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Why the U.S. Mission in Afghanistan's Helmand Province is Doomed to Failure

By Sonali Kolhatkar, New America Media. Posted July 18, 2009.


The new offensive is an attempt "to disrupt, dismantle, and defeat al Qaeda." But what will actually be gained such brute force?
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The United States’ new offensive into Afghanistan’s troubled Helmand province provides a test case for achieving President Obama’s stated goal: “to disrupt, dismantle, and defeat al Qaeda in Pakistan and Afghanistan.”

It is the first major push of its kind, relying on a massive ground presence of thousands of Marines rather than air strikes, which American strategists acknowlege have killed far too many civilians over the past two years. But while Operation Khanjar realizes Washington’s increased desire to divert more “resources” into Afghanistan, it is unclear what, if anything, can be accomplished by this kind of brute force.

At the launch of the offensive, U.S. General Stanley McChrystal gave only the following explanation: that his intention is to “clear, hold and build” in Taliban strongholds like Helmand.

But what exactly does “clear” mean? If it means to kill, the U.S. Marines will have to distinguish between Taliban and non-Taliban Afghans to avoid more civilian casualties. This is a near-impossible task. The Taliban do not wear a uniform or carry membership cards. They carry weapons, but so do Afghan civilians, who do so to protect their families. In an effort to lower the embarrassing count of civilians killed (often greater than the numbers killed by the Taliban), McChrystal has ordered troops to cut short any pursuit of Taliban fighters if civilians are at risk.

The U.S. troops have to play cautious -- they have everything to lose: their own lives and the diminishing goodwill of the Afghan people. Unfortunately for the troops, Afghan civilian resentment, built up over the past several years, has not vaporized just because the U.S. military’s rules of engagement have officially changed. The Marines are facing a Taliban force bolstered by the survivors of U.S. bombs and the loved ones of those killed. The Taliban’s greatest advantage is their ability to move through a population increasingly sick of “death-by-occupation,” leaving the U.S. troops with only two options: risk letting the Taliban escape, or kill the Taliban even if it means killing civilians in the process and violating the new rules. Both scenarios lead to a Taliban victory.

Perhaps by “clear,” McChrystal means capture. But that raises more difficult questions: Where will they put the prisoners, and what sort of justice will be offered? Will the United States turn Bagram into a greater gulag than Guantanamo? Will they turn over those who survive their torture and interrogation to secret military tribunals? In releasing 90 percent of those imprisoned at Guantanamo without charge, the United States has already proved inept at distinguishing al Qaeda and Taliban members from ordinary civilians over the past eight years. Imprisoning and torturing innocent civilians has the same obvious effect as killing them: increased hostility and resentment toward the occupation.


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See more stories tagged with: afghanistan, pakistan, taliban, al-qaeda, u.s. military, bagram, stanley mcchrystal, helmand province

Sonali Kolhatkar is Co-Director of the Afghan Women's Mission, a US-based non-profit that funds health, educational, and training projects for Afghan women. She is also the host and producer of Uprising Radio, a daily morning radio program at KPFK, Pacifica in Los Angeles.

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Thank you
Posted by: Autonomy Now on Jul 18, 2009 9:18 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Yet another intellectually responsible analysis of the situation in Afghanistan. Standing up to the war-supporting Feminist Majority Foundation the other day was also admirable.

This writer Sonali should start carrying freakin megaphone with her.

-Autonomy Now

http://www.twitter.com/autonomy_now

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We can't afford this or any more wars!
Posted by: hackbut on Jul 25, 2009 2:11 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I agree completely with Senator Feingold and with the author, and suggest that the only reason that the Afghan War has continued for 8 years is that it is being fought not by the children of the elite, but by the children of what is becoming for the first time (other than racially) in the U.S. the underclass, the same people whose jobs have been outsourced, etc. Re-instate the draft and we will undertake far fewer such adventures.

At the same time the left-wing press (most of it) continues to dwell on the successes of the enemy, not on ours, while the right wing press just ignores the whole thing. Had the press done this kind of rrporting in WWII we'd all be speaking German or Japanese. So, we should not be in it, but our press is disloyal and shameful regarding it.

What we should be doing is going after the enemy, which is al-Qaida, not the Taliban, and therefore our military response should be limited to killing as many al-Qaida as possible, especially bin Laden.

Islam is never going to approve of "Crusader" armies fighting their people, so most military adventures in the Islamic world are a lost cause before they begin.

Walk across the street and put yourself in the shoes of the Afghan people - yes, you have some terrible people in your country, and an army of "others" has invaded your country to destroy them, destroying a good many of you in the process and getting in the way of your own culture's rooting out the cancer. How would you like it?

Lastly, and there is much more which could be said, how can a bankrupt country like the U.S., which is rapily becoming a third rate power because it does not invest in the things which make a power first rate, think it can afford wars and spening money it does not have in both aiding other countries and interfering in their affairs. What chutzpah!

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begin
Posted by: hahaho on Jul 30, 2009 5:36 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Islam is never going to approve of "Crusader" armies fighting their people, so most military adventures in the Islamic world are a lost cause before they begin.links of london tiffany

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