Reply
Thu 24 Jun, 2010 09:00 am
Nothing will change because Petraeus replaces McChrystal. The civil war between the Pashtun, Tajik and other non-Pashtun tribes, will continue as it has for centuries. "Karzai, a Pashtun, has used his position, Shahrani said, to funnel political and economic patronage to his relatives and other Pashtuns while gradually pushing out Tajik and other non-Pashtun leaders." ---BBB
Wednesday, June 23, 2010
Obama's Afghan strategy remains plagued by problems
By Nancy A. Youssef, Saeed Shah and Jonathan S. Landay | McClatchy Newspapers
WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama's decision to accept Gen. Stanley McChrystal's resignation and draft his superior, Gen. David Petraeus, to lead the war in Afghanistan eliminates a source of friction, but it doesn't address the problems plaguing U.S. policy there.
The change in command, Obama made clear Wednesday, is a change in personnel, not in a policy that's hampered by, among other things, the absence of a political strategy, rising U.S. casualties, growing ethnic tensions, endemic political corruption, the administration's July 2011 deadline for beginning a troop withdrawal and a stalled offensive in the country's second-largest city.
Petraeus, the head of the U.S. Central Command, is the main architect of the current strategy, which borrows some elements from the surge of additional U.S. troops he championed in Iraq, and he was largely responsible for putting McChrystal in charge of executing it.
If Petraeus's appointment has any immediate impact, it's likely to be on the prickly relationships among the strong personalities in charge of the war, including U.S. Ambassador to Afghanistan Karl Eikenberry, special envoy Richard Holbrooke and Vice President Joe Biden, and with the U.S.'s NATO allies and the Pakistanis.
"I think there will be a lot more of a 'let's work together' spirit with Petraeus in charge, said Prof. Joseph Collins, a professor at the National Defense University in Washington.
However, whatever comity Petraeus brings — with his stature as the counterinsurgency general who saved the war in Iraq and his political savvy — is likely to be tested by disagreements over policy and personnel, some of which McChrystal and his aides vented about in their exit interview with Rolling Stone magazine.
As McClatchy reported earlier this month, a number of U.S. and allied military, intelligence and diplomatic officials have been warning for months that the American strategy in Afghanistan is failing and complaining that no one at a high level in the Obama administration wants to hear their discouraging words.
Eikenberry, a former three-star general, said in a cable that was leaked as the administration was crafting its strategy that he opposed deploying additional troops, the cornerstone of the current strategy, because Afghan President Hamid Karzai wasn't a reliable partner.
All the additional troops are expected to be in Afghanistan by the end of the summer, bringing the U.S. troop level to 105,000. There currently are 94,000 U.S. troops and 48,000 allied forces.
It remains to be seen whether Petraeus can persuade Eikenberry to embrace the strategy. If not, the next question will be whether America's best-known general can convince Obama to replace the senior U.S. official in Afghanistan, who technically outranks Petraeus.
Despite his involvement in the administration's review and crafting of its Afghan strategy, Petraeus has distanced himself from the July 2011 withdrawal deadline, which some military officers and others think has prompted Karzai, the Taliban, neighboring Pakistan and Iran and others to jockey for leverage in post-American Afghanistan rather than cooperate with the U.S.
"Petraeus might carry more credibility than McChrystal did in reassuring the Afghan government and the regional powers that the start of a U.S. military withdrawal doesn't mean an end to continued U.S. engagement in Afghanistan," said Ronald Neumann, who served as the U.S. ambassador to Afghanistan from 2005 to 2007.
"Otherwise, nothing changes," he continued. "You had a good general before, and now you have a good general who is also appreciative of political considerations in Washington."
"The July 11, 2011, policy is confusing," Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., an Air Force colonel and military lawyer, said Wednesday. "It undercuts the war effort. It empowers our enemies. It confuses our friends. And I think it needs to be re-evaluated." "If the president says, 'no matter what General Petraeus may recommend, we're going to leave in July of 2011,' we will lose this war," Graham said.
As Graham suggested, there's some daylight between Petraeus and the White House — and especially Vice President Joe Biden — on the withdrawal issue. On Capitol Hill last week, one senator asked Petraeus if he supported a deadline, which is counter to standard counterinsurgency doctrine. Petraeus replied with a "qualified yes."
Instead, he's stressed that the pace of a withdrawal must based on conditions, while Biden and other administration officials have called a July 2011 withdrawal certain.
Nor can Petraeus, who in Baghdad was notorious for browbeating the Iraqi government to take responsibility for its own country's security, resolve the differences between the Taliban and a majority of the Afghan people or the growing disputes between the Karzai administration and leaders of Afghanistan's minorities, both of which are confounding efforts to find a political resolution to the conflict.
Nazif Shahrani, an Indiana University anthropology professor who's from northern Badakshan province, said it's impossible to forge a compromise between the hard-line Islamic rule sought by the Taliban leaders, who reject democratic governance, and Afghanistan's constitutional system with an elected president and parliament.
Karzai, a Pashtun, has used his position, Shahrani said, to funnel political and economic patronage to his relatives and other Pashtuns while gradually pushing out Tajik and other non-Pashtun leaders.
The resulting ethnic tensions have been growing as all sides consolidate their positions in anticipation of a U.S. withdrawal and as Karzai steps up peace overtures to the overwhelmingly Pashtun Taliban and allied Pashtun-dominated insurgent groups widely thought to be backed by neighboring Pakistan.
Indeed, some U.S. officials think that Pakistan has continued to provide sanctuary and support to some militant Islamic groups in an effort to counter what it fears could be growing Indian influence and ensure that a post-American Afghanistan is pro-Pakistan.
All these problems, along with a shortage of civilian personnel, the absence of a credible Afghan civilian government and difficulties training the Afghan military and police forces, have hampered the U.S.-led effort to free the southern Afghan city of Marjah from the Taliban's grip.
The Marjah campaign, which McClatchy last month reported that McChrystal said looked like "a bleeding ulcer," has delayed a much larger offensive in Kandahar, Afghanistan's second-largest city and the spiritual home of the Taliban. Earlier this month, McChrystal said that effort is stalled until fall.
Meanwhile, weary NATO allies have said they're eager to leave Afghanistan, and no one has spelled out a viable political strategy for the country as a whole.
In Kabul, critics of President Hamid Karzai and the current military strategy hoped that change would come with Petraeus. Some suggested that a change in personality alone could improve the situation.
"We hope that Petraeus will be able to pressurize President Karzai better, so that he becomes accountable not only to Americans but also to the Afghan people," said Hamid Mir, the deputy director of Afghanistan's Center for Research and Policy Studies, an independent research organization. "(Petraeus) is a tough character, so I'm sure Karzai won't be able to influence him, as Karzai was able to with McChrystal."
"We hope that this means that the Americans will be able to work more as a team, that the new commander can now work with Eikenberry and Holbrooke," Mir added. "Those divisions impacted negatively on Afghanistan. Karzai was not made to fix his bad governance because of those divisions, as he had the support of McChrystal."
Karzai, who on Tuesday lobbied Obama to keep McChrystal and publicly lavished praise on the U.S. general, late Wednesday was having to adjust to the new reality.
"This is an internal United States government issue and a decision by President Obama that we respect," said Waheed Omar, Karzai's spokesman. "We respect the choice (Obama) made. Petraeus is very experienced, and he has very good knowledge of Afghanistan. We hope this marks the continuation of the improvements that McChrystal brought."
While officials in Afghanistan stressed that key members of McChrystal's team will stay on, including Lt. Gen. David Rodriguez, McChrystal's top deputy, Petraeus won't have some of his key advisers who worked beside him in Iraq.
Among those Petraeus came to depend on was a Special Forces general who led the effort to root out key al Qaida leaders and their backers in and around Baghdad. He was credited with helping to find and kill al Qaida leader Abu Musab al Zarqawi in June 2006 and shift the momentum from the Iraqi insurgency to its burgeoning security forces.
The general's name was Stanley McChrystal.
(Youssef and Landay reported from Washington. Shah, a McClatchy special correspondent, reported from Kabul. James Rosen contributed to this article from Washington.)
@BumbleBeeBoogie,
June 21, 2010
Checkpoint Kabul is written by Dion Nissenbaum, who covers south Asia with a focus on Afghanistan as bureau chief for McClatchy Newspapers. Other McClatchy journalists occasionally contribute.
Kabul's 'Jihadi gangster' takes on Afghan police corruption
Last summer, Kabul-based artist Aman Mojadidi came up with an intriguing idea.
What would happen if he bought some Afghan police uniforms, set up a fake checkpoint and offered an apology - along with a little cash -- to drivers used to paying small bribes at checkpoints across the nation?
The result was "Payback," a 15-minute short film that documents the culture jamming experiment on the streets of Kabul.
For one afternoon, Mojadidi and director Walied Osman staked out a section of Kabul road, set up the road block and flagged down car after car.
The entire afternoon was captured on hidden camera. Most of the befuddled drivers he stopped eventually took the money -- about $2.
Mojadidi said he wanted to examine the roots of pervasive police corruption and see how drivers would respond when they were given a little reverse "baksheesh."
By the end, 16 of the 20 drivers offered money took the cash.
Remarkably, the whole reverse bribe project took place under the watch of a real policeman who, at the end of the day, without a hint of irony, asked for a little baksheesh of his own.
The experiment also exposed an ongoing problem in Afghanistan.
When it is illegal to sell police and military uniforms in Kabul, they are for sale on the open markets, where McClatchy reporters recently bought a police uniform for about $13.
The Afghan interior ministry seemed to be unaware of the shops selling uniforms in the central Kabul market. And it remains unclear if they will do anything about it.
Mojadidi turned the checkpoint experience into an installation shown in Kabul last year. He and Osman are working on the short film.
Mojadidi, a Jacksonville, Fla. native who now works in Kabul, has done a series of thought-provoking pieces while in Afghanistan.
"We are all at conflict," Mojadidi writes on his website. "Whether with others or ourselves, with our own ideas, thoughts, desires, history, present, future. We are all at conflict as we try and navigate ourselves through a life we understand only through our experiences, through our confrontation both internal and external with social, political, cultural, and personal strife."
In his most recent work, "The Jihadi Gangster," Mojadidi takes a provocative look at Islamic militants in a bling culture where he wears a gold plated gun on a huge chain around his neck and has sexy women with a revealing burqa fawning over the Muslim gangsta as he watches TV.
Read more:
http://blogs.mcclatchydc.com/kabul/#ixzz0rme9K3Wv
It's all a lie.
There is no way to win. How can you possibly win, at least 2 groups of people with different ways of life are supposed to both submit to the US, who is killing both of them, and adopt their doctrines?
Who would do that and why?
It's getting painfully obvious that we have no reason to be there, and quite obvious nobody can win.