
Washington’s crisis over Afghanistan deepens
Bill Van Auken
The increasingly public dissension within the Obama administration and the military itself over the proposed escalation in
The sharp differences came to the fore last week with the leaking of cables sent by the
Eikenberry commanded US occupation forces in
The ambassador apparently argued that the deployment would do little good given the rampant corruption and political impotence of the Afghan puppet regime of President Hamid Karzai and would merely perpetuate and increase the dependence of the country’s security forces on US military might.
It is unclear whether Eikenberry was asked to submit his written opinion in the ongoing debate within Obama’s National Security Council. It is clear, however, that the warning from the ambassador and former commander cut across the proposal submitted by the current commander, Gen. Stanley McChrystal.
McChrystal’s proposal, which was leaked in September, calls for sending at least 40,000 more US troops—on top of the 68,000 already deployed—to wage an intensified counterinsurgency campaign with the aim of militarily suppressing the growing resistance to the
An alternative proposal has been advanced for sending another 10,000 troops to concentrate on training Afghan puppet forces. Two hybrid proposals call for 20,000 and 30,000 troops respectively.
Before the leaking of Eikenberry’s cables, it was widely reported that top officials within the administration had settled on plans to send between 30,000 and 40,000 troops. Before leaving for
Defense Secretary Robert Gates summed up this approach last Thursday. “I would say it was more, how can we combine some of the best features of several of the options to maximum good effect?” he told reporters. “How do we signal resolve and at the same time signal to the Afghans as well as the American people that this is not an open-ended commitment?”
Meanwhile, the administration is making a show of getting tough on the corruption that pervades the Karzai regime. Speaking in
In
Spiegel Online quoted a member of Karzai’s cabinet as saying: “The pressure on Karzai is horrible. He feels treated like the governor of a colony in the 18th century.”
Obama is scheduled to return to
Any attempt to prosecute the principal purveyors of corruption in
The dispute between the ambassador and the military commander has grown increasingly bitter, according to media reports. Citing the testimony of unnamed government officials, the New York Times reported that McChrystal “pointedly addressed” the issues raised in Eikenberry’s cables at a recent regularly scheduled meeting of US military and civilian staff at the
McChrystal condemned the ambassador’s position, saying its logical conclusion was “the helicopter on the roof of the embassy,” referring to the panicked withdrawal of the last
It seems unlikely that Eikenberry, a
When Eikenberry served as commander in
Undoubtedly, there exists widespread skepticism and outright opposition toward McChrystal’s counterinsurgency proposal within a senior command that for the most part joined the military in the immediate aftermath of the Vietnam War.
There is also growing concern within the Army that the eight years of war in
Further feeding such concerns, the Army on November 6 released a Mental Health Advisory Team report on troops deployed in
The Army’s survey found that 21 percent of its soldiers in
The survey also found that 31 percent of junior enlisted men reported problems with their marriages.
Citing discussions within focus groups formed during the survey, the report pointed to the growing popular opposition to the US-led occupation as a key source of falling morale. “They voiced frustration because they did not see progress,” the report said in relation to troops deployed in clearing roadside bombs. It quoted one soldier who stated, “Once we clear the route it gets another IED because the villagers are putting it there.”
Another soldier described being sent out on night patrols with little preparation or coordination. “We go out there [and] we think we're all going to die.”
The costs of the
In addition, the cost of training the Afghan police and military is expected to reach $50 billion over five years. This comes on top of the $130 billion appropriated for the
Another indication of the tensions building up within the
Criticizing proposals within the administration for cutting the number of troops requested by McChrystal, Kilcullen, a former Australian army officer, warned: “You either commit to D-Day and invade the continent or you get
The reference is to the 1956 humiliation of
No doubt, discussions within the
What Kilcullen ignores, however, is that the
The mounting costs of the
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