afghan war may have been justified at the outset does not give it perpetual justification regardless of changes of circumstance even if we ourselves brought about those changes. No, there was surely no international consensus on invading Iraq in 2003, or Vietnam or Cambodia, on humanitarian grounds. Nor does there exist any present international consensus on fighting insurgents in Afghanistan on that basis. Thus, if there is no longer a self-defense justification for fighting in Afghanistan -- even if there was once -- we should leave. This does not, however, relieve us of moral responsibility for our failure in Afghanistan. It is a heavy burden, collateral damage from the war crime we committed by invading Iraq.
- roidubouloi
August 6, 2010 at 9:09pm
What the heck is there to be ashamed of? The future of the lives of women in Afghanistan is no more relevant to or amendable by Americans or the American government; than the lives of African American slaves could be amended or changed by the people of China or the Chinese government in 1865. No other people or nation on the earth in 1865 could have moved African Americans to their status in the United States in 1965 (or 2010 for that matter). So how in heaven’s name could or should the people of China, Great Britain, France, Prussia, Russia or Mexico have been ashamed of the fact of the enslavement of African Americans in America in 1865? It would have been correctly seen then as a statement imperialist stupidity, had statesman of 145 years ago said such a thing.
- 12alainu
August 7, 2010 at 1:32pm
What there is to be ashamed of is that we exacted a price from Afghans in aid of our own security, but through our own fecklessness may end up leaving them rather worse off than when we appeared. The fact that one has a right to self-defense should not blind anyone to the fact that the exercise of that right can extract a heavy cost from innocents. By removing the existing government of Afghanistan by invasion and force and then failing through neglect to install a stable government in its place, we may have failed in the responsibility of minimizing the harm our self-defense imposes on others. While we had no duty to the people of Afghanistan had we not invaded, we assumed a duty by invading.
- roidubouloi
August 7, 2010 at 4:51pm
I did not understand Noga's point either; nor did I find in her link to Glavin's blog--which blog I glanced at only--any reference to Afghanistan. I find what Wieseltier and what Roidubouloi both say in their own different ways by and large right. Haas argues that the notion that al Qaeda can set up again in Afghanistan is an insufficient rationale for the war because there are any number of places it can set up and there is no American capacity to go to war against all those places. What distinguishes Afghanistan is that it was the launching pad of 9/11 and it seems politically impossible to countenance the prospect that it could become a launching pad again. That bedevils leaving. One final point: ...This means the abandonment of the focus on the central government that is the essence of the Petraeus doctrine... This is contrary to my understanding. I thought Coin was a "bottoms up" strategy that starts locally and expands nationally. This undertstanding sounds like it's along the lines of what Kissinger's comment, noted by Wieseltier, is pointing at.
- basman
August 7, 2010 at 4:53pm
"nor did I find in her link to Glavin's blog--which blog I glanced at only--any reference to Afghanistan." You can't have bothered much, basman, since Glavin has posted quite a few articles about Afghanistan and his own experience. I didn't link to any one in particular because there were too many of them. http://transmontanus.blogspot.com/2010/08/more-on-iran-julian-guantanamo-is.html http://transmontanus.blogspot.com/2010/08/injury-to-one-is-injury-to-all.html
- noga1
August 7, 2010 at 10:55pm
Noga, no need to bite Basman. The lead post on Glavin's blog on the 6th was about the Palestinian rights activist, Mohamed Abu Muailek, so it was a bit disorienting. Glavin's post on the 7th leaves no doubt about his topic. A picture is worth a thousand words. If Aisha makes it to the U.S., I would hope that she goes on a speaking tour before reconstructive surgery. I would like to see her and other women who have been blinded or mutilated by the Taliban appearing on Sunday morning talk shows. If we had had the opportunity to bring an Auschwitz inmate before Congress in the early years of WWII, it might have made the issue clearer to those in a previous generation who questioned the legitimacy of our involvement in foreign escapades. Who are we to blah, blah, blah... In terms of a strategy for winning, I was surprised to find myself nodding in agreement with Terry Glavin's prescription in his Saturday blog, both before, and after, I realized that he was quoting Mao. Somehow we still lack the necessary ruthlessness in this generation to win a war as dirty the war in Afghanistan. The Taliban have deliberately murdered 400 Afghan civilians this year alone without blinking while we agonize over accidental deaths caused by faulty targeting or collateral damage--as if these are in any remote way morally equivalent. Let's hope that the demented purists like Julian Assange don't convince the public that this is a regional issue and our involvement is a war-crime.
- willjames77
August 8, 2010 at 3:59pm
We are leaving Afghanistan. This is the intention and commitment of President Obama. He agreed to send more troops -- to give the "surge" concept a try in Afghanistan. This was done with very little hope in its success, but with a recognition that it had to be given a chance to work or a political price would be have to be paid. After all, he had opposed the Iraqi surge at a time when few would have thought of Iraq as "Sausalito" even in a snarky comparitive sense. Our exit will be slow, but it will begin next summer with significant reductions in our force levels there, and we will begin to pivot towards the drone and special forces warfare that Joe Biden has been advocating for some time. Make no mistake - this will not be a success either. Failure in Afghanistan was ensured in 2003, when we failed to follow through on the quick defeat of the Taliban. We are still dealing with the consequences of that negligence, and will do for years to come. Neil
- purcellneil
August 9, 2010 at 10:03am
"This was done with very little hope in its success, but with a recognition that it had to be given a chance to work or a political price would be have to be paid." This is a scary proposition. Does it mean that American soldiers were sent to kill and be killed with little expectation of success and for political expedience??
- NR165279
August 9, 2010 at 10:15am
testing
- noga1
August 9, 2010 at 10:18am
NR - I think you have to look at Afghanistan in 2009 as Obama did. We had been there a long time, most of that time making very little effort to "win" and consequently losing. The Bush surge in Iraq had been a success, and most of the Democrats had not supported it. Had Obama not even tried a similar strategy in Afghanistan, after proclaiming in the 2008 campaign that the Afghan war was one of necessity, there would indeed have been a political price. I think that must have weighed on the president's mind as he considered what to do. But I think he chose the path he did because he thought it was the best plan for America - in short, that after 8 years, America should not give up without having - at least for a reasonable period of time - made a serious commitment to the war. After all, once we leave, the situation in that region may deteriorate significantly from its present dismal condition. In fact, the reason there would be a political price for quitting without a fight is that it would have betrayed our security interests. If we begin to withdraw in 2011, it will either be because we have succeeded, or because success cannot be attained without a permanent occupation. As much as I am convinced that the latter is the more likely outcome, I agree with Obama's choice. He inherited a very bad situation -- Bush and company had neglected Afghanistan since the days leading up to the disgrace at Tora Bora. In the intervening years, the chances of success were greatly diminished. So - yes - I am sure that Obama sent soldiers to kill or be killed with little expectation of success, but I didn't mean to suggest that the calculus was primarily political. If you think about it, he pleased no one with his decision -- the hawks were dismayed that he set a timeline for the start of withdrawl of the troops, and the doves were appalled that he didn't bring them home now. I don't think you can call his solution to the problem politically expedient. Neil
- purcellneil
August 9, 2010 at 2:49pm
Neil, thanks for your thoughtful comments. I agree that no one was pleased with Obama's decision, nor should anyone be, given the deep ambivalence that it reveals. A troop surge with a simultaneous announcement of withdrawal plans suggests two feet pointing in different directions. Here's Jesus doing the same in the famous moment when Mary Magdalen reaches out to him: http://www.lib-art.com/imgpainting/4/9/9394-appearence-to-mary-magdalene-noli-duccio-di-buoninsegna.jpg "Should I stay, or should I go?" He's momentarily turned toward her, but the diagonals leading up and out suggest the final outcome of an exit stage-right. If we leave, apart from condemning the local populace to slavery and suffering under the Taliban, we know that we will be enabling the creation of another theocratic terror state that will seek to export its agenda and replicate itself wherever it can. To me the issue seems to be not whether, but how we can manage to stay. We need a sustainable, long-term strategy that doesn't bankrupt us and that gradually wears down our very determined opponents. It doesn't seem to me that we have any real option but to find one.
- willjames77
August 9, 2010 at 9:03pm
Will, I think a small force will probably stay in the region for a long time, but not in sufficient force to prop up Karzai or to keep the Taliban from returning to power. The scope of the mission will be to go after Al Qaeda with drones and special forces. Counterterrorism, not nation building or counterinsurgency. Neil
- purcellneil
August 10, 2010 at 5:32pm
Clearly Obama did not study the whole COIN manual, or he wouldn't have decided to pick and choose from it. Check out a summary of all of TNR's Afghanistan issue essays at http://therewillbewar.wordpress.com/
- qball02
August 15, 2010 at 9:08pm