by Faiz Shakir, Amanda Terkel, Satyam Khanna, Matt Corley, Benjamin Armbruster, Ali Frick, and Ryan Powers
No Longer A Forgotten War
For far too long, the war in Afghanistan has been dubbed "the
forgotten
war."
After
U.S. forces ousted the Taliban in 2001, the Bush administration quickly
shifted critical resources to the less critical war in Iraq. The
Pentagon repeatedly begged President Bush for additional troops for
Afghanistan, which never
seemed to materialize. The
Center for American Progress's Lawrence
Korb and Caroline Wadhams warned that this "forgotten
front" could become "a terrorist
haven for Al Qaeda and affiliated
terrorist networks." In the meantime, security around the region dramatically
deteriorated, heroin production
spiked, and government
corruption ran rampant. As
Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff
Adm. Michael Mullen has said of the current situation,
"In
Afghanistan, we do what we can.
In Iraq, we do what we must." In
the past year, attention has shifted back to Afghanistan as
coalition
troop deaths there began
surpassing those in Iraq. On
Tuesday, President Obama announced
that had approved the deployment
of 17,000 U.S.
soldiers to be sent to
Afghanistan. This move is a fulfillment of a
campaign
promise made by Obama and marks
the beginning of the drawdown in
Iraq, where these troops were originally headed. "This
increase is necessary to stabilize
a deteriorating situation in Afghanistan,
which has not received
the strategic attention, direction and resources it urgently requires,"
explained Obama. To put together a comprehensive strategy to accompany
this troop increase, Obama has authorized a strategic
review -- led
by former CIA official Bruce Riedel,
who was a member
of the CAP's 2008 working group on Pakistan -- of U.S. policy in
Afghanistan and Pakistan.
CHANGING
THE DYNAMICS: There
are already 38,000
U.S. troops in Afghanistan,
compared to 146,000 in
Iraq. To meet Obama's request, Defense Secretary Robert Gates has
ordered the deployment of 8,000
Marines -- who are expected to
arrive by late spring -- and a
4,000-strong Army brigade that will follow in the summer. Another 5,000
support
troops will be sent at a "later
date." Senate Majority Leader Harry
Reid (D-NV) welcomed
Obama's announcement this week; Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) said that more
troops were long overdue, but added that "the president must spell out
for the American people what he believes victory in Afghanistan will
look like and articulate a coherent strategy for achieving it." It's
important to keep in mind the mission in Afghanistan. As Sen. John
Kerry (D-MA) recently wrote in the Washington Post, "The United States
is not
in Afghanistan to make it our 51st state -- but to make
sure it does not become an al-Qaeda narco-state
and terrorist
beachhead capable of destabilizing neighboring Pakistan." Indeed, the
bulk of these new troops will be going to southern Afghanistan, where
the poppy
trade has exploded under the Taliban,
which uses
the
profits to fund its forces.
"What this [additional troop
deployment] allows us to do is change
the
dynamics of the security situation,
predominantly in southern
Afghanistan, where we are at best stalemated," said commander of NATO
forces in Afghanistan Gen. David McKiernan.
COMPREHENSIVE
APPROACH: The
deployment of these additional troops is part of Obama's commitment to
make Afghanistan "the
center of our global counterinsurgency campaign."
Part of this
strategy requires building, training, and equipping the Afghan National
Army. The new troops
authorized by Obama will have a "dual mission" to "help
double
the size of the Afghan Army to 134,000
by the end of 2011 and
provide security in Afghan communities, which increasingly are falling
under Taliban control." Accompanying Obama's troop surge should be a
corresponding civilian surge; McKiernan has already "pressed
for more help from civilian agencies,
both within the U.S.
government and from other countries." As the Center for American
Progress has written, actions in Afghanistan also have an
impact on Pakistan, a country
with nuclear weapons and a far larger
population. Obama has recognized this fact and appointed Richard
Holbrooke to be the Special Envoy to both Afghanistan and Pakistan.
Director of National
Intelligence Dennis Blair has acknowledged that "no
improvement
in Afghanistan is possible
without Pakistan taking control of its
border areas and improving governance." This week, the Pakistani
government made a concession to local Taliban leaders and agreed to enforce
strict religious law in the Swat
Valley, a resort near the Afghan
border that was once known as the "Switzerland of Pakistan." After
being ousted from Afghanistan in 2001, the Taliban has rebuilt strength
in Pakistan; this recent Swat deal is similar to the ones struck in
2004, 2006, 2008, which ended up creating greater safe havens.
Additionally, U.S.
missile strikes on suspected al
Qaeda hideouts
in Pakistan have been extraordinarily effective in "tracking
and killing high-value terrorist suspects,"
but they have "not
helped to prevent the spread of jihadist sympathies in the tribal
regions and beyond, nor has it slowed the stream of militants and
material into Afghanistan," national security analyst Micah Zenko
notes. "In fact, according to Pakistani intelligence reports, refugees
from Afghanistan have flocked to the Taliban by the hundreds to avenge
the drones' killings of innocent civilians."
CHALLENGES
AHEAD: Afghanistan
requires a sustained commitment from the international community. One
senior U.S.
commander has warned that "it's
going to get worse before it gets better."
McKiernan has stated
that even
with the additional forces, "2009
is
going to be a tough year." A
majority of the American public
currently believes the
situation is going "badly" in
Afghanistan and support Obama's
deployment of additional troops as "unfortunate but necessary." Major
impediments to progress include increasing insurgent violence,
corruption and the illegal economy, and a lack of coordination within
U.S. government and with international allies. According to the United
Nations, 2,118 civilians died in fighting in Afghanistan last year, "a
40% hike as the war grows ever
more bloody." The Taliban greeted
Holbrooke's arrival in Kabul last week "by launching an audacious
terror attack on three government buildings in the capital, leaving 26
people dead." Government corruption is now so bad in Afghanistan that many
women say they would prefer
living under the Taliban. Delivering a
threat assessment on Feb. 12, Blair concurred with this view, stating
that
corruption in Kabul and throughout the country had bolstered
support for the Taliban and warlords.
Obama avoided asking Canadian
Prime Minister Stephen Harper for increased troop support while he was
in Ottawa this week, and convincing
other countries may be
tough. In the past, Obama has
pressed NATO allies to step up their
commitments and not let the U.S. and U.K. do all the "dirty
work."
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A former British resident held at Guantanamo Bay, Binyaman Mohamed, "will be flown home early next week, marking the first transfer of a Guantanamo detainee by the Obama administration."
THINK
PROGRESS: Then and now:
Canadians welcomed former President Bush
with violent protests, raise American flags for President Obama.
WONK
ROOM: Washington Post defends
George Will’s climate change denial: We "check facts to the
fullest extent possible."
YGLESIAS: Karl
Rove claims the economy will get better soon
"on its own."
POLITICAL
ANIMAL: The Weekly Standard's
Fred Barnes claims that the Bush
administration never suppressed science.
WISCONSIN:
Gov.
Jim Doyle (D) proposes legal protections for same-sex couples.
ARIZONA: Arizona faces a
severe teacher shortage.
TEXAS:
"Thanks to the federal stimulus package, the state budget deficit is
all but erased."
"[Rep. Darrell Issa (R-CA)] has called on President Obama to put in
place a system that ensures all White House emails be preserved even if
official business was done through private e-mail accounts."
-- CNN, 2/19/09
VERSUS
"Are we simply going on a
fishing expedition at $40,000 to
$50,000 a month?"
-- Issa, 2/26/08,
objecting to an investigation of the Bush administration's abuse
of
private e-mail accounts
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