AfPak: War on two fronts
By Eric Walberg
Online Journal Contributing Writer
Oct 16, 2009, 00:17
As more NATO trucks
were being torched in Peshawar last week, a Karachi student managed to fling
his shoe at warmongering US journalist Clifford May during his address to the
Department of International Relations on �Pakistan �s Role in Countering the
Challenge of Terrorism.�
In Washington,
Pakistan�s Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi announced bitterly the US
probably knows Osama Bin Laden�s whereabouts. He neglected to draw the
appropriate conclusion about what the US is really up to in AfPak.
Also in Washington,
within hours of the decision of the Nobel Peace committee, US President Barack
Obama met with his War Council.
It�s getting to the
point that it�s hard to tell who is the biggest opponent of Obama�s plans to
bring peace to AfPak: the Taliban, the Pakistani government, or the Nobel
committee. Oh yes, or virtually the entire world beyond the Washington beltway.
As the world marked
the eighth anniversary of the US invasion of Afghanistan on 7 October, the
Taliban were stronger than ever -- their forces have increased nearly fourfold
since 2006. �We fought against the British invaders for 80 years,� Mullah
Mohammad Omar reminded the world on the Taliban�s
website. �If you want to
colonise the country of proud and pious Afghans under the baseless pretext of a
war on terror, then you should know that our patience will only increase and
that we are ready for a long war.� A statement from the leadership insists, �We
had and have no plan of harming countries of the world, including those in
Europe. Our goal is the independence of the country and the building of an
Islamic state.� They call for the immediate withdrawal of foreign troops as the
only solution.
So far, there is no
hint that Obama is even considering this no-brainer. On the contrary, the war
is now being fought on two fronts, with the US and Britain starting an
extensive training programme for Pakistan �s Frontier Corps (FC) in
Baluchistan, the new battleground.
It is part of the
Obama administration�s massive military aid package to AfPak -- Pakistan will
get $2.8 billion over the next five years in addition to $7.5 billion in
civilian aid, but only if it satisfies US benchmarks by making progress in
�anti-terrorism and border control.� The Pakistani government and army are furious,
not to mention the 60 percent of Pakistanis who see the US as the greatest
threat to Pakistan -- with good cause.
In the past few
months, US forces have stepped up their aerial bombardments of villages in the
northern tribal areas. According to the Pakistani press, of the 60 cross-border
US drone strikes between January 2006 and April 2009, only 10 were able to hit
their targets, killing 14 Al-Qaeda leaders and 687 civilians. Even official US
policy (to kill no more than 29 civilians for every �high-value� person) is
being violated. At least 23 Al-Qaeda leaders should have been killed, nine more
than the actual 14. This assassination campaign is a more ruthless version of
Operation Phoenix in Vietnam, and can only spur the Taliban and Al-Qaeda�s
recruitment efforts.
True, Taliban
control of the Pakistan frontier province of Swat was brought to a brutal end
during the past six months by the Pakistani army, though civilian corpses
continue to be dumped, with accusations of revenge and official terror pointed
at the army. And the almost complete lack of reconstruction aid by the Pakistan
government -- with winter approaching -- means the Taliban will probably regain
Swat. Local opposition to the war against both Afghanistan and Pakistan�s
frontier region, especially Baluchistan, continues to grow, with the
long-simmering Baluchi campaign for independence gaining new life daily.
Obama�s war plans
have reached a critical stage. In an arrogant gamble, much like General
MacArthur�s challenge to president Harry Truman in 1951 over the Korean war,
General Stanley McChrystal recently demanded publically that Obama provide
60,000 more troops for Afghanistan, boldly stating the war would be lost
without them. Faced with a similarly outspoken MacArthur, Truman just as
publically fired him.
McChrystal is said
to have offered the commander in chief several alternatives �including a
maximum injection of 60,000 extra troops,� 40,000 and a small increase. Common
in military planning is to discuss three different scenarios in order to
illustrate why the middle option is preferable, though this is usually done
privately. But the Obama administration faces growing hurdles within his
Democratic Party if he decides to go with even the middle option.
Obama�s review of
AfPak is now centring on preventing Al-Qaeda�s return to Afghanistan -- a
narrower objective that could require fewer, if any, new American troops.
Obama-Biden no longer see the primary mission in Afghanistan as completely
defeating the Taliban or preventing its involvement in the country�s future, a
policy strongly opposed by Defence Secretary Robert Gates and Secretary of
State Hillary Clinton. Gates-Clinton have a point: once the Taliban are
acknowledged as legitimate players who are of no strategic danger to the US,
then the horror of the past eight years becomes excruciatingly clear. The
defeat of the whole criminal project becomes inevitable and will be just as devastating
for the US as the Soviet defeat was for the USSR.
But the
Gates-McChrystal super-surge is just about impossible in any case. The
Institute for the Study of War reported recently that the US military has only
limited troops ready for deployment, meaning that forces might not reach the
war zone until the summer of 2010. There are only three Army and Marine
brigades -- 11,000-15,000 troops -- capable of deploying to Afghanistan this
year. Troops are plagued by a severe lack of helicopters and all-terrain
vehicles.
Whatever Obama
decides -- 60,000, 40,000 or 2 -- the troops will have little time after they
arrive to turn things around. Even super-loyal Canadian Prime Minister Stephen
Harper just reaffirmed that Canadian troops will under no circumstances stay in
Afghanistan after 2011. Any plans for the indefinite occupation of Afghanistan
as touted by some NATO and US officials are fantasy; Canada�s retreat will be
part of a flood. Canadian government support for the war, like that of its
bigger brothers, the US and Britain, has all along been motivated by
Afghanistan �s untapped resource potential. The TAPI gas pipeline -- so named
for its 1,680 kilometre path from Turkmenistan through Afghanistan, Pakistan,
and eventually India -- is slated to be constructed starting next year on the
very soil that Canadian and US troops now occupy in southern Afghanistan.
Harper�s best-case
scenario is for the pipeline to go ahead with Canadian participation and for a
miracle to occur -- the Taliban�s sudden and unexpected defeat, allowing
Canadian troops to come home, the pipeline and other resource deals signed, and
assuring him of a Conservative majority in the next election. �Canada has the
potential to beat rivals because it has such an uncheckered history in that
part of the world,� argues Rob Sobhani, president of Caspian Energy Consulting.
�People like Canadians, Canadians are apolitical.� Even if the miracle doesn�t
happen and the pipeline deal collapses, Harper realises his political goose is
cooked unless the troops come home, so he is forced to wash his bloody hands of
this betrayal of Canada�s traditional international role of peacekeeper.
Obama needn�t rely
on the Taliban as advisers on how to end the war. Deputy-general of the China
Council for National Security Policy Studies Li Qinggong reflected official
Chinese thinking on 28 September in Xinhua: The United States should first put
an end to �the anti-terror war� and �end its military action. The war has
neither brought the Islamic nation peace and security as the Bush
administration originally promised, nor brought any tangible benefits to the US
itself. On the contrary, the legitimacy of the US military action has been
under increasing doubt.� Obama should take advantage of international opinion
to withdraw troops immediately. This is no doubt also the hope of the Nobel
committee that put its own credibility on the line by awarding him the Peace
Prize. The UN Security Council permanent members should �draft a roadmap and
timetable,� including deployment of an international peacekeeping mission.
The delicious irony
of the US invasion and occupation of Afghanistan (and Iraq) is that it is
China, the US�s real international rival, that has benefited most. Chinese
investments (and workers) have been pouring in to both US war zones. The main
effect of George W Bush�s two wars and Obama�s AfPak has been to promote
Chinese business interests, leaving the US bankrupt and its army in tatters.
Eric Walberg writes for Al-Ahram
Weekly. You can reach him at ericwalberg.com.
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