Thursday, April 2, 2009

Why we are going to win in Afghanistan

Dear Concerned Local Citizens of the United States (and many other countries, actually),

Most of you know I spent the last year overseas, nine months working in Baghdad and the remainder doing volunteer work in India, Zambia and Thailand. Returning to Hawaii for a week, I then left for a week to visit friends and family on the mainland, in SF, NYC, DC and Detroit.

The whole journey was an exercise in culture shock. Having gone from months of rocket barrages, helicopter rides, armored convoys, morning security briefings, international development bureaucrats, 120 degree heat, dust storms, hyper-efficient Singaporean subways, Mumbai slums, Indian rickshaws, Zambian skies, stupendous waterfalls, African Safaris, Thai family dinners and beach parties on Indian Ocean islands, it was quite a flip to see bong shops on the streets of Hippiedom in Haight Ashbury, watch my 4 year old nephew playing a Polar Bear in a NYC Bear Show surrounded by parents with hundreds of digital cameras, attend a surprise bachelor party with a bus and Secret Service escort, take the Chinatown Bus from NYC to DC (which is far more cramped than the $20 sleeper-bus I took from Singapore to Kuala Lumpor), visit the massive new visitor center at the US Capitol complete with a statue with of King Kamahameha, and go out drinking with my identical-twin-engineering-major-cousins who live together in good ole’ middle American Ann Arbor, Michigan, and are graduating this year from the University of Michigan (Go Blue).

And it was at U of M, that bastion of Middle American Public University Mass Education, that I had a truly cultural experience that I’d like to share with all of you.



I was hanging out with Jason Kerwin, one of my best friends growing up at Punahou (I mention future Dr. Kerwin II [his dad is also a Dr.] because he’s gonna be famous and I want you guys to know I know him…also, Barack Obama went to my high school). Jason applied to the PhD program in Economics at UofM, and was there checking out the campus and meeting the grad students. One of the grad students turned out to be a very nice young lady whose undergrad minor was Persian studies, which encompassed Iran and Afghanistan. She mentioned this minor when I said I that I was not a prospective grad student, but was only visiting my friend. I told her I had graduated from Georgetown with a major in Middle East Regional Studies and had just gotten back from a year long global tour, which included 9 months in Baghdad working for two sub-contractors, one under USAID. THAT instantaneously sparked a debate on the merits of the war in Afghanistan and an analysis of our chances to win.



Her conclusion was that we would be crushed in Afghanistan just like the Soviets were. One of her reasons was that our nation building program would undoubtedly be incapable of properly restoring services to the country. She proclaimed we’d just end up building gas pipelines through pasture lands, which would anger farmers, who would then join the Taliban, and, over time, would literally bleed us dry. We would lose, just like the Russians did.



I then launched into a speech about why we are going to win in Afghanistan.



The definition of winning is always a topic of fierce debate. Whatever it is, no one would agree that it is the situation in Afghanistan now. Winning would most likely look like a stable, democratic Afghanistan, next door to a stable, democratic Pakistan, which is at peace with India over Kashmir. It would mean peaceful and free elections in “Af” and “Pak,” the elimination

of the Taliban and Al Qaeda’s safe havens in Western Pakistan, and most likely their utter destruction, their top leadership being killed or captured.



Here is why that will happen.



1. We will win in Afghanistan because there has been a paradigm shift in policy with Obama’s election. The shift is that everybody now recognizes Afghanistan is a regional problem and must be met with a regional approach. This is a significant break from Bush and Rumsfeld, who viewed Afghanistan strictly through the lens of counter-terrorism. They funded warlords in Afghanistan to maintain stability and focused on trying to kill Al Qaeda leaders. Rumsfeld specifically said he did not want to engage in nation building in Afghanistan. The Bush administration’s focus on Al Qaeda, and later Iraq, distracted the United States’ intellectual resources from the real problems in Afghanistan: the Pakistani Inter-Services Intelligence Agency’s support of the “Jihadists” in Pakistan.



Now we are having the correct debate, on TV, in the papers, in D.C. When both John McCain and Barack Obama say Pakistan is the problem, you know you’re on to something. The realization, by both parties at the same time, that Pakistan’s security concerns vis a vis India must be addressed in order to rid Afghanistan of the Taliban and Al Qaeda is the key to our winning in Afghanistan.



What are Pakistan’s security concerns? It was Pakistan’s “Military-Industrial-Intelligence-Complex” (PMIIC) that created, and continues to maintain and protect, the Taliban. In the 1990s, Pakistan’s Inter-Services Intelligence Agency (ISI) believed they needed to create a “strategic depth” of support into Afghanistan in case the Pakistani army was ever overrun by India’s. Pakistan is 14% Pashtun, while Afghanistan is 44%. The Taliban is a largely Pashtun organization. The Pashtun people live mostly in North West Pakistan and South East Afghanistan. If the Pakistani army was overrun by the much larger Indian army, which had defeated them in virtually every war they ever fought, the Pakistani generals figured they could retreat into the arms of their Pashtun brothers in Afghanistan while they prepared a nuclear counter-attack against the Indians. In addition to that, the PMIIC also created dozens of “Jihadist” groups to battle the Indians in Kashmir. These groups are not regular Pakistani army. Without going into lengthy detail, the Pakistanis and the Indians have been fighting over the Kashmir region since both countries’ independence from Britain in 1946. Pakistan knew they could never drive the Indians out of Kashmir directly, so their long term strategy was to fund terrorist groups who would go to Kashmir and kill Indians on behalf of the Pakistani government, but under the cover that they were independent operators. The thought was that these hit and run terror operations would be so exhausting to India, they would eventually give up and leave Kashmir.



Today, the Pakistanis are still afraid of India and they still want India out of Kashmir. The Pakistani generals think that the US will leave Afghanistan soon, and then they can get right back to installing the Taliban in Afghanistan and inciting their terrorist friends to drive the Indians from Kashmir. The problem with this thinking is that Pakistan’s Taliban friends are friends of Al Qaeda’s. Al Qaeda is not primarily interested in driving the Indians

from Kashmir. They want to install a caliphate over the entire world. One of those terrorist groups is called Lashkar-e-Toiba and was responsible for the Mumbai attack. Other Kashmir Jihadist groups have also claimed responsibility for attempts on former President Musharraf’s life and the assassination of Benazir Bhutto, wife of Pakistan’s current president. The Pakistani Taliban has been and continues to be responsible for murder and suicide bombings in Pakistan’s cities. Thus, the Jihadists the ISI created have moved beyond Kashmir.



The problem we have is that the ISI still supports them. They support them because they think we are going to leave. But now that the paradigm shift has happened in Washington, we can now press, from both sides of the aisle, upon Pakistan’s newly legitimate and elected government, that they must rid the PMIIC of its fundamentalist elements. We can now confidently and without partisan bickering, restrain Indian responses to Pakistani terrorist incursions (as we did after Mumbai). And we can finally focus, without insulting the Administration or the opposition in the US, on rebuilding Afghanistan, re-establishing democracy and rule-of-law in Pakistan (which we could not do before because of Bush’s unending support for Musharraf), and convincing the Pakistanis that India is not a threat to them by helping to resolve the dispute in Kashmir.



2. We will win in Afghanistan because we cannot afford to lose. Losing in Afghanistan means we pull out, the Taliban returns and Al Qaeda once again has a safe haven from which to attack us. That puts us right back to 2001, where we started. What’s the point to having a military if we concede to our sworn enemies a base from which to continue to launch attacks against us and our interests? If we withdraw from Afghanistan without resolving Pakistan’s security dilemma, the PMIIC will simply reinstall the Taliban in Afghanistan, or worse, the Taliban, in cooperation with the fundamentalist elements within the PMIIC, will take over the government of Pakistan– including its nuclear arsenal. Failure is not an option.



3. We will win in Afghanistan because there is no force on earth strong enough to drive us out. When we drove the Soviets out of Afghanistan, we spent billions of dollars buying and funneling weapons and ammunition directly to the mujahideen, with the aid of the major European powers, China, Pakistan, Israel, Saudi Arabia and Egypt. While many countries say they oppose us in general, there are not enough of them with the political will to oppose us in Afghanistan. And even if they did, they do not have the resources to purchase the type and amount of weaponry needed and funnel it to the Taliban. We would certainly find out and stop them. Further, the old sponsors of the Taliban and Al Qaeda, mainly Saudi Arabia and the Gulf, no longer have the money or they are our allies. Iran hates the Taliban and Al Qaeda and the Pakistani people will hate them soon enough as they keep murdering and bombing Pakistanis.



We also posses a level of legitimacy the Russians did not have, namely a UN. The Russian occupation of Afghanistan was not seen as justified, whereas our NATO operation is seen by the international community as a legitimate response to an act of aggression.



Ultimately, we will win in Afghanistan because the Afghans want us to stay and help. The Pakistani middle class wants us to stay and help. They know we are the best country on earth, the most decent country on earth, the richest and yet most generous country on earth.

They know that we are the only people who are going to help them rebuild their democracy and that we have the money to do it. The Chinese certainly will not help them build a democracy. The Russian idea of nation building is evident for all to see in what is left of Chechnya. The Europeans do not have the resources. No major power on earth has a stake in the resurgence of the Taliban. So, even if the world does not help as much as we would like, neither will they stand in our way.



Now that Washington and the country is aware of the fact that Afghanistan cannot be solved simply by bombing Al Qaeda and leaving, all minds will focus on how best to rebuild Afghanistan, stabilize Pakistan and resolve Kashmir. Expect debates on increasing troop numbers in Afghanistan, on the probable spike and then decline in casualties as we move against the Taliban and improve security. Expect disagreements about adding more NATO or UN troops, increasing funding for building schools, effective nation building programs and how best to resolve Kashmir. Expect more elections and more talking, and in about a year and a half (after the next Spring offensive) a lot less shooting.


Sam King

3 comments:

  1. Dear readers,

    This is an email response I got to the above post.


    Sam,

    Hi... This is Kevin... I just wanted to take the time to thank u for sharing ur experiences over the last couple of years.. Some of it
    was quite helpful in expanding some of my own perceptions about the world we live in. I've read all u have sent..

    Also, I couldnt help but feel a little concerned over this last piece u have written regarding Afghanistan. While ur facts about
    the situation address pieces of the puzzle for which a solution may be possible I feel that the proper attention is quite misdirected.
    Violence and war breeds more violence and more war. I think if u read below some u might see a different way to realize a solution.


    I suspect u are well versed in international matters and have studied various readings of various individuals both American
    and other. I hope u have read Norm Chomskys writings on the US, (even though a US citizen now he was born outside the US. )
    His writings are not subjective like urs or mine. He cites facts and analysis based on facts about what the US is really about thru
    the deeds of the federal government. The connection between the people of the US and its government is quite disturbing.. This
    is partially the fault of the media but maybe we will save that discussion for another time..

    History of US involvement in the world regarding the spreading of Democracy and Western ideas really tells it all. It amazes
    me how little we have learned about past mistakes and still try to put our ideals on other peoples. It simply doesnt work.
    The US is simply an overly aggressive people with the basic thought that it knows what is right for everyone.. Whether this "rightness" is true or not is NOT the question. The question is who gives the US the right to tell anyone what to do.. Anyone... The respect and envy of other peoples in the world comes from leading by example. Not forcing the example on others. It is the same situations as the Romans did, the same as the Persians did,, same as the Christian Crusaders did, same as the Germans did, same as the French, British and Spanish did, same as the Japanese did.. etc. etc.. War war and more war. The list is endless over the course of modern history and has really never ended.. We are an imperialistic state whether u or i believe that or not.. the facts are indisputable. Whether what we as Americans stand for is "right or wrong" is different from different peoples eyes. That is the crux of the problem.. Our country was born and freed from the inside.. Not from the outside.. It has never worked.. ever.. The so called liberation of Pakistan, Afghanistan, Iraq, Iran, N. Korea, even China, etc..etc.. will come from within those said countries. War and forceful will changes do not work. Obama, Bush McCain, and a slew of American leaders before them failed to and continue to fail to realize this. Hopefully Obama in the coming months will come to a realization that there is another way. We cannot afford not too.. Rolling the dice one to many times and releasing nuclear weapons on ourselves is of course suicide. Its inevitable this will happen when we turn to violence for solutions.

    Ok.. so lets go a little deeper.. At the end of Clintons administration the US stood on the world stage as a shining example of prosperity and peace. After 9/11 the world was ready to back almost anything the US would do to help to stem the so called terrorist threat. 9/11 was tragic.. no doubt. a black eye to the pride of Americans everywhere. Horrific loss of life. But the US reaction under Bush was akin to a child loosing face. A chance for the Bush admin. to take control of everything and create a war, kill 10s of thousands of people who had nothing, absolutely nothing to do with this criminal act. Where is that higher morality Americans are
    supposed to live by? Eye for an eye.. even if its the wrong eye? Unbelievable.. And Americans across the board supported this. I personally was shocked to see such ..... what would u call it.. MURDER? Strong word.. but maybe true. We killed innocent people for what .. ? Innocent lives for what? For our values? For oil?
    Ok .. sorry for rambling on so much but there is so much to say.. I feel u have a heart Sam.. and u are trying to do the right thing. I just hope maybe i can help u see some things in a different light a bit.. Please if u get the chance read Chomskys Hegemony or Survival.. it may change ur view a bit..

    So.. yes.. its easy to criticize from the back sidelines... what is the solution then? .. what is the answer then?.. I will tell u what i think the answer is.. One simple but all powerful concept.. Yes education.. I think that if the US had spent the trillion dollars, and the other "western nations including Japan" had spent another trillion in the middle east on helping the local people, educating them in personal health, school, education for them in business practices, hospitals, housing, farming, infrastructure creation, by now there would be no conflict there.. and there would be peace.. and productivity.. and in years to come those
    educated populations would begin to contribute to more peace and prosperity.. They would choose for themselves a more democratic and fair self rule... from the inside out. .no more opium, no more suicide bombers, poor people would not take to these radical ideas because they would have something to loose.. These people love their children as much as we do.. as much as any one does.. A peaceful solution ..

    This concept of education applies to Americans themselves also.. Look at the statistics for the best educated nations in the world.
    They have the longest lifespans, the most stable social structures, the best productivity, lowest infant mortality rates, lowest crime rates, best balance of wealth for the general population and on and on.. The US sits very low on this list. I think this where we should start.. Not in Afghanistan and not on the moon.. In our own backyard.. On our own streets filled with homeless- If Americans were better educated we probably wouldnt have voted for Bush.. twice..

    Well, I will stop here for now.. I hope i have contributed something to your viewpoints. I have a little experience in world affairs,
    having lived abroad for most of my life. Experienced a lot first hand as u have.. Please take the above with a grain of salt. I cherish my freedoms as an American, but I also am not afraid to speak when i think we have done wrong.




    warm regards,

    From a concerned citizen.

    Kevin

    ReplyDelete
  2. Dear readers,

    This is another email response I got from another friend named Doug.

    The modern history of this planet consists of small and large wars where
    people try to impose their religion on other people, megalomaniacs try to
    subjugate other people, or ethnic groups/tribes slaughter other ethnic
    groups/tribes. Fortunately the U.S. public seems to have outgrown any
    desire for either religious wars, wars of conquest, or "ethnic cleansing".
    But that was not always the case. You might recall we conquered the
    Philippines and killed maybe 100,000 people who wanted self-government.
    We also had dozens of southern towns which forcibly evicted or killed
    everyone who was not white and confiscated their property during the early
    20th century.

    The way I hear it, the "Obama solution" to Pakistan/Afghanistan is to pick
    sides and enourage a less virulent Taliban faction (which presumably wants
    oppressive Muslim rule of Afghanistan) to kill other Taliban factions which
    want to impose anarchy and/or Muslim rule on the rest of the world. I am
    clueless as to whether this would confine the anarchy. I do not share
    your optimism that good foreign policy, "nation building", common sense, or
    public opinion are a "solution" to thousands of religious zealots who have
    access to modern technology and are willing to kill anyone who does not
    agree with them.

    ReplyDelete
  3. I agree with Kevin on the specific point of changes tending to come from within countries and not from without. It is hard to come up with a lot of examples of successful nation building in the sense of imposing cultural and political change from the outside. Post-War Japan, maybe.

    ReplyDelete