Sunday, October 11, 2009

The Afghanistan Debate

I don't know nearly enough to have a firm opinion on what to do with Afghanistan, but I liked Frank Rich's column in the Times today (and it echoes our discussion of "victory" in the age of insurgencies):

If you listen carefully to McCain and his neocon echo chamber, you’ll notice certain tics. President Obama better make his decision by tomorrow, or Armageddon (if not mushroom clouds) will arrive. We must “win” in Afghanistan — but victory is left vaguely defined. That’s because we will never build a functioning state in a country where there has never been one. Nor can we score a victory against the world’s dispersed, stateless terrorists by getting bogged down in a hellish landscape that contains few of them.

Most tellingly, perhaps, those clamoring for an escalation in Afghanistan avoid mentioning the name of the country’s president, Hamid Karzai, or the fraud-filled August election that conclusively delegitimized his government. To do so would require explaining why America should place its troops in alliance with a corrupt partner knee-deep in the narcotics trade. As long as Karzai and the election are airbrushed out of history, it can be disingenuously argued that nothing has changed on the ground since Obama’s inauguration and that he has no right to revise his earlier judgment that Afghanistan is a “war of necessity.”

Those demanding more combat troops for Afghanistan also avoid defining the real costs. The Congressional Research Service estimates that the war was running $2.6 billion a month in Pentagon expenses alone even before Obama added 20,000 troops this year. Surely fiscal conservatives like McCain and Graham who rant about deficits being “generational theft” have an obligation to explain what the added bill will be on an Afghanistan escalation and where the additional money will come from. But that would require them to use the dread words “sacrifice” and “higher taxes” when they want us to believe that this war, like Iraq, would be cost-free.



2 comments:

  1. I really would like to respond to Frank Rich's column, I really would. I'm sure many out there look to him as an astute guide for U.S. military affairs. But I find it intolerable to repsond to a guy who is essentially, still a theatre critic.

    And if I've got this right, he's not even a reporter, who would, presumably, talk to the real sources in an effort to seek the truth behind the story.

    I just can't stomach reading someone like Rich, who, with no military experience and no real journalistic training, can so blithely comment on military affairs just because he's got a Premium LexisNexis Pass.

    He really is just a glorified GoogleMonkey, isn't he?

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  2. If I can channel Dave Barry, "Glorified GoogleMonkey" would make an excellent name for a band.

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