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      Karazai's Washington Visit:  
	The War Awaiting Kandahar  
	By Ramzy Baroud 
      Al-Jazeerah, ccun.org, May 24, 2010 
	   Clad in his usual attire of a colorful, striped robe, Afghan 
	President Hamid Karazai appeared more like an emperor as he began his fourth 
	day in Washington. Accompanying him on a somber visit to the Arlington 
	National Cemetery were US Defense Secretary Robert Gates, Chairman of the 
	Joint Chiefs of Staff Adm. Mike Mullen and top US (and NATO) commander in 
	Afghanistan Stanley A. McChrystal - the very men responsible for the war and 
	occupation of his own country.    The well-choreographed and 
	clearly-rehearsed visit seemed set on giving the impression that the 
	relationship between Karzai and these men was that of an independent, 
	confident leader seeking the support of a benevolent superpower.    
	But what were Karazai’s real reasons for visiting Washington?    
	Typical media analyses have for months misrepresented the apparent chasm 
	between Afghanistan and the US under Obama’s administration. Even if this 
	administration was genuinely discontented with Karazai’s policies, at least 
	until very recently, the resentment had little to do with the reasons 
	offered by media ‘experts’. It was not because Karazai was failing to 
	deliver on governance, end corruption and so on. Let’s face it, the US war 
	in Afghanistan was never morally grounded, and it never could be either. Not 
	unless the militant mindset that governs US foreign policy somehow acquires 
	a complete overhaul.    For now, let’s face up to reality. Bad days 
	are awaiting Afghanistan. True, it is hard to imagine how Afghanistan’s 
	misfortunes could possibly get any worse. But they will, particularly for 
	those living in Kandahar in the south. Seated next to Karazi during his 
	Washington visit, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton promised that her 
	country will “not destroy Kandahar in order to save Kandahar.”    The 
	statement may sound assuring, but it is in fact ominous and very troubling. 
	Clinton was referring to the Bush administration’s policy in both Iraq and 
	Afghanistan. In fact, she candidly admitted this by saying, “This is not 
	Fallujah,” referring to the Iraqi city which was almost completely destroyed 
	in 2004 by a massive US Marine assault intended to ‘save’ the city. “Lessons 
	have been learned since Iraq,” stated Clinton.   But if lessons were 
	truly learned, then why the fictitious language, the silly assertion that 
	the real intention is to in fact ‘save’ Kandahar? And what other strategy 
	does the US have in store for Afghanistan, aside from the irritating debate 
	on whether to use unmanned drones or do the killing face to face?   
	Was Karazai in Washington to provide a cover for what is yet to come in the 
	Taliban’s southern stronghold? It’s not unlikely. Considering past and 
	repeated claims of a growing divide between Kabul and Washington, a bloody 
	attack on Kandahar could in fact be seen as the US acting unilaterally in 
	Afghanistan. Add to this scenario the constant and continued calls made by 
	Karazai himself to engage Taliban. A US escalation without public consent 
	from Karazai himself couldn’t possibly be seen as a part of a joint 
	strategy.    At a presentation at the United States Institute of Peace 
	(USIP), Karazi spoke of an extended US commitment to Afghanistan that would 
	last “beyond the military activity right now ... into the future, long after 
	we have retired, and perhaps into our grandsons' and great-grandsons' -- and 
	great-granddaughters' -- generations.”   “This is something the Afghan 
	people have been seeking for a long, long time,” he said.    Clinton 
	too was concerned about the plight of the ‘people’. She promised to “help 
	the people of Kandahar to recover the entire city to be able to put it to 
	the use and the benefit of the people of Kandahar…We're not fighting the 
	Afghan people…We're fighting a small minority of very dedicated, ruthless 
	extremists who unfortunately are able to enlist young men... for a variety 
	of reasons and send them out onto the battlefield.”    Although 
	Clinton wanted us to believe that the Bush era is over, with a new dawn in 
	US foreign policy upon us, she used almost the exact same language, phrased 
	in almost the exact same context that the Bush administration used prior to 
	its major military assaults aimed at ‘saving the people’ from some ‘ruthless 
	extremists’, whether in Iraq or Afghanistan.    And a major assault 
	there will be, for the Taliban’s counter-surge is threatening the US’s 
	counterinsurgency operations.   A quick scan of an article by Marie 
	Colvin in Marjah, Afghanistan, where the Taliban is once more making its 
	presence very clear, highlights the challenges facing the US military 
	throughout the country. Entitled ‘Swift and bloody: the Taliban’s revenge,’ 
	the May 9 article starts with the claim that “rebels have returned.” 
	Throughout, the report was dotted with similar assertions. “Marjah was 
	supposed to be safe…All that progress is threatened by the Taliban 
	‘surge’…There were always fears that they would re-emerge .. The strength of 
	the Taliban’s presence is gradually becoming clearer…The Taliban are growing 
	bolder…”    The term ‘surge’ was once associated with General David 
	Petraeus’s strategy predicated on the deployment of 30,000 new troops in 
	Afghanistan. That it is now being attributed to the Taliban’s own strategy 
	is ironic, to say the least. Once meant to be a ‘success story, now 
	convincing the world that things are working out in Afghanistan might not be 
	so easy after all. “Worries are growing in the Pentagon that if thousands of 
	marines and Afghan security forces cannot entirely defeat the Taliban in 
	Marjah, a town of only 50,000, securing the far larger prize of Kandahar may 
	be an even greater struggle than has been foreseen,” wrote Colvin.    
	The challenge ahead, although bolstered with all the right (albeit 
	predictable) language is likely to be bloody, just like the rest of this sad 
	Afghanistan episode, which actually began much earlier than 2001.   
	The US and Karazi (as a supposed representative of the ‘Afghani people’) 
	must come across as united in the face of the extremist minority. Karazi’s 
	visit to the US was the political padding prior to the likely military 
	storm. It was meant to assure the public that the chaos which will follow is 
	in fact part of a counterinsurgency effort; well-planned, calculated, 
	executed and, as always, passionately articulated.   - Ramzy Baroud (www.ramzybaroud.net) 
	is an internationally-syndicated columnist and the editor of 
	PalestineChronicle.com. His latest book is "My Father Was a Freedom Fighter: 
	Gaza's Untold Story" (Pluto Press, London), now available on Amazon.com. 
	
  *****   Visit my website:
	www.ramzybaroud.net. Also watch 
	Aljazeera's documentary about my latest book: My Father was a Freedom 
	Fighter: Gaza's Untold Story. (Pluto Press; Palgrave Macmillan, 2010). The 
	subtitled program is available at YouTube in two parts:
	Part I &
	
	Part II. Then, check out this short film (in
	English and
	Arabic) 
	about the book. The book is available from
	Pluto 
	Press (UK),
	
	Amazon UK and
	
	Amazon. 
	   
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