By Alan Caruba
You don’t have to be a soldier or
diplomat to ask whether President Obama’s withdrawal of our troops from
Afghanistan on December 31 is a good idea or not. Consider what happened when he
withdrew our troops from Iraq in 2011. The answer to that is the Islamic State
which filled the vacuum left behind.
On December 25, Obama addressed troops
stationed at Marine Corps Base in Kaneohe Bay, Hawaii. He told them that their
service had given Afghanistan a chance “to rebuild its own country” whatever
that means. Having been invaded over and over again for centuries, one wonders
what country Obama was referring to.
“We are safer,” said Obama, “It’s not
going to be a source of terrorist attacks again.” This is an illusion. Obama
cannot make such predictions anymore than the Afghans can. So far, when it comes
to foreign policy, Obama has a nearly unbroken record of
failure.
Since the U.S.-led invasion in 2001,
Afghan civilian casualties are estimated to have been 10,000 while 2,200 U.S.
troops have been killed. The war is estimated to have cost $1 trillion, plus
another $100 billion for reconstruction.
We have been in Afghanistan for 13
years and are scheduled to completely leave the country at the end of 2016 when
Obama leaves office. As 2014 comes to a close, the White House had planned to
have 9,800 troops there. Together with Iraq, we will have 15,000 troops where we
have been fighting al Qaeda since 2001. In Iraq, the war on Islamic
terrorism forced the U.S. to return to fight ISIS. There are about 6,000 other
international troops aiding us.
Afghanistan is likely to be a repeat
of what occurred in Iraq. The cruel truth of the world we share is that the
United States must be the planet’s policeman, leading coalitions of others who
join us, or the bad guys who threaten us all will take over. From the Roman
Empire to the British one, this role is a vital one.
Corruption is the
Enemy
Afghanistan has a Taliban problem, but
close observers identify its corruption as the main enemy of progress. You can
fight an enemy you can see, but fighting an inbred cultural problem is a whole
other problem.
In April, testifying before a Senate
subcommittee, framing his opening remarks in the form of a letter to whoever
would win the presidency in then forthcoming elections, retired Gen. John Allen,
a former commander of U.S. and NATO forces in Afghanistan from 2011 to 2013,
said that corruption, not the Taliban is the greater threat. “For too long we
focused our attention on the Taliban as the existential threat to Afghanistan,”
but compared to the scope and magnitude of corruption, “they are an
annoyance.”
Gen. Allen is so highly regarded that
he is the President’s “special envoy” to more than 60 nations and groups that
have joined a coalition to defeat the Islamic State. From just one
reconnaissance mission per month after our withdrawal from Iraq, the U.S. now
flies 60 per day. That’s what happens when you don’t maintain a force to defeat
an enemy. Referring to the Islamic State Gen. Allen testified that “We’re not
just fighting a force, you know, we’re fighting an
idea.”
Gen. Allen’s view of the issue of
corruption in Afghanistan was supported by John Sopko, the special inspector
general for Afghanistan reconstruction who addressed a gathering at the Middle
East Institute in May, saying “corruption is more serious than the
insurgency.” Not only does it waste
money, Sopko noted that it prevents helpful projects from being completed, robs
the Afghan people of the resources they need, and makes them lose faith in their
government.
Still hopeful for change, Afghans went
to the polls in September and elected Dr. Ashraf Ghani Ahmadzai, a former
finance minister as their new president to replace Hamid Karzai. He will share
power with a former foreign minister, Abdullah Avbudullah. Typical of Mideast
politics, Ghani is an ethnic Pashtun and Abdullah was backed by
Tajiks.
When the then-Soviet Union decided to
invade Afghanistan in 1979 following a Marxist coup, hundreds of Afghans left
the country as refugees. By the time the Soviets withdrew in 1983, there were
3.2 million refugees, mostly in Pakistan. The invasion so weakened support
within the Soviet Union that it collapsed in 1991.
When President Bush struck back at al
Qaeda after 9/11 he successfully bombed them out of existence there, but decided
to send troops as well. Bush’s goal was to deprive al Qaeda of a safe base, but
also to establish a modern democratic government there as a model for the
Islamic world. He repeated this in Iraq when he invaded to remove its dictator,
Saddam Hussain. A tribal culture, the Middle East has had difficulties emerging
into the modern world.
Prior to Obama’s reassurances to the
Marines, the White House announced the release of our more prisoners from
Guantanamo. They were repatriated to Afghanistan. If he continues to empty out
Guantanamo, the U.S. will not lack for enemies bent on
revenge.
As for our troops, they have remained
in Afghanistan and Iraq ever since 9/11. Obama may want to withdraw or at least
reduce the number of troops, but recent history suggests that until ISIS and
comparable forces are defeated, future U.S. Presidents will have to maintain our
forces there for many years to come.
© Alan Caruba, 2014
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