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Go Home Riedel: Counterterrorism Won't Work

THE PLANK SEPTEMBER 28, 2009

Riedel: Counterterrorism Won't Work

Former CIA man Bruce Riedel, who chaired Obama's (first) Afghanistan strategy review earlier this year, writing with co-author Michael O'Hanlon, warns against what you might call the Biden strategy:

The fundamental reason that a counterterrorism-focused strategy fails is that it cannot generate good intelligence. Al-Qaeda and the Taliban know not to use their cellphones and satellite phones today, so our spy satellites are of little use in finding extremists. We need information from unmanned low-altitude aircraft and, even more, from people on the ground who speak the language and know the comings and goings of locals. But our Afghan friends who might be inclined to help us with such information would be intimidated by insurgent and terrorist forces into silence — or killed if they cooperated — because we would lack the ability to protect them under a counterterrorism approach....

The second reason a counterterrorism-oriented strategy would fail is that, if we tried it, we would likely lose our ability to operate unmanned aircraft where the Taliban and al-Qaeda prefer to hide. Why? If we pulled out, the Afghan government would likely collapse. The secure bases near the mountains of the Afghan-Pakistan border, and thus our ability to operate aircraft from them, would be lost. Our ability to go after Afghan resistance fighters would deteriorate. And the recent momentum we have established in going after Pakistani extremists would be lost.

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Sigh. Where's General Patton when you need him, right? Or, perhaps, General Curtis Lemay? Time to bring in the old Soviet commanders and waterboard them for tips about how their own anti-counterterrorism tactics in Afghanistan almost prevailed but for the Bidens in the Kremlin. But then as Karzai creeps closer and closer to the Stalin model of the unitary executive government maybe he and Cheney can devise a more effective....if draconian....solution. We can burn the Afghan village down to the ground in order to save it. Maybe with neutron bombs to keep the infrastructure intact. We might need that some day to build more pipelines and such. george

- iambiguous

September 28, 2009 at 3:53pm

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All depends on what you mean by "work". First the goal, then the strategy and tactics to achieve it. We should maintain the current Afghan platform for the "counter-terrorism" mission, but that doesn't mean making Afghanistan EU-ready. I see no reason we can't just accept Afghanistan as it is, cut deals with various war-lords as convenient, give the occasional tip of the hat to whatever government is in Kabul, and forget about nation building.

- Robert Powell

September 29, 2009 at 9:43am

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