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Petraeus Is a Failure -- Why Do We Pretend He's Been a Success?

By Fred Branfman, Truthdig. Posted June 24, 2009.


Petraeus's tragic blunders in Afghanistan and Pakistan leave only one option: he must be replaced.
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Gen. David Petraeus’ aura of success resulting from reduced violence in Iraq has blinded normally sensible observers to his far greater failure in Afghanistan and Pakistan. His ill-conceived effort to deny al-Qaida and the Taliban “safe havens” in Pakistan -- through drone aircraft bombing, special-forces assassination and perhaps torture (by way of association with Gen. Stanley McChrystal, his new Afghanistan military commander) -- has backfired, driving the Taliban east into Pakistan, where they have joined local allies to weaken the Pakistani government. It has also strengthened, not weakened, al-Qaida and alienated growing numbers of Pakistanis. The Petraeus strategy has thus dramatically strengthened America’s enemies and helped destabilize a nuclear-armed nation of 170 million whose importance dwarfs Iraq and Afghanistan combined. More alarmingly, he now intends to escalate his failed strategy, which could cause unimaginable catastrophes in coming months and years.

President Obama -- who may well regret his call as a candidate for attacking Taliban safe havens in Pakistan, given the debacle those attacks have produced -- should replace Petraeus, and McChrystal’s nomination should be blocked. However, Obama is unlikely to take such an action absent significant public pressure. Petraeus has enormous leverage over the president. The general is extremely popular because of the perceived success of the Iraqi surge. The Obama administration could be capsized by a combination of likely losses in the “Af-Pak”¬ theater and the popular Petraeus resigning and blaming Obama, one imagines, for “not listening to his military commanders.” Obama could even be defeated in 2012 by Petraeus himself on those grounds, should persistent Washington rumors about a nascent “Petraeus for President” campaign prove true.

Obama’s best political defense if his Middle East policy fails, as appears likely, would be to claim he was following the military’s lead. This may explain why he has reversed himself and adopted such Bush policies as military tribunals and preventive detention.

It is critical now for Congress, the media, opinion makers and the public to undertake an objective analysis of the basic question: Has the Petraeus strategy worked in the Afghanistan-Pakistan theater?

The general’s “Iraqi surge” strategy is irrelevant to this question. Past military victories do not guarantee future success. Petraeus has been no more successful in “Af-Pak” than the creators of the Maginot Line were in World War II, generals who had succeeded in World War I.

When Petraeus became head of CENTCOM (the U.S. Central Command) in October 2008, he became America’s chief military strategist for the theater, overseeing Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan, the Middle East and Central Asia.

Petraeus clearly sees himself as the central player in the region. When a New York Post interviewer stated on May 19, “As the commander of the US Central Command, you’re the big-picture `strategy guy,’ ” Petraeus did not demur. Instead he referred to his “strong” team of generals -- McChrystal, David Rodriguez and Karl Eikenberry (the new U.S. ambassador to Afghanistan) -- and added that “I’m privileged to have Ambassador Richard Holbrooke as my `diplomatic wingman.’ ” The perceived success of the surge in Iraq had given Petraeus tremendous power, allowing him to extend the strategy to the Afghanistan-Pakistan theater.

The most important mission of the general, as overall theater commander, has been to design a strategy to ensure that fighting in Afghanistan does not destabilize its nuclear-armed neighbor Pakistan. He has failed in this mission.

David Kilcullen, Petraeus’ own counterinsurgency adviser in Iraq, has characterized U.S. policy as a fundamental “strategic error ... our insistence on personalizing this conflict with Al Qaeda and the Taliban, devoting time and resources toward killing or capturing ‘high-value’ targets ... distracts us from larger problems.”

As Kilcullen had noted earlier, these “larger problems” include the potential “collapse of the Pakistani state,” which he called a calamity that in light of the country’s size, strategic location and nuclear stockpile would “dwarf” all other dangers in the region. While Petraeus obviously does not bear sole responsibility for all problems in the Af-Pak theater, his many “strategic errors” have played a major role in weakening the U.S. and strengthening its enemies, as I will outline below.


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People seem to keep forgetting something:
Posted by: Ian MacLeod on Jun 24, 2009 1:37 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Ole "Betray-us" would never have seen another promotion had not people like Shinseki and other men and women of conscience and honor not resigned in protest or been forced to resign rather than serve such a corrupt administration. Personally, I still feel that they would have served better by staying in and forcing the Dipshit-in-Chief to see that some facts are just not amenable to alteration by mere preference. And I would much rather have such people in charge of the military when they are called upon to put down protesting citizens, which they will be. The UCMJ does not require military to follow illegal orders, and had they chosen to, these people might have forced an impeachment. Instead, they're gone, and we have a crony, bottom-of-the-barrel general who will say or do anything his corporate masters tell him to, as he has repeatedly shown.

More of the same, coming up. and soon enough, he'll be ordered to turn his urban warfare trained ("Kill 'em all, let God sort 'em out") killrt spes loose on us. When the economy tanks, it will go all at once: water, food shipments, fuel, Social Contract checks,
EVERYTHING. Then it's gonna get messy.

Ian

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An incredible mess............and then try to remember why we are in Afghanistan... 911?
Posted by: pfgetty on Jun 24, 2009 2:53 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Are we there to get bin Laden? Make Afghanistan a better place? Install democracy? Win the war between Christians and Muslims? How can you expect Petraeus to win a war that has absolutely no goal at all?

Really, does anybody know why we are there, and going into Pakistan?

Remember how all of this started? It was 911. Somehow we invaded Afghanistan because people training in the mountains there supposedly attacked us. There is no evidence at all that stands up to scrutiny that anybody from Afghanistan attacked us. Yet we invaded, killing thousands, and continue to kill there every day.

Do you remember that the Taliban offered up bin Laden, as long as they could send him to a third country to stand trial in an international setting. The press reported that briefly, then never mentioned it again.

And the press, like Alternet, never again mentioned that the case against Afghanistan and the trainees there has no substance. It is all a fraud.

We have plenty of proof......PROOF.........that the story of 911 is a lie. From the proof that the collapses occurred via controlled demolition to the proof that the hijackers named are alive to the fact that these guys could not have controlled the jets to the impossibility that all four could evade our air defense system.

And yet Alternet and the rest of the media have censored all of this.
Why?
What kind of grip do the pro war monsters have over our media? Is it money? Threats? Are they linked to groups that wanted all of this, like weapons industries or oil or ProIsrael groups?

Alternet, can you tell us?

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» Alternative link to main article Posted by: LeftWright
» Hey Centavo. Posted by: pfgetty
» RE: Hey Centavo. Posted by: Centavo
» RE: Hey Centavo. Posted by: Sister_Lauren
» RE: Hey Centavo. Posted by: Centavo
» Well said. Posted by: GuitarBill
Success in Iraq?
Posted by: bonapartist on Jun 24, 2009 3:11 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Last thing I checked the level of violence in Iraq went down due to ethnical cleansing being completed after all this time. The various factions, militas and so on created their enclaves and zones of dominance by now. All who could be kileld or forced to flee are killed or forced to flee by now. It has little to do with US troops sittign pretty in their fortified bases.

Old Pet is a reliable jackal though so Obama kept him in service, not to mention he probably knows too much and might start talking if kicked out. To eliminate him might be a liability due to high profile so he is sent to another colonial venture.

Competences have nothing to do with it. After all money is made while the war is rolling, if he "won" the war woudl end and then what? No fat billions for oversized military and no pork to distribute.

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» You're a little off on your facts Posted by: robbie.seal
» "there was no one left" Posted by: robbie.seal
We should run the show, not the military
Posted by: johnwinthrop on Jun 24, 2009 3:51 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Petraeus saved Bush and his supporters on Capitol Hill, including Lieberman and "moderate" Democrats.

The war in 06 was about to cause the Establishment to collapse. The 'surge' stabilized some of the worst combat spots, and that's all the useless media needed to make Petraeus a hero.

The media needs a person to symbolize an issue, as it is incapable of indepth ideological or sociological research and reporting to reveal cause and effect.

Bush went on to lose for the many other reasons besides Iraq that revealed his stupidity and lack of consciousness about ordinary people. But he didn't lose because of Iraq. Obama was lucky he had a doofus for an opponent.

Now Obama continues those same Petraeus policies, confident, I suppose, that if one surge is good, two are better.

We need to make our narcissistic President get out now. That is why millions supported him initially. Contracting strategic policy to the military is what Bush did. Why should we endure more of it?

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This article is pure baloney. Another Obama apologist article.
Posted by: JenniferBedingfield on Jun 24, 2009 4:07 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
First off, General Betrayus is not as popular as the author paints him to be. Obama just chose to keep most of Dubya's cronies and show what a status quo fraud he really is after misleading as many voters with his "hope and change" pixy dust all last year even while flip-flopping on every issue. Second, I dare you Obamabots to explain to me how the hell you can justify Obama hiring McChrystal, a dangerous Cheney crony hell bent on carrying out Obama's plans to bomb out the sweetheart civilians in Afghanistan and Pakistan and possibly Iran. If this is "change you can believe in", you're just as bad as the Republicans.

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» RE: Catch Charlie Rose today, if you can Posted by: JenniferBedingfield
» Quakin' Obama Posted by: johnwinthrop
» Haunted House Posted by: johnwinthrop
Bonehead Populism
Posted by: grindermonkey on Jun 24, 2009 5:01 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The glorification of generals is the glorification of war. When your child comes home from war missing limbs and unable to speak, consider the glory of it all.

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

» True dat. Posted by: thekidde
This could explain that...
Posted by: TFYQA on Jun 24, 2009 5:06 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
OBAMA & HILLARY'S KILLING FLOOR
linked text

"The plutocrats believe there are some things worse than war: the confiscation of special privileges; the abolition of unearned income; the overthrow of the economic parasitism; the establishment of industrial democracy. The plutocrats would welcome a war that promised salvation from any such calamities; they would also welcome a war that promised greater foreign markets, the destruction of foreign competition, more security for property rights and a longer lease on life for plutocratic despotism." - Scott Nearing — 1917

"I believe that if we had and would keep our dirty, bloody, dollar-soaked fingers out of the business of these nations so full of depressed, exploited people, they will arrive at a solution of their own -- and if unfortunately their revolution must be of the violent type because the "haves" refuse to share with the "have-nots" by any peaceful method, at least what they get will be their own, and not the American style, which they don't want and above all don't want crammed down their throats by Americans. ": -- General David M. Shoup - Commandant of the Marine Corps 1960-63, winner of the Congressional Medal of Honor - Source: May 14, 1966

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Possible Answer
Posted by: jmmartin on Jun 24, 2009 5:18 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
You ask: "Petraeus Is a Failure -- Why Do We Pretend He's Been a Success?"

Possible answer: Because the Right made such a big hoop de doo about Move On's advertisements re: "Betray Us" we've been cowed into letting him do as he pleases. The "surge" supposedly "worked," so he became a hero.

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The Pakistan-Afghanistan War
Posted by: US Citizen on Jun 24, 2009 5:22 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
What started out as a small war in Afghanistan has now escalated into a major war in Pakistan and Afghanistan. And you can be sure that all of the people of Iran know exactly what the United States is doing to the people of the small villages of Pakistan and Afghanistan when we drop bombs from drones. It's hard for the US to claim any moral upper hand when we bomb villages with drones.

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» Who Is on "Our" Side Anyway? Posted by: johnwinthrop
» RE: Who Is on "Our" Side Anyway? Posted by: Sister_Lauren
How soon people forget
Posted by: 911FalseFlag on Jun 24, 2009 5:29 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
it is quite amazing to me that people are still writing articles critiquing the ability of the military to take over countries illegally. Have people forgotten that these wars are based on outright lies intentionally not mistakenly told by the Bush administration and now supported by the Obama administration.

Obama Completely believes at least outwardly in the war on terror. The war on terror is a fake war created out of the false flag attack on 9/11. It is amazing how even educated well-informed supposedly people still talk as if this war on terror is not a creation of the CIA and the secret government that actually runs his country. This is the "secret government" that Bill Moyers talked about in his documentary played on PBS back in 1987.

For more articles and videos go to 911insidejob.net.

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» RE: How soon people forget Posted by: Sister_Lauren
» RE: How soon people forget Posted by: EncinoM
Overseeing an immediate withdrawal
Posted by: wagner on Jun 24, 2009 5:50 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
What we should do is getting out of all wars of choice and do it immediately. General Petraeus would be as good as anyone to coordinate and oversee the withdrawal.

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America is not Israel's Pontius Pilot
Posted by: weathered on Jun 24, 2009 6:34 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
free us from the arrogance and diabolic deceit.

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Ditto! Why does apartheid Israel endlessly provoke violence that destabilizes the enter Middle-East?
Posted by: JohnTruth2001 on Jun 24, 2009 7:05 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Why do we stand for it, and even encourage it. Hasn't the "Israel is our friend and a beacon of democracy" nonsense been played out? Isn't Israel a tool of the military/industrial/banking complex that is ruining the world???

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As Michael Herr (?) said
Posted by: badkitty on Jun 24, 2009 10:25 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
As Michael Herr (?) said, "Vietnam, Vietnam, Vietnam, we've all been there."

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Petraeus
Posted by: Jaffe on Jun 24, 2009 10:47 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Petraeus's "surge" was not successful in Iraq. The country is razed. Factional warfare rages on all sides. Deadly depleted uranium residue is virtually everywhere.

The moronic "surge" is considered a success only because fewer Americans are being killed--if one can believe the casualty reports.

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» RE: Petraeus + $$$$$$$$$$$$ Posted by: VZEQICVA
Loser generals used to shoot themselves,
Posted by: peterjkraus on Jun 24, 2009 11:40 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
.... and now they want to run for President. Why does success not count, when society is trained (like an organ grinder's monkey) to worship success? How can losers like Bush I and II, Petraeus, McCain, Al Haig (remember Vietnam loser Haig, boasting "I'm in charge" when he wasn't?), all these windbags, how can they even show their faces in public? Nothing in their wake but shit, only death, destruction and an America that is broke.

Fuck Petraeus and all the chest-full-of-medals assholes like him.

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Betrayus is a traitor
Posted by: willymack on Jun 24, 2009 7:22 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
He's a bushie ass licker, and that in and of itself is enough. The bushies, including poppie, while forgotten, are definitely not gone as the endless "wars" in Afghanistan and Iraq will attest. There's MONEY to me made there, and as long as this is the case, there'll also be murder and mahem for fun and profit.

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Dated article, very wrong conclusions...
Posted by: jackb29 on Jun 24, 2009 9:24 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Branfman must have wrote this article in late May. The situation on the ground in Pakistan has changed greatly. The Paki Army has been successful in pushing the Taliban out of Swat and other areas, and the Pakistani people, although still not very happy with US drone attacks, have turned against the Taliban because of their harsh implementation of Sharia law. Paki villagers in the contested zones are taking up arms against the Taliban. From the NYTimes: "But this time is different, analysts and officials say. Villagers are even rising up in a remote corner of northern Pakistan, a grass-roots rebellion that underscores the shift in the public mood against the militants and a growing confidence to confront them."

Branfman is a old Vietnam antiwar figure that sees everything thru that prism. Southwest Asia is not Vietnam. Pakistan is turning against the Taliban, and the latest reports in the NYTimes and Washington Post bear that out. Also, although the Paki Army is a conventional force, it is very nationalistic and well trained and equiped. With 750,000 soldiers, it far outnumbers the Taliban.

Read up on a few more recent press reports, and rewrite this bad article.

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» NY Times? Posted by: bonapartist
googoomuck
Posted by: googoomuck on Jun 25, 2009 11:02 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
People seem to forget that Generals are soldiers too. Generals take orders, they do not create policy. The failure comes from the people who create foreign policy. That policy is not to win a so called war on terrorism, but to destabilize the middle east. That is working quite fine by the way.

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The ingrates!
Posted by: bobtr900 on Jun 26, 2009 5:38 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Just imagine the ungrateful peoples of Iraq/Afghanistan/Pakistan! The GOP and their Religious Right are killing them and for their own good, and they are not thankful. Something like the Spanish Inquisition.

And another thing, 14 terrorists dead and 700 civilians dead. Again the GOP and their Religious Right are just killing and torturing them for their own good. 14 vs 700, that's some trade off, but it's for their own good, so say the GOP. An equation for death and corporate/theological profits, all brought to you by the GOP and their RR's.

Hmmm!!!

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Adam Kokesh
Posted by: CUnknown on Jun 28, 2009 10:04 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If you care about peace and freedom, you need to donate to Adam Kokesh this July 4th!

www.thisJuly4th.com

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