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Afghanistan
Afghanistan: Time to Stop Nation-Building
2009-09-01
It's that clever George Will, writing in the Washington Post.
WASHINGTON -- "Yesterday," reads the e-mail from Allen, a Marine in Afghanistan, "I gave blood because a Marine, while out on patrol, stepped on a (mine's) pressure plate and lost both legs." Then "another Marine with a bullet wound to the head was brought in. Both Marines died this morning."

"I'm sorry about the drama," writes Allen, an enthusiastic infantryman willing to die "so that each of you may grow old." He says: "I put everything in God's hands." And: "Semper Fi!"

Allen and others of America's finest are also in Washington's hands. This city should keep faith with them by rapidly reversing the trajectory of America's involvement in Afghanistan, where, says the Dutch commander of coalition forces in a southern province, walking through the region is "like walking through the Old Testament."
Yes, do let's keep faith with those who gave their all by making it worth nothing.
U.S. strategy -- protecting the population -- is increasingly troop-intensive while Americans are increasingly impatient about "deteriorating" (says Adm. Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff) conditions.
And what part do opinion pieces claiming "Afghanistan is another Viet Nam," by writers like George Will have to do with that impatience, pray tell?
The war already is nearly 50 percent longer than the combined U.S. involvements in two world wars, and NATO assistance is reluctant and often risible.
The way it works with anything is that you pay with money (troop numbers, when it's a war) or you pay with time. We paid World Wars I and II with money, which people like George Will has worked to make sure is impossible. Therefore our only choice is to pay with time.
U.S. strategy is "clear, hold and build." Clear? Taliban forces can evaporate and then return, confident that U.S. forces will forever be too few to hold gains. Hence nation-building would be impossible even if we knew how, and even if Afghanistan were not the second-worst place to try: The Brookings Institution ranks Somalia as the only nation with a weaker state.

Military historian Max Hastings says Kabul controls only about a third of the country -- "control" is an elastic concept -- and "'our' Afghans may prove no more viable than were 'our' Vietnamese, the Saigon regime." Just 4,000 Marines are contesting control of Helmand province, which is the size of West Virginia. The New York Times reports a Helmand official saying he has only "police officers who steal and a small group of Afghan soldiers who say they are here for 'vacation.'"

Afghanistan's $23 billion GDP is the size of Boise's.
According to Wikipedia, the Afghan economy grew 3.5% last year and is forecast to grow 9% in 2009. That's much better than the U.S., f'r instance.
Counterinsurgency doctrine teaches, not very helpfully, that development depends on security, and that security depends on development. Three-quarters of Afghanistan's poppy production for opium comes from Helmand. In what should be called Operation Sisyphus, U.S. officials are urging farmers to grow other crops. Endive, perhaps?
Sisyphus wasn't able to double cereal production in the past six years. Presumably cereals are more suited to the Afghan climate than endive.
Even though violence exploded across Iraq after, and partly because of, three elections,
I do not understand what the Washington Post thinks they getting when they pay this man to explain his thoughts.
Afghanistan's recent elections were called "crucial." To what? They came, they went, they altered no fundamentals, all of which militate against American "success," whatever that might mean.
A series of successful elections reinforces the idea that the government is of the people, not over the people, which eventually leads people to choose politics as the way they affect their rulers rather than terrorism or coups de main. It also reinforces the idea in those who would be the rulers that it's an awful lot more fun to win an election and have your opponent writhe in impotent defeat than just send out an assassination squad or go to war.
Creation of an effective central government? Afghanistan has never had one. U.S. Ambassador Karl Eikenberry hopes for a "renewal of trust" of the Afghan people in the government, but The Economist describes President Hamid Karzai's government -- his vice presidential running mate is a drug trafficker -- as so "inept, corrupt and predatory" that people sometimes yearn for restoration of the warlords, "who were less venal and less brutal than Mr. Karzai's lot."
The Israelites following Moses around the desert yearned sometimes for the fleshpots of Egypt, too. No doubt Mr. Wills years for the days before those pesky weblogs fisked everything he wrote, and found it empty. The universe moves on, and his writing would improve immensely were he to try to keep up.
Adm. Mullen speaks of combating Afghanistan's "culture of poverty." But that took decades in just a few square miles of the South Bronx.
No. It took decades to realize the old methods weren't working. The change went fairly quickly once they stopped doing it wrong.
Gen. Stanley McChrystal, U.S. commander in Afghanistan, thinks jobs programs and local government services might entice many "accidental guerrillas" to leave the Taliban. But before launching New Deal 2.0 in Afghanistan, the Obama administration should ask itself: If U.S. forces are there to prevent re-establishment of al-Qaeda bases -- evidently there are none now -- must there be nation-building invasions of Somalia, Yemen and other sovereignty vacuums?
A good question. The Somalia jihadis are getting a great deal of help from Pakistan. Given that a win in Afghanistan depends on bringing the Pakistani Taliban and their ISI enablers to heel, there is a real probability that the wild dogs in Somalia would subsequently calm down a bit. It turns out supporting a gang of jihadis is fairly expensive, even when they aren't successful at doing anything more than painting the architecture when their bottoms explode.
U.S. forces are being increased by 21,000 to 68,000, bringing the coalition total to 110,000.
Golly, that sounds like a surge. How long did the Iraqi surge take to work? Perhaps we should consider giving the Afghan one about the same time before labelling it a failure.
About 9,000 are from Britain, where support for the war is waning. Counterinsurgency theory concerning the time and the ratio of forces required to protect the population indicates that, nationwide, Afghanistan would need hundreds of thousands of coalition troops, perhaps for a decade or more. That is inconceivable.

So, instead, forces should be substantially reduced to serve a comprehensively revised policy: America should do only what can be done from offshore,
A bit difficult in a land-locked country...
using intelligence, drones, cruise missiles, airstrikes and small, potent special forces units, concentrating on the porous 1,500-mile border with Pakistan, a nation that actually matters.

Genius, said de Gaulle, recalling Bismarck's decision to halt German forces short of Paris in 1870, sometimes consists of knowing when to stop. Genius is not required to recognize that in Afghanistan, when means now, before more American valor, such as Allen's, is squandered.
Poor Mr. Will definitely does not see genius looking back at him from the mirror.
Posted by:GolfBravoUSMC

#3  There is Afghanistan and there is Afghanistan.

The oil/gas and most of the wheat, and most of the modernization and progress, seem to be in the north of the country in the majority Tajik and Turkomen regions, the former stronghiolds of the Northern Alliance. Lets call them Afghanistans Kurds.
Posted by: buwaya   2009-09-01 15:29  

#2  According to Wikipedia, Afghanistan used to supply natural gas to the Soviet Union, and the wells are still there, capped when the Soviets left. And cereal production, as I just noted in the in-lines above (not written when crosspatch posted -- sorry about that) has just about double since we got there. And while the unemployment number bandied about is a horrid 40%, Afghanistan has absorbed 4 million returning refugees in the last few years. Granted that some were thrown out recently by Pakistan, most returned willingly, meaning they are willing to bet their lives and the lives of their children that things will continue to improve.
Posted by: trailing wife   2009-09-01 15:01  

#1  You can't grow alternative crops in places that for the most part don't even have electricity. If you were to manage to get the province to grow wheat, where would you put it and how would you get it there?

People have no idea how primative most of Afghanistan is. There are no "gas stations", no rural electrification, no hard surface roads. It is like the US at the turn of the 20th century except with satellite phones and radios. Most energy production in Afghanistan comes from wood burning. More energy is produced from wood than from coal, oil, and gas combined. I don't believe there is even an oil refinery in Afghanistan.

We are going to have to "clear and hold" for a couple of generations. Our country developed pretty quickly between 1900 and 1950 ... but it took 50 years to do it. First you need to teach the population to read. That is going to take several years just doing that.

Posted by: crosspatch   2009-09-01 13:50  

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