Robert Pape , professor of political science at the University of
Chicago testified today before the House Armed Services
Terrorism, Unconventional Threats and Capabilities Subcommittee.
Arguing against a troop increase in Afghanistan, the professor
argued instead for a containment strategy where Western and
Afghan forces would protect towns from increasing Taliban
takeover but gradually scale-down forces while still financially
aiding locals from afar. Pape believes that the presence of
American troops has largely caused the insurgency to take place.
He says in his New York
Times piece, “The more Western troops we have sent to
Afghanistan, the more the local residents have viewed themselves
as under foreign occupation, leading to a rise in suicide
bombings and other terrorist attacks.”
While it seems to be common sense that the presence of American
troops in a combat area increases the chances of American troops
being attacked, the assertion that the presence of the Western
troops is the cause of the violence seems dubious. Rather, the
relative absence of American troops has left a power vacuum in
South Afghanistan that the Taliban has exploited to develop an
insurgency. As recently in 2006, there were only 20,000 American
forces in Afghanistan, while there were 160,000 American forces
in Iraq during the 2007 surge– a country smaller than Afghanistan
in both geographic size and population. During this time, the
Afghan Taliban made advances over the Pashtun region and suicide
attacks against Americans and Afghan government security forces
skyrocketed to an average of around 120 incidences per year since
2006.
If we try a containment strategy without more troops, there is
absolutely no guarantee that the Taliban will not continue to
strengthen and secure more Afghan towns, including Kandahar.
Meanwhile, Al-Qaeda will enjoy a safe haven in the
Taliban-occupied areas and have resources available to train
foreigners for attacks in Western Countries. The safe havens
allowed the network to flourish in the late 1990s when American
troops were entirely absent, and that flourishing safe haven is
reported to be happening again along the lawless Pakistan
border.
Our troops are not the problem, but rather, the problem is the
Taliban. Our troops could be part of the solution in defeating
Al-Qaeda and the Taliban in Afghanistan if the requests for
additional troops are approved by the president.