August 22, 2017
MY CORNER by Boyd Cathey
What
Are America’s Vital Interests in Afghanistan?
Friends,
This morning I am reminded of a passage from that little book of sardonic
humor, 1066 and All That (originally
published in 1930). Its full title is: 1066
and All That: A Memorable History of England, comprising all the
parts you can remember, including 103 Good Things, 5 Bad Kings and 2 Genuine
Dates. It’s a very irreverent look at
British history, a kind of primer characterized by those unique touches of
British wit which manage to convey a skeptical view of the established history,
but always with an underlying point, humorously made.
One such “good thing” comes in the section on Afghanistan—or was it
Burma? The authors ask: “Why was there a THIRD Afghan War?” And the answer is:
“Because there had only been TWO Afghan Wars!” The Brits had fought two wars in
Afghanistan, 1839-1840 and 1878-1880, but then came a third in 1919, and all
three times Britain ended up basically leaving the country as unmanageable and,
in fact, ungovernable. Certainly, with
Imperial Russia extending its influence from the north in central Asia, various
British governments believed they needed to protect and shore up their
“northern flank,” the Northwest Frontier, separating greater India and Russian
territories to the north. Afghanistan became the buffer, but it never actually
came under direct British rule.
Sixty years later Soviet Russia attempted to impose Communism, or a form
thereof, on the mountainous kingdom. From 1979 until 1989 well over 100,000 front
line Soviet troops attempted to pacify the Afghans, only to leave disastrously
in 1989, tails between their legs…And, with more ominous portents for the
United States, suffering a momentous defeat that helped directly precipitate
the final death throes of the Soviet Communist state. Afghanistan, like Vietnam
for the United States twenty years previously, had not only been a “killing
field,” but had radically altered and depressed Russia and the views—and
spirit—of its citizenry.
Interestingly, during the Soviet-Afghan War it had been the United
States that supplied weapons to the Taliban fighters who, at that time, led the
insurgency against the Soviets; they were pictured as “freedom fighters against
Communism.” In effect, we were tacitly allied with them. Many of those same
weapons are now being used against the American-supported government in Kabul
and against the several thousand American troops stationed there.
As I watched President Trump deliver a difficult, even pained, speech
last night on future American involvement in the Afghan hinterlands, I could
not help but reflect on this desultory and unsettling history. I kept asking
myself this question: “What is the vital
interest of the United States in Afghanistan?”
I recall that after 9/11 the rationale for our involvement there was the
presence of Al Qaeda and its leader, Osama bin Laden, those responsible for the
destruction of the Twin Towers, that immense terrorist attack on America and
its citizens. Al Qaeda was involved in terrorism here, in the continental United States. And we were going to search
them out there and kill them where
they held up in their caves in the impenetrable mountain ranges of Afghanistan.
That rationale, at least, made some
sense strategically from the point of view of national security. We were
protecting our vital interests and responding to those who had committed acts
of terrorism against our citizens, specifically in New York City. We went there
to strike a death blow to Al Qaeda and take out its leader, Osama bin Laden.
But, what then, after Al Qaeda had transferred its center of operations
elsewhere? Since the ignominious defeat of the Soviets and the initial American
involvement after 9/11, the Taliban replaced Al Qaeda as the looming threat to
a new Afghan government that is propped up by the United States and American
arms. That situation was in large part the product of the globalist
Neoconservative policy advisors surrounding George W. Bush. Just like in Iraq,
or in Bosnia, and just as in other eventual failures in “nation building,”
Afghanistan would become their latest experiment in imposing liberal democracy
and all the fruits of representative government, women's rights, free elections,
and, no doubt, eventually diversity, same sex marriage, perhaps even
transgenderism, on the conservative Islamic Afghan tribes.
In fact, they had learned nothing from earlier failures; their globalist
and democratic ideology, which the Neocons posited as “universally applicable”
anywhere and everywhere, trumped all other considerations. And the result of
that policy and of the studied indifference and lack of a policy during the
Obama years brings us up to present and the very possible success of the
Taliban in its efforts to overthrow the hapless “central government” in Kabul
and expel the Americans—just as they forced 100,000 crack Soviet troops to
leave twenty-eight years ago.
The Afghan Taliban and Al Qaeda are by no means the same. The Taliban is
not an international or global Islamic terror network; rather, its objective is
an Islamic Afghan state which it would govern. As such, it presents no critically
intrinsic or international threat to the United States on the scale of ISIS or
Al Qaeda. No military man, no military leader, relishes the idea of “leaving a
job undone.” In Afghanistan, since the Bush administration, the United States
has more or less had two major objectives: assisting in the defeat of the
Taliban, and propping up a new “liberal democratic” government in Kabul. While
last night President Trump repeated his campaign promise that the United States
was not in the business of “nation building,” he reversed himself and acceded
to hawkish military and Neocon advisors regarding American involvement in
“search and destroy” missions. Apparently Generals Mattis, McMaster, and others
convinced him that approximately another 4,000 American soldiers are needed “to
get the job done.”
But what happens if in, say, six or ten months time those same generals
and advisors come back and say: “Mr. President, the 12,000 troops there aren’t
sufficient enough to get the job done, we need to double that number.” Or,
after the passage of an additional year, and their advice is that just maybe another 25,000 Americans might do the
trick? Does anyone remember the
portentous decision that President Kennedy made when he committed the first few
thousands of combat troops to stop international Communism in South Vietnam?
And back then we were at least, arguably, facing a very real and very
militaristic international threat from a global power that had stated that its
goal was “to bury us.”
It is fine and well that we state upfront that we are no longer in the
business of “nation building,” and also that Pakistan must cease its somewhat
surreptitious support for the Taliban. Indeed, Pakistan is a key to Taliban
success. But let us ask: Does not the halting, fitful decision announced last
night, against the president’s instinctive judgment and his campaign promises,
place us squarely on a slippery slope? Indeed, this morning I heard the
ultra-interventionist par excellence,
Senator Lindsey Graham, loudly praising the president to high Heaven for his
decision to send more troops to defend “freedom,” “democracy,” “human rights,”
the “equality of Afghan women,” that is, all the usual and accustomed ideology
conveyed in the slogans of Neocon foreign policy. And just about any time
Lindsey is for something, my antennae
go up, and I am agin’ it.
And what happens, now, to the agenda so forcefully and clearly
enunciated by Donald Trump during the 2016 election campaign? Does it fall by
the wayside, superseded by another desultory, unwinnable and steadily enlarging
war in a far off land mostly inaccessible and certainly uninviting to the vast
majority of American citizens?
I pray that this time—on this occasion—that the president and his
advisors are right. But history and constant experience argue strongly and
convincingly that they are not.
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