It was supposed to be "the good war"; a war against
terror; a war of liberation. It was intended to fix the eyes
of the world on America's state of the art weaponry, its crack
troops and its overwhelming firepower. It was supposed to demonstrate
-- once and for all -- that the world's only superpower could
no longer be beaten or resisted; that Washington could deploy
its troops anywhere in the world and crush its adversaries at
will.
Then everything went sideways. The war veered from the Pentagon's
script. The Taliban retreated, waited, regrouped and retaliated.
They enlisted support from the Pashtuns and the tribal leaders
who could see that America would never honor its commitments;
that order would never be restored. Operation Enduring Freedom
has brought neither peace nor prosperity; just occupation. Seven
years have passed and Afghanistan is still ruled by warlords
and drug-merchants. Nothing has improved. The country is in
shambles and the government is a fraud. The humiliation of foreign
occupation persists while the killing goes on with no end in
sight.
The Taliban have taken over more than half of Afghanistan.
They have conducted military operations in the capital of Kabul.
They're dug in at Logar, Wardak and Ghazni and control vast
swathes of territory in Zabul, Helmand, Urzgan and Kandahar.
Now they are getting ready to step-up operations and mount a
Spring offensive, which means the violence will only intensify.
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The Taliban's approach is methodical and deliberate. They've
shown they can survive the harshest conditions and still achieve
tactical victories over a better-equipped enemy. They are highly-motivated
and believe their cause is just. After all, they are not fighting
to occupy a foreign nation; they're fighting to defend their
own country. That strengthens their resolve and keeps morale
high. When NATO and American troops leave Afghanistan; the Taliban
will remain. The US occupation will just be another footnote
in the country's tragic history.
The United States has gained nothing from its invasion of Afghanistan.
US troops do not control even a square inch of Afghan soil.
The moment a soldier lifts his boot-heel; that ground is returned
to the native people. That probably won't change either. General
Dan McNeill said recently that "if proper US military counterinsurgency
doctrine were followed; the US would need 400,000 troops to
defeat Pashtun tribal resistance in Afghanistan." Currently,
the US and NATO have only 66,000 troops on the ground and the
allies are refusing to send more.
On a purely logistical level; victory is impossible.
The battle for hearts and minds has been lost, too. A statement
from the Revolutionary Association of the Women of Afghanistan
(RAWA) sums it up like this:
Gradually, the Allies will
see that Bush's war cannot be won and that continuing the fighting
is counterproductive. There is no military solution to the conflict
in Afghanistan and the political objectives are getting murkier
all the time. This just adds to the growing sense of frustration.
Recently Secretary of Defense Robert Gates tried to cajole
the allies into sending more combat troops to fight in the south,
but he met with stiff resistance . He said:
But support for the war is
waning in Europe. This is America's war, not theirs. Europeans
don't need to occupy foreign nations to meet their energy needs.
Their countries are prosperous and they can afford to buy for
fuel on the open market. Only America wants the war. It's all
part of a geopolitical "grand strategy" to project US
power into the region to control its resources. So far, there's
no indication that the plan will succeed.
Germany has the third biggest economy in the world. Over the
last few years, they have strengthened ties with Russia and
made agreements that will satisfy their long-term energy needs.
But German involvement in Afghanistan has put a strain on relations
with Moscow. Putin thinks that the US is using the war to put
down roots in Central Asia so it can control pipeline-routes
from the Caspian Basin and surround Russia and China with military
bases. Naturally, Putin would like to persuade Chancellor Angela
Merkel to withdraw German troops from Afghanistan so he could
strike a blow against the US-led alliance.
Eventually, German leaders will see that it's foolish to tweak
the nose of the people who provide them with energy (Russia)
just to support Washington's adventures. When Germany withdraws
from Afghanistan; NATO will disband, new coalitions will form,
and the transatlantic alliance fall apart. The cracks are already
visible.
Bush has said that the war in Afghanistan must continue or
the country will become a haven for drugs, terrorism and organized
crime. He says we are fighting a "poisonous ideology of
Islamic extremism which threatens to become a global movement".
But the Taliban and Pashtun tribesmen see it differently. They
see the conflict as an imperial war of aggression which has
only added to the suffering of their people. A recent report
by the United Nations Human Development Fund appears to support
this view. It shows that Afghanistan has fallen in every category.
The average life expectancy has gone down, malnutrition has
risen, literacy has dropped, and more than half the population
is living below the poverty-line. Hundreds of thousands of people
have been internally displaced by the war.
Afghanistan now produces 90 per cent of the world's opium; more
than any other country. The booming drug trade is the direct
result of the US invasion. Bush has created the world's largest
narco-colony. Is that success?
Presently, there are no plans to remove the warlords or improve
the lives of ordinary Afghans. Reconstruction is at a standstill.
If the US stays in Afghanistan, the situation 10 years from
now will be the same as it is today, only more people will have
needlessly died. Most Afghans now understand that the promise
of democracy was a lie. The only thing the occupation has brought
is more grinding poverty and random violence.
There's no back-up plan for Afghanistan. In fact, there is
no plan at all. The administration thought the Taliban would
see America's high-tech, laser-guided weaponry and run for the
hills. They did. Now they're back. And now we are embroiled
in an "unwinnable" war with a tenacious enemy that
grows stronger by the day._Eventually, the Europeans will see
the futility of the war and leave. And that will be the end
of NATO.