THE HILL
 

Afghanistan: War without honor

By Bernie Quigley - 09/16/09 07:15 AM ET

When South Carolina Sen. Lindsey Graham (R) asked Adm. Michael Mullen yesterday to assure the 55 percent of Americans who no longer think we know what we are doing in Afghanistan that the new troops he wants will do the job — will win the war — he nodded yes. As expected.

What I would like to have heard next was this: Do you assure us, then, that as a man of honor, you will resign your commission and leave the republic in disgrace if you fail?



But this is fantasy football. The problem with broad-based governance and its vast, globalist appeal is that it is not based in real people and places but is a democracy of feelings and abstractions. It is like economy detached from gold — it has no talisman to indicate and sustain truth. In this realm of the televised everyday, with its primal pounding of the radio everywhere, getting stoned is the modest substitute for enlightenment and disgrace and failure — whether it is an American president’s dithering while 1 million fall to the knife in Rwanda or a trophy grabbed on award night from Taylor Swift — can be easily accommodated by a simply apology on Leno. With Eisenhower, Sherman and Lee it was different, and we may never find this character again in ourselves. And one day we may need it.

Commentator Haviland Smith, a former CIA station chief who writes a column for the Barre Times and the Rutland Herald in Vermont, has a more likely appraisal than the Graham/Mullen sweet talk. The president’s strategy may be based on rhetoric, he says:

Why does President Obama believe it is necessary to "win" in Afghanistan? Of course, this question begs the issue of what "winning" means and whether it is even remotely possible. Certainly, historically, it rarely, if ever, has been ...

Barack Obama of 2008 had literally no military experience or background and thus little credibility with either the military or its American supporters. If he wanted to have any credibility with the right and with pro-military congressmen, he may have felt that he had to balance his negativity on Iraq with a pro-military stance on Afghanistan ...

As president-elect Obama, he has found himself in a completely different situation. None of his old political associates had much experience with military matters. President Obama has ... completely revamped his military team with Generals Petraeus and McCrystal as his go-to leaders on Afghanistan ...


It's a fair guess that two highly ambitious, educated, articulate, relatively young generals would be disinclined to admit that they could not meet the military needs of the administration — "winning" in Afghanistan. Clearly, they have said that the job can be done, albeit with much involvement on the civil side, yet they have no example of its ever having been accomplished!



Visit Mr. Quigley's website at
http://quigleyblog.blogspot.com.

Source:
http://thehill.com/blogs/pundits-blog/the-military/58933-afghanistan-war-without-honor

Comments (3)

If Adm. Mullen was willing to put his career on the line over Afghanistan, would you Bernie? If we stabilize Afghanistan enough that it is governable and can stand on it's own, would you be willing to walk away from writing such as above, in disgrace and in full acknowledgement that had we abandoned Afghanistan, as we did after the Soviet withdrawal and as you tangentially argue for now, it would likely only embolden Al Quaida to strike at America again?BY Jim Hillhouse on 09/16/2009 at 10:46
This same general said we needed to fight outside of the cities to avoid civilian casualties…then, sent drones to wipe out hundreds of innocents. This same general said success in the war (after saying victory was impossible) would be the Afghans taking over so we could withdraw…even as he says more troops are needed, now. His definition of an end-goal chances every day and has NOTHING do do with fighting those that attacked us on 911. This GENERAL needs to be replaced. I don't blame Obama, though. He's just an inexperienced leader relying on the advice of political groups. What else should we expect. Pray for the President's wisdom.BY Kenneth Clifton on 09/21/2009 at 07:06
Better questions. No answers. That's a start. So… let's take another couple of steps. *** First, what's the 800-pound gorilla in this Afhgan Room ??? That would be the $ 80,000,000,000/year opium/heroin business — worldwide — that utterly corrupts Afghan politics. The Karzais and their allies are taking the largest cut from these moneys. *** Second, what type of war is this ??? Well, presently, that would be a Westmoreland-style Search-And-Destroy war. Made comfortable by Predators, for a few. Made hopeless, useless for most everyone else. "Search" only sees maybe 1% of enemy forces on a given day — which looks stupid when you wargame it. *** Third, what did work in Vietnam ??? That would be Combined Action Program as described by Bill Corson in his 1968 book, The Betrayal. *** Fourth, what type of war should Afghanistan be ??? That would be a Tracking War similar to fighting Apache and the Sioux in the 19th Century. Or beating Confederate raiders. Or defending what was then Rhodesia's northern border. Not the utterly brutal S-A-D of Westmoreland and Predators. *** Fifth, how do you fight a Tracking War ??? Well, you learn to back-track. You use dog-based Combat Tracking Teams to track and kill assassination teams — protecting modern schools and clinics. Then you back-track to their home bases and wipe out the threat source. Tracking is defense. Back-tracking is offense. You need both. *** Combat tracking requires training lots of dog teams out of Fort Huachuca, Arizona. Think of Bear Grylls's "Natural Survivor" t.v. series, plus weapons. *** Any questions ?BY TuffsNotEnuff on 09/21/2009 at 08:53

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