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      US Endgame in Afghanistan:  
	The Evil of Three Lessers  
	By Eric Walberg 
      Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, September 20, 2010 
	
  In his school-boyish Oval Office “Mission accomplished!” speech 
	31 August, United States President Barack Obama heaped faint praise on 
	Bush's invasion of Iraq, averring that no one could doubt Bush's support for 
	the troops, love of his country and commitment to its security when he wrote 
	this most "remarkable chapter in the history of the United States and Iraq". 
	True, it was written at a "huge price" to the US (apparently it was provided 
	free of charge for the fortunate Iraqis).
  He vaguely talked of "a 
	transition to Afghan responsibility", vowing to stick to his promise to 
	begin withdrawal of troops next year, reiterating the Obama Doctrine: 
	"American influence around the world is not a function of military force 
	alone. We must use all elements of our power -- including our diplomacy, our 
	economic strength, and the power of America’s example -- to secure our 
	interests." The fact that as a senator, he opposed Petraeus, the mastermind 
	behind the surge in Iraq in 2007 and the one Obama is now staking his 
	presidency on in Afghanistan, was not raised. 
  The lack of fighter 
	jet and battleship for his "Mission accomplished!" sound byte was just as 
	symbolic as was Bush's bomber-jacket hubris. Obama is looking more and more 
	like a White House caretaker, a prisoner of the Pentagon, if in fact he ever 
	had any policy freedom in the first place. Hillary famously cracked 
	"Whatever Stanley [McChrystal] wants, give it to him." Now, with the 
	unceremonious dumping of McChrystal, Dave will most certainly get what he 
	wants, and an early exit from Afghanistan is not on his check list. On the 
	contrary he now wants to surge the surge with an extra 2,000 troops. So what 
	are Obama/Petraeus's real options?
  There is little to differentiate 
	McChrystal and Petraeus apart from the latter's pomposity. He oversaw the 
	preparation of the Army-Marine Corps's counterinsurgency field manual and 
	its application in Iraq, and will try to smoke out the "enemy" just as did 
	his predecessor. Obama droned on, so to speak, about Al-Qaeda 
	(counterterrorism in Washington-speak), but made clear the current surge was 
	really to stem the Taliban hordes (counterinsurgency or COIN in 
	Washington-speak). Counterterrorism elements "are absolutely part of a 
	comprehensive civil-military counterinsurgency campaign", Petraeus told 
	wired.com, meaning he, like Obama, still confuses Taliban and terrorism, or 
	rather tries to confuse anyone bothering to listen. 
  McChrystal's 
	unpopular (among GIs) order for troops to stop killing civilians at random 
	will continue: "You cannot kill or capture your way out of a substantial 
	insurgency." He has sort-of endorsed Karzai's attempt to "win Afghan hearts 
	and minds" through the new High Peace Council which would lead to 
	"reintegration of reconcilable elements of the insurgency,. This has been
	
	tried now for two years
	
	without any success. It looks like a repeat of the Iraqi Sunni Awakening 
	movement of 2005, which paid former Sunni resistance fighters as ad hoc 
	militias, which had nothing to do with Petraeus, being a spontaneous 
	development by local sheikhs. Whether it was successful is still debatable.
	
  Trying to apply this to Afghanistan is a pipe dream in any case, 
	where hostile mountains, warlords and a decentralised state were and are the 
	norm, unlike pre-2003 Iraq. Apart from the dubious surge theory, there is 
	nothing that Petraeus adds to the equation, nothing to suggest he will have 
	any chance of budging the Taliban from their bottom line: the unconditional 
	exit of all foreign troops and evacuation of all bases. None of this 
	remotely reflects the so-called Obama Doctrine of diplomacy vs military 
	solutions to international problems, talking vs killing, but hopes for Obama 
	long ago dried up. His tired Oval Office spiel neither surprised nor 
	disappointed. It induced only yawns.
  The man in control, Petraeus, is 
	himself in need of an awakening. Someone should tell him his surge, COIN and 
	whatnot are too late: the Taliban are already the de facto government. NGOs 
	seriously working in Afghanistan have known this for quite a while. The 
	tragic deaths of ten International Assistance Mission (IAM) staff recently 
	in Badakshan province was a direct result of forgetting this important 
	political fact. At 44, IAM is the longest serving NGO in Afghanistan, and 
	has successfully manoeuvred the various royal, republican, communist, 
	Islamist regimes for over four decades by scrupulously avoiding any 
	identification with local government and occupation forces, acknowledging 
	whichever side is in power, and sticking to its relief work. But NATO 
	abandoned the area in July just as new aid workers were arriving, and this 
	time the new volunteers got caught in the transition. Says IAM director Dirk 
	Frans sadly, "They were in the wrong place at the wrong time." 
  The 
	case was all the more poignant as there has been increasing cooperation with 
	the Taliban and fewer targeted killings of aid workers as a result of NGOs 
	reaching out to the Taliban and respecting their right to govern. Mullah 
	Omar even wrote a letter of approval for one aid group. "The chain of 
	command is more coherent in 2010 than 2004," says Michiel Hofman, Medecins 
	Sans Frontieres (MSF) rep in Afghanistan. MSF has access to 
	Taliban-controlled areas so long as its employees wear clearly marked vests 
	with the group's insignia, front and back, to differentiate them from the 
	occupiers.
  UNICEF and the World Health Organisation work with both 
	the Taliban and Karzai officials to provide polio vaccinations, once 
	condemned by clerics as a conspiracy to poison or sterilise Muslim children. 
	Volunteers carry a precious letter of approval from Mullah Omar. Red Cross 
	spokesman Bijan Famoudi told April Rabkin at npr.org that Red Cross workers 
	coordinate with the Taliban almost daily concerning their movements and can 
	reach Taliban leaders within hours if there is a problem.
  The Taliban 
	are not the ogre they are made out to be by the Western media. They respect 
	genuine international aid workers, unlike foreign fighters from Chechnya, 
	Saudi Arabia and Uzbekistan, who have a "reputation much tougher when it 
	comes to foreigners", notes Hofman. But then the MSF honcho could say the 
	same of the other foreign fighters, the occupiers, who in a desperate bid to 
	use such workers are human shields, have increasingly insisted on NGO 
	cooperation as part of their effort to "win hearts and minds". The US and 
	German military have put conditions on grants to aid organisations, 
	requiring them to work with the occupiers. Caritas refused a chunk of $12.9m 
	worth of aid because it would have been part of the German army's 
	reconstruction work.
  Karzai too tries to pressure NGOs. In April, he 
	had Italian and Afghan employees of the Italian aid organisation Emergency, 
	which ran a hospital in Helmand, charged with "terrorist activities", 
	including plotting to assassinate the governor. The charges were nonsense, a 
	case of sour grapes, as the group successfully negotiated the release of a 
	foreign journalist, no thanks to Karzai et al.
  The US has three 
	choices at this point: the easy one is to just pull out and leave the 
	Taliban to disarm the Western-created warlord militias and to work with the 
	less odious members of the Karzai regime to create a viable regime in a 
	peaceful, if very poor and devastated country. There are genuine NGOs on the 
	ground now that can help coordinate a non-imperialist international aid 
	effort. Yes, some heads will roll, but the sooner the process gets underway, 
	the fewer deaths there will be all round. This is what Pakistan and Saudi 
	Arabia want, leaving them in the driver's seat.
  Its second option is 
	to let the regional governments take over in stabilizing the current regime. 
	This, however, would require a revolution in US thinking: mend fences 
	between it and Iran. Iran is eager and willing to do just this and has been 
	since it provided the US with valuable assistance in routing the Taliban 
	after 9/11. Iran supports the Karzai regime, which is dominated by the 
	Persian-speaking Tajiks, and strongly opposes making any deals with the 
	Taliban. In a meeting in New Delhi in August, Iran's Deputy Foreign Minister 
	Mohammed Ali Fathollahi said, “Empowering the military forces of Afghanistan 
	and also the police of Afghanistan are points on which countries of the 
	region should help, and Iran voices its readiness to help in this regard.... 
	We don’t have any doubt in the capability of the government of Afghanistan.” 
	 Sounds like Petraeus/ Obama, right? The US plans to spend $11.6 billion 
	next year and another $25b by 2015 precisely to create an Afghan army and 
	policy force to support Karzai. Iran has offered to help do this. It holds 
	the fate of this US endgame in its hands. The advantage of this option is 
	that peace would break out in the region without US occupation of 
	Afghanistan and subversion of Iran, and the US would still have quite a bit 
	of influence in post-pull out Afghanistan. Both India and Russia would be 
	solid supporters of such a scenario and the latter would ensure the support 
	of the "stans" on Afghanistan's northern borders. Pakistan and the Saudis 
	would have no choice but to tag along.  
	Its third option is a lame compromise between the above. Council for 
	Foreign Relations President Richard Haass suggests partitioning Afghanistan, 
	handing over Pashtun areas to the Taliban and arming the other ethnic groups 
	to defend themselves. Syed Saleem Shahzad reports in Asia Times that the US 
	is finally talking to the Taliban commanders, including Sirajuddin Haqqani, 
	mediated by Pakistan and the Saudis, offering to cede control of the south 
	to the Taliban while keeping control of the north. This is a recipe for 
	unending civil war too horrible to contemplate. 
	*** 
	Eric Walberg can be reached at http://ericwalberg.com/  
	  
	  
       
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