Daniel Larison isn't sure there is any good that can come from
Republicans who oppose President Obama's Afghanistan policy on
anything other than noninterventionist grounds. He
writes, "With respect to Afghanistan, this coalition of the
unprincipled is particularly unwelcome, not least because the
Afghan war has always been as legitimate as the Iraq war was
not."
We are now learning that there were a lot of Democrats who were
as opportunistic in their support of Afghanistan -- it gave them
a good war to support while opposing the bad war in Iraq -- as
some Republicans are in their newfound desire to get out of
Afghanistan. But let's deal with Larison's statement about the
two wars on its own merits: In 2001-02, I think he is absolutely
right. Afghtanistan was not a preventive war, it was an act of
self-defense against the terrorists who attacked America and the
government that was giving them safe haven. But is this still
true in 2009? Remeber that the strictest noninterventionist
Republicans now opposing the Afghan surge -- Ron Paul, Walter
Jones, Jimmy Duncan -- all voted to go in eight years ago.
I'm open to the argument that preventing a worse government from
taking over Afghanistan would benefit our national security, in
part by making it more difficult for a worse government to take
over more strategically important Pakistan. But I am deeply
skeptical of our ability to accomplish much in terms of
nation-building there. So while I don't agree with, say,
Diana West about what constitutes just military tactics, I am
inclined to agree with her about the pointlessness of the course
we are now embarking upon.
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