
A mine clearing line charge detonates on Route 611 in Sangin district, Helmand province, Afghanistan as U.S. Marines clear road for travel. (photo: DVIDSHUB, Dec. 4, 2010)
written by Robert Greenwald and Derrick Crowe
On Thursday, December 16, 2010, the White House will use its December review to try to spin the disastrous Afghanistan War plan by citing “progress” in the military campaign, but the available facts paint a picture of a war that’s not making us safer and that’s not worth the cost.
Let’s take a look at just the very broad strokes of the information. After more than nine years and a full year of a massive escalation policy:
- the insurgency continues to gain in size and strength,
- more U.S. troops are dying than ever,
- more civilians are dying than ever,
- violence in the country continues to spike,
- Pakistan is playing a double game with the U.S. and
- the military strategy lacks credible prospects for a turnaround.
And yet, we are told we can expect a report touting security gains and “progress,” and that there’s virtually zero chance of any significant policy change from this review. It sort of begs the question: just what level of catastrophe in Afghanistan would signal that we need a change in direction?
Insurgency Growing and Getting Stronger
This cat is already out of the bag, no matter how hard the Pentagon tries to reel it back in. In the ironically named “Report on Progress Toward Security and Stability in Afghanistan,” published several weeks ago, the Pentagon told Congress that the insurgency’s organizational and geographic reach are qualitatively and geographically expanding. This growth is reflected in other statistics. According to USA TODAY, U.S. troops were hit with 7,000 more attacks this year compared to last year. About 3,800 troops were killed and injured by IEDs, about 1,000 more than last year. These statistics depict an insurgency with unbroken momentum, despite administration and military claims to the contrary. . . .
As the signers of the Afghanistan Call to Reason put it last week,
“Despite these huge costs, the situation on the ground is much worse than a year ago because the Taliban insurgency has made progress across the country. It is now very difficult to work outside the cities or even move around Afghanistan by road. The insurgents have built momentum, exploiting the shortcomings of the Afghan government and the mistakes of the coalition. The Taliban today are now a national movement with a serious presence in the north and the west of the country. Foreign bases are completely isolated from their local environment and unable to protect the population.”
The insurgents’ momentum is clearly shown by the number of attacks they’ve initiated across the country so far this year. According to the Afghan NGO Safety Office (ANSO),
“The [Taliban] counter-offensive is increasingly mature, complex & effective. Country wide attacks have grown by 59% (p.10) while sophisticated recruitment techniques have helped activate networks of fighters in the North where European NATO contributors have failed to provide an adequate deterrent (p.11). Some provinces here are experiencing double the country average growth rate (p.12) and their districts are in danger of slipping beyond any control. Clumsy attempts to stem the developments, through the formation of local militia’s and intelligence-poor operations, have served to polarize communities with the IEA capitalizing on the local grievances that result. In the South, despite more robust efforts from the US NATO contingents, counterinsurgency operations in Kandahar and Marjah have similarly failed to degrade the IEA’s ability to fight, reduce the number of civilian combat fatalities (p.13) or deliver boxed Government.”
Here’s a helpful chart from ANSO’s report that shows the level of ever-escalating insurgent attacks across Afghanistan.

The White House wants to weasel out of the implications of the data above by saying that the reason the statistics are going south is because, as Petraeus so often says, “when you take away areas important to the enemy, the enemy fights back.” So, we’re “on offense,” as President told troops few weeks ago during his trip to Afghanistan. Well, so what? The 1976 Buccaneers went on offense, too, but that didn’t mean they won games.
When the administration claims that they’re seeing “progress” in pockets of southern Helmand and Kandahar (a claim open to serious dispute, by the way, and strangely contradicted by some of Petraeus’ own spin), they’re displaying a familiar kind of confusion between the tactical and the strategic, one that seems to always pop up when we’re confronting a failed war.
“One of the iconic exchanges of Vietnam came, some years after the war, between Col. Harry Summers, a military historian, and a counterpart in the North Vietnamese Army. As Summers recalled it, he said, ‘You never defeated us in the field.’ To which the NVA officer replied: ‘That may be true. It is also irrelevant.’”
Pakistan’s Double Game
That brings us to Pakistan. According to the New York Times, two new National Intelligence Estimates “offer a more negative assessment [than the administration's upcoming review] and say there is a limited chance of success unless Pakistan hunts down insurgents operating from havens on its Afghan border.” But that’s some serious wishful thinking, since Pakistan has long used the Taliban as a cat’s paw to combat growing Indian influence in Afghanistan. Pakistan wants the militants who threaten it internally suppressed, but it finds the militants who threaten the Karzai regime useful. Fixing that problem would requite U.S. policy follow the roots of their support of the Taliban all the way up to the India/Pakistan animosity, and nothing–nothing–in the U.S.’s military-first strategy comes close to doing so.
Troops Pay the Price
While U.S. politicians nibble at the edges of this real crisis, U.S. troops pay the bloody price, a price that’s gotten much worse with the arrival of the new escalation policy over the course of this year. At least 874 American troops have been killed in the war so far this year, compared to 317 for all of 2009. In the NATO hospital near Kandahar, doctors performed a major amputation once very other day in September.
These statistics go hand-in-hand with the huge rise in civilian casualties, which number some 2,400 this year so far, according to the Campaign for Innocent Civilians in Conflict.
Time for the White House to Get Real
The Obama administration is kidding itself if it thinks the American people will buy this attempted whitewash of the failure of the escalation strategy in Afghanistan. We are in the grips of a desperate unemployment crisis, wrapped in a larger economic meltdown. We are not ignorant of the $2 billion dollars sent per day on the war, and we want that money, and those young people, back here at home so we put people back to work.
Following the death of Ambassador Richard Holbrooke, the president should take a step back and realize that we all have to travel down that road some day. He should think about what legacy he wants to leave behind him. Postponing a final end to U.S. military action in Afghanistan until 2014 puts U.S. taxpayers and American troops on the hook for an enormous investment of blood and treasure in a failing enterprise with no prospects for a turnaround.
A real, honest review would objectively conclude that the enterprise is failing and that the best alternative is to start removing U.S. troops immediately to stave off continued economic and social damage caused by this war that’s not making us safer nor worth the cost.
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44 Comments

May the invaders and occupiers suffer a total inglorious defeat.
Unless the United States adopts the Roman (and German) solution of physically liquidating villages and peoples who resist, this is a lost cause. I am expecting a Republican to recommend that policy before long.
Ralph Nader, Ron Paul, and myself have proven the Old Book was right,” A prophet is not without honor, save in his own country.” Our insane and evil war mongering keeps doing more damage to ourselves than our enemies. Obama needs to get us out of the entire Asian continent within 90 days. Our troops are only clay pigeons in South Korea, our troops have debauched so many Okinawans that the entire prefecture hates our guts,we do nothing but make the Taliban and it`s pal Al Qeda stronger every time we fire a predator and it is time Iraq got busy killing each other or getting along without 50,000 of our soldiers doing nothing but playing video games and wasting food. Not one single stinking democrat has ever got up in congress and said Afghanistan is a dung heap and the graveyard of invaders and Obama must be nuts to keep our kids there one more second.
Zenostoa
I’m driving along the other day and an NPR voice informs me that the ‘Taliban’ used to be a regular organizaton, with members and a hierarchy of sorts and a mission, all the usual accouterments of an organized organization. But now ‘Taliban’ means ‘Everybody who wants all the foreigners to leave.’
If that is really the case, an awful lot of Afghanis must be Taliban. One can only hope that the US doesn’t just decide to kill them all.
If a Republican suggests ethnic cleansing, I’m sure Mr. Bipartisan would think it’s a pretty good idea.
There are only two ways out of Afghanistan. The first is to simply leave in an orderly manner as soon as possible.
The second is to stay, then be forced out trailing blood. Like the Russians did, in our own lifetime.
It’s your choice, Americans. Call me a cynic, but I find it hard to believe Americans would go for the first way. I’ve really come to believe that Americans love war, violence, cunning, and cruelty.
Out of
VietnamIraqAfghanistan now!What is our strategic objective is a natural gas pipeline that doesn’t go through Iran and Russia worth the cost? Is there anything in Afghanistan that justifies the cost?
We are not ignorant of the $2 billion dollars sent per day on the war, and we want that money, and those young people, back here at home so we put people back to work.
Sent per day? Spent perhaps?
A couple of related articles from TomDispatch:
http://www.tomdispatch.com/blog/175328/tomgram%3A__engelhardt%2C_epitaph_from_the_imperial_graveyard/
http://www.tomdispatch.com/blog/175329/tomgram%3A_fatima_bhutto%2C_the_war_against_pakistan/
“just what level of catastrophe in Afghanistan would signal that we need a change in direction?”
The only hopes seems to be for the Afghans to throw the US out of their country.
How will the Obamabots spin more war in Afghanistan as another brilliant political move by Obama.
They haven’t finished the pipeline yet and are protecting what they do have. Until that is finished nothing will change. Oh, that is if China doesn’t get there to grab it first.
Obama promised the escalation of War in Afghanistan in order to promise the Military Industrial Complex its blood-soaked 2 billion a day.
Austerity Measures for us, Tax Cuts For Millioniares and Two billion a day for the MIC.
“Foreign bases are completely isolated from their local environment and unable to protect the population.”
Who protects the population from the foreign bases?
Unfortunately we are still and will forever remain in Iraq.
50 000+ troops
100 000 + contractors XE Blackwater (all bill’s footed by taxpayers)
Meanwhile one city in Michigan just laid off 5 crossing guards to save 8 thousand dollars. So when a child get’s run over remember this number:
Cost of 1 soldier for 1 year in Afghanistan 1 million.
Obama is a useless spineless craven corporate owned milatary stoogeof the Military Industrial Complex.
Oh by the way I donated to Obama
You can’t protect thousand of miles of gas pipeline not in a country with that many explosives and that many people who hate us.
Why can’t we build Pyramids instead of fight stupid wars? We could let Pyramid profiters overcharge us for stone.
More eleventy seven dimensional chess no doubt.
http://blog.buzzflash.com/node/12096
I’ve been saying this is about the Soviet pipeline for years. The above link adds to my suspicion.
Why not a robust space exploration program? Think of all of the technologies that the moon program gave us. Think how much a properly funded Mars program would.
As long as our War Machine makes obscene profits we’ll never stop warring. I never, ever thought I would despise and revile a President of the United States as much as I did G.W. Bush. Obama has proven me wrong about that and many other things.
Space Program cool a jobs program would be even better
A robust space program would be a very effective long term jobs program.
The war machine could make obscene profits off of something else something that doesn’t kill people.
What do you have in mind?
The fact that they don’t just goes to show you that they like killing people.
Drive by …
And guess who supported and organized them
Didn’t we support and organize them to fight the commies?
War has been very “good” to America, and such an appreciation has a lot of historical and cultural backing. So much so that we think it can accomplish things that in fact it can’t (like win hearts and minds, or spread freedom and democracy). We worship the military. The US’s one recent loss, Vietnam, was such a shock to the abiding faith that war is good and America is exceptional, that the country refused to even look at the reality of that loss and so never learned the real lesson or understood why–a people who we had objectified and dehumanized couldn’t have possibly had more power or will to win than we did. So we repeat our actions in Afghanistan, while oil companies and those at the top of the MIC food chain bank on private profits at public expense. But barring “liquidating villages,” who rolls over for a foreign invader bent on theft and murder? Would you quit that fight?
But the daughters and sons of people who won’t profit from that pipeline can sure as hell die trying.
The US has hitched its wagon to imperial war and can’t quit that monkey barring the crash and burn of a paradigm shift?
Green power is my choice building green cars for everyone would take years, the space program, also rebuilding America’s infrastructure
Thats the scary part.
There was extensive research done on US GIs during and after WWII by Army psychologists who estimated that psycho/sociopaths showed up in the Infantry at rates 3 to 4 times higher than they did in the civilian population and accounted for a disproportionate amount of the killing done by small arms fire.
“GRITtv: Lee Camp: Stop Hitting Yourself, America” (link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XaZMPfAWKkM )
He’ll trot out Big Dawg again and the pundits will wax poetic about the mojo of it all.
God, this is awesome. Our very own politico-military seminar! Thank you so much Messrs. Greenwald & Crowe.
But, but, but, everyone here is overlooking the simple fact that a lot of people are making BIG MONEY from these warz. They are making outstanding “progress” on their bottom lines.
You are not at true American if you don’t support that.
Yes. Most people have to be carefully taught to kill.
Though it does good deeds like build dams and stuff the military exists for the dual purposes of destroying things and killing people. We may or may not need such. But the military and its philosophy is not the place to look for creativity and institutional freedoms.
Pride goeth before destruction, And a haughty spirit before a fall.
Proverbs 16:18
Anyone want to take a shot at explaining how the dems are going to run with Obama on sustaining this misery in 2012?
The comments about insurgence hiding in Pak. remind me so much of Vietnam. We could never win that war because the enemy always had safe refuge in the North (and we never knew who we were fighting). I still hear some conservatives claim we could have won in Vietnam. Sounds like we’re running an experiment to prove it.