By Tom Bethell on 9.10.09 @ 6:07AM
How are we to distinguish "civilians" from "insurgents" in
Afghanistan?
For several days, the front pages of our leading newspapers have
been filled with stories about how NATO allies bombed two fuel
tankers in Afghanistan and accidentally killed some innocent
bystanders.
The strike, ordered by a German commander and implemented by an
American pilot, was "the deadliest use of German military force
since World War II," according to the Christian Science
Monitor. And this has "injected an intense, emotional debate
about the war" into a German election. It has preoccupied us,
too.
Here's how a recent page-one
story began in the Washington Post (Sept. 5). When
you read it, pretend it is 1944 and for "northern Afghanistan"
read "Germany":
The allies "launched an investigation Friday into a predawn
airstrike in which an American fighter jet bombed two hijacked
fuel trucks in northern Afghanistan, killing scores of people and
prompting accusations that many of the dead were civilians."
If I were General McChrystal, the top U.S. commander in
Afghanistan, I would ask: How are we to distinguish "civilians"
from "insurgents"? ("Insurgent" is the new polite word for the
enemy.) Are we to assume that anyone not carrying a rifle is a
civilian? Can we ask the UN to proclaim that combatants should
clarify matters by wearing uniforms?
In Afghanistan today, we are expected to wage a nice-guy war
against indeterminate bad guys and at the same time avoid
collateral damage against those who may one day be on our side.
Or maybe not. Their decision in that respect is understood to
depend on how nice we are in the interim. (Are we helping to
advance the cause of women's rights, for example? We only have to
spell out such conditionals to realize how absurd the whole
situation is.)
Our NATO allies fight under even more restrictive rules. The
Germans, for example, are not allowed to attack suspected enemy
forces unless those forces first attack them. They are targets,
in other words, but they are allowed to shoot back.
The U.S. has now invested its prestige in fighting a war against
a country which is not really a nation but a collection of tribes
who, when not united by a common external foe -- such as the
U.S., or before us the Soviet Union -- would be at each others'
throats. Meanwhile we have enlisted the loyalty of tens of
millions of Americans whose patriotism is engaged. They support
the U.S. side with all the fervor of sports fan cheering on the
home teams.
Most Americans no doubt recognize that the terms of engagement
against today's "insurgents" in faraway places are more
restrictive than they were against Nazi Germany. But I doubt if
they realize just how onerous and self-defeating the new rules
have become.
Here I will skirt the question whether the U.S. ought to be in
Afghanistan for geopolitical reasons, for reasons of prestige, or
for any other reason. I will simply say this. Fighting a nice-guy
war, in mountainous and extremely hostile terrain, where we
cannot easily distinguish friend from foe, and where we are
severely restricted in the way we use the weapons at our
disposal, is a losing proposition.
The man most imperiled politically by this state of affairs is
the President of the United States. It will be difficult for him
to pull out of such a conflict, and (I believe) impossible for
him to win it. As an interim measure, then, perhaps he should
spell out publicly what the new rules of engagement are. That
way, Americans citizens may more easily decide whether to support
our continued involvement in such a conflict.
topics:
Afghanistan War