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Gen. McChrystal's Rise: More Secrets, Less Daylight in Afghanistan and Pakistan

Posted by Tom Hayden, The Nation at 7:38 AM on May 14, 2009.


Will McChrystal continue his secret war now that he holds a more prominent position?

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All along there were two US wars in Iraq. There was the public war, in which the Pentagon tried to manipulate the mainstream media into being a “message amplifier,” while some intrepid reporters and bloggers fought back. Then there was the secret war carried out by the Special Operations forces, whose existence was denied even by the Pentagon.

Now the secret operations threaten to completely compromise what remains of the public war in Afghanistan and Pakistan with the ascension of Gen. Stanley McChrystal to top commander from his classified role in running Special Ops in Iraq for five years.

When questioned by the media or senators presiding at his confirmation hearing in a few weeks, Gen. McChrystal may have a simple answer to anything troubling: sorry, that is classified.

The mystique of secrecy may come to shroud all public inquiry about Afghanistan and Pakistan. There are questions to be answered, however.

One is framed on page 380 of Bob Woodward’s book The War Within, in which the author describes a top-secret operation in 2006 that targeted and killed insurgents with such effectiveness that it gave “orgasms” to Derek Harvey, a top aide to Gen. David Petraeus and longtime tracker of Iraqi dissidents. The secret program was led by McChrystal, then a lieutenant commander, using signals intercepts, informants and other tools of what McChrystal calls “collaborative warfare” through Special Access Programs (SAPS) and Special Compartmented Information (SCI.) McChrystal, according to the New York Times, conducted and commanded most of his secret missions at night. These missions were consistent with the proposals of Petraeus’s top counterinsurgency adviser at the time, David Kilcullen, to revive the discredited Phoenix Program used in South Vietnam.

This expanding secret war is crucial to understand for three reasons. First, according to Woodward’s claim, it was “more important than the surge” in reducing insurgent violence in Iraq. Second, the Special Ops units served as judge, jury and executioner in hundreds of extrajudicial killings. The targeted victims were from broad categories such as “the Sunni insurgency” and “renegade Shiite militias” or other “extremists.” Third, and most important, the operation was kept secret from the American public, media and perhaps even the US Congress.

Woodward himself agreed to self-censorship, choosing to accept the Pentagon’s argument that to disclose any details “might lead to unraveling of state secrets that have been so beneficial in Iraq.”

And there the matter has been left, without a single follow-up story, investigation or Congressional inquiry.

Three years later, Iraq is far from being a pacified US ally, raising the question of whether the secret killing campaign was partly a desperate effort to get through the 2007-2008 political cycle in the United States.

The prospect of contending with secret counterinsurgency programs is not a secret but a well-known challenge to those on the receiving end in Iraq, Afghanistan and Pakistan. The real point is that Special Operations allows the Pentagon to pull the wool over the eyes of the American public, media and Congress. Nothing requires an explanation, including the actual causes of American deaths.

If that seems a harsh conclusion, consider the one public “blot” we already know about concerning Gen. McChrystal’s war record. An investigation by the Pentagon itself found him guilty of fabricating false information in the drama surrounding 2004 death of Army Ranger Pat Tillman, an Arizona Cardinals football player who was killed by friendly fire in Afghanistan. In 2007, McChrystal was held accountable for a Pentagon cover story that Tillman died from “devastating enemy fire,” when in fact he was killed by accidental rounds from his own unit.

What kind of military leader would falsify the details of a soldier’s death in order to create a patriotic legend for public consumption?

His rise can only mean an intensified campaign of secret–and dirty–warfare in the remote villages of Pakistan and Afghanistan.

The public, the media and the Congress are entitled to know whether and how Gen. McChrystal will become transparent, accessible and accountable as he steps out of the shadows, or whether he will be committing America’s future to the night.

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Tagged as: afghanistan, pakistan, david mckiernan, stanley mcchrystal


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Sorry, that is classified - Robert Gates
Posted by: Sister_Lauren on May 14, 2009 8:18 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Why War Criminal Robert Gates Should Not Be Approved by the Senate as Secretary of Defense

Most damning of all is the fact that Gates was one of the founders of al Qaeda, the CIA's Arab Legion which was assembled to attack the Soviets in Afghanistan. Gates is thus part of the infrastructure that produced the patsies of 9/11:

According to former CIA Director Robert Gates's memoir From the Shadows, the big expansion of the US covert operation in Afghanistan began in 1984. During this year, "the size of the CIA's covert program to help the Mujaheddin increased several times over," reaching a level of about $500 million in US and Saudi payments funneled through the Zia regime in Pakistan.

As Gates recalled, "it was during this period [1985] that we began to learn of a significant increase in the number of Arab nationals from other countries who had traveled to Afghanistan to fight in the Holy War...

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

Gen. Stanley McChrystal
Posted by: Sister_Lauren on May 14, 2009 8:46 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
In Secret Unit's 'Black Room,' a Grim Portrait of U.S. Abuse

By the spring of 2004, the demand on interrogators for intelligence was growing to help combat the increasingly numerous and deadly insurgent attacks.

Increasingly numerous and deadly insurgent attacks caused by CIA agents?

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

Petraeus now has "All the King's Men" in place in both Iraq and Afghanistan
Posted by: Quannah on May 14, 2009 10:30 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
They are all Generals who have worked in Special Ops. They have rooted out all of the "Old Guard" generals who have stuck to the old way of fighting conventional wars.

So, what does this mean?

It means that black ops will be the new warfare, and we will know less and less about what's really going on in either place.

What happened with the story about Pakistani civilians being hospitalized with severe burns and injuries that look strikingly similar to the result of White Phosphorus attacks the Israelis launched in Gaza in December and January? Why has this story DISAPPEARED, even here on AlterNet?

These wars will EXPAND. Seems Petraeus has even more power now than he did under the Bush Junta! Just one more "Fuck You" from Obama!

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The Afghanistan-Pakistan War
Posted by: US Citizen on May 15, 2009 5:06 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
From now on, this war shall always be referred to as the Afghanistan-Pakistan War. It is very important that a war be referred to by its correct name.

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