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How the U.S. Is Destroying, Not Helping, Democracy in Afghanistan

Posted by Byard Duncan, AlterNet at 11:33 AM on November 3, 2009.


The White House is opting for political convenience rather than real change.
byard
Byard Duncan is a contributing writer and editor for AlerNet.

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A couple weeks back, Barack Obama found himself tangled in a sort of political half-Nelson: In order to maintain the illusion that Afghanistan’s government was operating effectively, he had to thank Hamid Karzai (the Afghan president responsible for rigging the country’s initial elections) for agreeing to a run-off. But by thanking Karzai, he drew attention to just how fractured the political scene in Afghanistan was.

"We have seen the candidates expressing a willingness to abide by constitutional law, and there is a path forward in order to complete this election process," Obama said, adding that he was appreciative of Karzai’s “constructive efforts.”

This was of course a farcical move -- a lot like thanking a thief for returning your car stereo. But it was also necessary, given that the alternative would be admitting eight years of U.S. presence has done nothing to stabilize Afghanistan’s political climate. Obama, fully aware of his statement’s empty pomp, was performing some old-fashioned damage control.

Such ceremonial lip service could possibly have been excused as political necessity, were it not now the central tenet of the White House’s Afghanistan policy. Indeed, after Karzai’s main challenger, Abdullah Abdullah, withdrew from the run-off elections Sunday, Obama adviser David Axelrod had this to say:

“Every poll that had been taken there suggested that he was likely to be defeated anyway, so we are going to deal with the government that is there.”

Never mind the corruption, Axelrod suggests; Abdullah would not have won anyway. Abdullah, by the way, had been “under intense pressure from Western officials to avoid confrontation and end a two-month dispute over the election results,” according to the New York Times.

All this adds up to yet another huge ideological problem for Obama’s “good war:” the U.S., despite its attempts to spread democracy to Afghanistan, is actually opting for a sort of cardboard cut-out equivalent -- a false version meant to survive only as long as is politically convenient. By indicating that it’s in Abdullah’s interest to go quietly, the Obama administration is actively (and rather openly) contradicting the principles it supposedly espouses.

Basically, the White House is cementing an absurd precedent that Obama established when he congratulated Karzai in October. A sort of cotton-candy policy on Afghanistan -- one composed of saccharine rhetorical gestures, and devoid of any real substance.

 

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Tagged as: obama, afghanistan, axelrod


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"saccharine rhetorical gestures, "
Posted by: oregoncharles on Nov 3, 2009 10:42 PM   
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Ahh, yes the Obama touch. Reminds me a great deal of Ronald Reagan, who based his administration on the notion that all you had to do was get the PR right, and you could do whatever your corporate funders wanted.

It's looking like Ronnie was smarter than I thought.

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Truth vs Rhetoric
Posted by: Basenjis on Nov 4, 2009 8:39 AM   
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Our silver-tongued president has succeeded in adding the final touches to a long process of systematic destruction of the last vestiges of US national credibility. Is there any part of the literate world that does not know that the corrupt Hamid Karsai is an American puppet and what he has done to maintain that role? Obama would do better to save his breath. We know.

The Obama Administration came after years of US government deceit, obfuscations and downright lies to the American public about our foreign entanglements and the result is mass citizen loss of confidence in anything now that comes from Washington or its spokespeople. How is the new adminstration any better?

We have allowed our own government to toss away our hard-won birthrights for a mess of pottage and nice words can't fix it.

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Our Mission in Afghanistan
Posted by: Muser on Nov 4, 2009 9:13 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
We should not consider our mission in Afghanistan to establish democracy. There is no liberal democratic or nationalist imperative in the Afghan psyche. When that country has been free of invading foreign armies, civil order has been confined to localities within a political system of practically autonomous fiefdoms. That condition is anarchy.



Certainly anarchy assaults Western liberal democratic (and autocratic, for that matter) sensibilities; but it suits the Afghan temperament. In part, this may owe to the topology of the country: an assemblage of cellular communities divided from each other by hard mountainous shells. The anomaly of Afghanistan has bedeviled Western, Russian, and Asian empire-builders for centuries.


Stephen Coll’s comment in the October 26, 2009 New Yorker presents a nation-building agenda (election reform, ethnic integration, political party growth, constitutional and governmental reorganization, eradication of corruption and drug-dealing, and non-violent dispute resolution). This program might well eliminate security-threatening disorder in a culture that values the rule of law. However, Afghanistan’s culture primarily values family and clan welfare. In this environment the American and Western objective of securing their own safety can best be assured by monitoring a place like Afghanistan, intervening in it when necessary, and letting it behave in its anarchic way the rest of the time.

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Afghanistan will
Posted by: Archie1954 on Nov 4, 2009 10:43 AM   
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never be democratic in the sense that we understand. their is no central government that has the support of all of the various tribes that make up the people of that challenged state. Without the ideology of one state, one government you cannot have democracy in our definition of the term. Right now the various tribal elders etc. choose what warlord to support so that may be a form of democracy but that's where it ends and it is not going to change no matter how many Americans lose their lives over there.

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Bring our troops home from Afghanistan
Posted by: greenferret on Nov 4, 2009 12:17 PM   
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Soon President Obama will decide whether to send as many as 60,000 additional U.S. soldiers to the war in Afghanistan.

Let's urge Obama to live up to his 2009 Nobel Peace Prize. Tell him to withdraw troops from Afghanistan -- not send more.

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