By George H. Wittman on 11.14.08 @ 6:08AM
He wanted it -- but how can it not become his Vietnam?
Among the many things President-elect Barack Obama will have to
address is that Afghanistan, his preferred war site, is going to
cause far more trouble for his administration than he has been
willing, or able, to recognize.
Obama's military analysis in July that the United States might
have to commit "at least an additional two combat brigades" is
supported by September's projection of two or three additional
brigades by the commander of the NATO-led international force,
Gen. David McKiernan The numbers are a bit confusing because
McKiernan was talking about U.S. troops in excess of the 3,700
members of the 10th Mountain Division whose ETA is January '09.
Current figures of U.S. troops in-country is 33,000.
The operational reason for this increase primarily has been the
need for reinforcement of American military activity against
Taliban elements operating in the south and east. Secondarily the
objective will be to assign additional American units to the job
of field training Afghan Army strike forces. There are 68,000
members of the Afghan Army currently, with an increase to 80,000
to 140,000 expected as the first phase of build-up.
President-elect Obama is counting on the success of this eventual
buildup of the Afghan Army to the point of being able to take
over the entire job of counter-insurgency nationwide. NATO
military planners are reported to have estimated that such an
effort would require a 400,000 to 600,000 soldier Afghan Army.
One wonders whether Obama and his staff have done the math on
that plan.
So far President-elect Obama has ignored the blunt statement of
Britain's field commander, Brigadier Mark Carleton-Smith, who in
early October said, "We are not going to win this war." What
Carleton-Smith followed with, however, would fit into Obama's
wishful thinking about the future of the fight against the
Taliban. "…It's about reducing [the war] to the manageable level
of insurgency that's not a strategic threat and can be managed by
the Afghan Army."
In other words, the NATO forces led by the Americans aided by
elite British and Canadian units would reduce the Taliban
operations to a "manageable level" and then hand things over to
the Afghans. Sounds good, but reality in the field indicates that
arriving at that "manageable level" would require a multifold
increase in American, British, and other forces, which is just
not in the political economic cards.
Obama is all for the idea of negotiating with the Taliban. But
there is no need for these Islamic fighters to negotiate when
they do not feel pressed militarily to do so. Large parts of the
south and east of Afghanistan are for all intents under Taliban
control. When American ground forces, aided by air assets, strike
Taliban mountain encampments, they are forced to attack the
villages in which the fighters hide. Orchestrated political
uproar ensues.
When such attacks hit Pashtun tribal areas, the reverberations
are felt all the way to Kabul. President Hamid Karzai , a leading
Pashtun, himself, is forced to be vigorously indignant, and the
NATO command once again apologizes. Other than suggesting a
campaign to divide cooperative Taliban from hard core, how
President-elect Obama intends to break this cycle has never been
explained. He is consistent, however, on the matter outlined by
Brigadier Carleton-Smith of getting the war to the point of being
"manageable" so as to have the Afghan Army take over. That's not
a strategy; it's a prayer.
The problems of Afghanistan certainly are far too complex to be
solved by the limited military means available. That's the real
reason behind the British commander's statement. And, tragically,
so is the expectation of democracy breaking out in this legendary
land. Even now the plans for next year's elections are
threatening to dissolve. With the south and east Pashtun tribal
areas effectively blocked off from participating, President
Karzai is deeply worried that elections will result in pushing
him out of office.
Karzai would like the traditional Afghan method of choosing
leadership to be used. This would call for a massive council of
elders (loya jirga) where political favors can be
negotiated and leaders settled on. Hamid Karzai sees this form of
"representative democracy" far more advantageous to him than
leaving the vote up to general elections. And he may be right.
Obama will have to deal with this ticklish political problem
immediately upon entering office.
Barack Obama from the outset has tried to shift U.S. strategic
focus from Iraq to Afghanistan. For some rather simplistic reason
he thought there was greater legitimacy, and thus justification,
for American military forces to be involved in the latter
country. For Obama the fight to rid Afghanistan of the
religiously tyrannical Taliban movement that has supported Osama
bin Laden was righteous -- as opposed to freeing Iraq from the
proven genocidal grasp of Saddam Hussein.
At this stage of affairs the mountainous Afghan border with
Pakistan is purely a theoretical divider. Any military effort to
counter the Taliban as well as drive Al Qaeda from the Afghan
side therefore is made ineffectual by the Pakistani sanctuary.
The key is Pakistan, and getting its effective support has been
the principal American target for the last seven years. In other
words, Barack Obama's approach to Afghanistan sounds good but
recognizes none of the complexity endemic to the problem.
It may not be Obama's creation, but it is his chosen war. Welcome
to the real world of international security, Mr. President-elect!
topics:
Barack Obama, Afghanistan