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Pre-empting a Progressive Split on Afghanistan

by: Spencer Ackerman  |  The Washington Independent

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US Army soldiers in eastern Afghanistan. (Photo: Getty Images)

    National Security Network report seeks common liberal ground.

    As the Obama administration spends the next two months reviewing strategy options for Afghanistan, a progressive organization is attempting to cobble together a liberal consensus around basic principles for the future of the seven-year-old war - thereby fending off a progressive split over Afghanistan early in the Obama administration's term.

    The National Security Network, an organization that seeks to bring together policymakers, experts and Democratic activists, plans to release a document, titled "Principles for an Afghanistan Strategy," later today. Assembled in consultation with Afghanistan experts from the development, diplomatic and defense communities, the two-page document urges the Obama team to create "a comprehensive strategy that recognizes the limits of military power." It is agnostic on the question of deploying additional troops for the war, and its drafters hope to reach out to progressives who object to military escalation. On Tuesday, the Obama team announced it would deploy 17,000 additional troops to Afghanistan.

    "The ultimate goal here is for the Obama administration to come out with something 50-plus days from now that most people can live with," explained National Security Network executive director Heather Hurlburt, referring to the progressive community. If a progressive consensus can be reached, Hurlburt said she planned on taking the consensus document to the Obama team's review committee, which is headed by former CIA official Bruce Reidel, Undersecretary of Defense for Policy Michele Flournoy and Richard Holbrooke, the special administration envoy to Afghanistan and Pakistan.

Also see:     
Afghanistan: A Way Forward    β€’

    Mirroring the stated goals of the Obama team's policy review, the National Security Network document seeks to address Afghanistan policy from the perspective of first-order concerns. It endorses the war, contending that "Afghanistan's continuing deterioration would allow al-Qaeda central, which intelligence agencies identify as the greatest national security threat to the United States, to operate with impunity under a resurgent Taliban." But the document also echoes recent recognitions by members of the Obama team, like Defense Secretary Bob Gates, that the war's humanitarian and governance components "will be better served by a smaller-scale effort which can enable local, regional and non-governmental efforts than a massive one which cannot be sustained."

    As for the strategy to achieve those goals, the National Security Network urges the U.S. to support an effort to help the Afghanistan government "satisfy baseline economic and security requirements of its citizens" in order to win and hold popular allegiance. It supports "vigorous diplomacy" with all of Afghanistan's allies "from India and Iran to Russia and the other Central Asian states"; tying Pakistan policy to Afghanistan policy; and to supplement military force by cracking down on both government corruption and the "stranglehold of the opium trade" which helps fund the insurgency.

    Perhaps most controversially, the document endorses a counterinsurgency strategy against the Taliban-led coalition seeking to overthrow the U.S.-allied government in Kabul. Noting that counterinsurgencies are historically won by those who "outgovern ... rather than outgun" their opponents, the National Security Network urges military leaders to make decisions "with an eye to meeting Afghan security concerns," bolstering Afghan security forces and "phasing out tactics that have increased civilian casualties with questionable payoffs." A United Nations report released this week found that civilian casualties have risen significantly in Afghanistan in 2008 , and over 60 percent of civilian casualties linked to U.S. military activities have been caused by airstrikes.

    Hurlburt explained that consultations taking place over the past two weeks with experts rejected a strategy that focused narrowly on counterterrorism activities like specifically targeting Al Qaeda or Taliban leadership, out of fear that a strategy that neglected the concerns of the Afghan people wouldn't work. "The counterinsurgency and development people together make the point the you can't achieve your counterterrorism objectives without a modicum of government functionality," she said. But what she said her "friends in the development community," who urge a robust construction and humanitarian effort, "are not fully recognizing is how shallow the domestic pool of support is [for such efforts] at this point. That's what the progressive advocacy community, like Get Afghanistan Right, understands."

    Get Afghanistan Right is a coalition of progressives that rejects military escalation in Afghanistan. Hurlburt said that she wanted to work out a sense from the "expert community" of what was achievable and realistic for Afghanistan before taking the document to "progressive advocacy" organizations like Get Afghanistan Right to secure buy in. She conceded that there would be disagreements that probably can't be fully resolved.

    "In my wildest dreams, if we could agree to disagree on troop numbers but get the other pieces right, and ask hard questions on those troop numbers" Hurlburt said she would consider the effort at consensus-building successful. "The other thing I'd really like to see is greater familiarization, so the expert community can see advocacy community has valid concerns, and the advocacy community can see the expert community are good people with serious concerns and not, to use an overused word, 'war mongers.'"

    Jason Rosenbaum, a blogger at the Seminal and a leader of Get Afghanistan Right, said he welcomed the National Security Network's efforts. "We think there's a lot of common ground among progressives on Afghanistan, especially when you get the around the question of the war-fighting part," he said. "I would love to be on board that discussion as much as possible." He said he considered "NSN an ally, and we consider VoteVets an ally in some senses," referring to a progressive veterans' organization that has pushed for an increase of troop levels in Afghanistan.

    Get Afghanistan Right also released a statement of principles on Tuesday for the war, reacting to President Obama's announced troop increase. "Without a clear strategy, benchmarks for success, and a plan to bring our troops home, this escalation will only prolong the American-led occupation - increasing anti-American sentiment throughout the region - while failing to make America any safer," the organization wrote in a statement signed initially by 15 academics.

    Hurlburt was optimistic that progressive consensus is possible. She said that the network's role was "to turn down temperature of rhetoric enough to see the truths that the other [progressive] side is offering them." And she called the Afghanistan strategy review a test for progressives. "This is a great experiment in asking, can the progressive community do a better job with these types of challenges than [it did] in 1993 or 1977 or whatever. We've never done this successfully as a community - shape war policy, and shape policy of own [progressive] governments when we manage to elect them."

  

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It sounds as if Get

It sounds as if Get Afghanistan Right have got it right. Russian Army veterans have been recording their alarm that the US-led force in Afghanistan is simply repeating the mistake they made. Insurgency "wars" are not won by traditional battle tactics. Please try to get the Afghan people on our side - if only to slow down the flow of drugs. They will be able to settle for their own version of "democracy".

The fascist amerikan

The fascist amerikan escalation in Afghanistan will be the death rattle for the amerikan Imperialistic empire !

I would literally flood the

I would literally flood the nation with cellular telephones and create a high-end wireless network, with two interlocking goals. The first would be to form a communications infrastructure that would empower effective grassroots citizenry and facilitate individual prosperity; it's direct access to the global economy, and it might well reduce the local reliance on strong men in an economic sense, at least. It could certainly increase the relevance and utility of a reasonable government to individuals. It's small things that matter; access to records, agricultural information, etc. From a national security perspective it would increase the ability of the NSA to build a working picture of what's going on by several orders of magnitude. In other words, there should be practical advantages to individuals at the very lowest level, so there is no "Sea of Peasants" for Al Q'eda to swim in. Oh, and stop blowing shit up from great heights. If you feel the need to kill someone, do everyone the courtesy of a personal visit. Seriously and all sarcasm aside, that approach has significant cultural importance.

So glad to hear that some

So glad to hear that some progressives are developing a real alternative to the failed"military power trumps all" strategy of Cheney/Bush. Can't wait to see the insights they come up with, hoping it includes reality, and not just more rhetorical ideology. Definitely sharing this link with others!

It sounds like a PR campaign

It sounds like a PR campaign to shut up progressives who know the occupation is illegal and want out, like me. Those of us of a certain age, remember Vietnam. Add on the continuation of the illegal Bush other policies, including drones/missiles into Pakistan. How many illegal wars/occupations would make cheerleaders of the President feel comfortable?

US OUT OF AFGHANISTAN. The

US OUT OF AFGHANISTAN. The US is in Afghanistan for hegemony, to protect an oil pipeline, and to try out new weapons. The "flow of drugs" that the other commenter refers to are natural plant drugs (marijuana and opium poppies) that are far less harmful than legal pharmaceutical drugs. Obama should immediately remove all troops from all countries to save trillions of dollars and to end US imperialism that has been an invasive source of world problems and bloodshed for the past century. If "liberals" and "progressives" are to have any ethics, they must oppose war and the military-industrial complex that has so well promoted it for so long.

Heroin Money for Bankers.

Heroin Money for Bankers. If we're in Iraq to control the oil, why are we in Afghanistan? If Obama wants to do the social justice goals that people think he is interested in then he would have to oppose the military industrial complex's plans to dominate the unconquerable. The British and the Soviet Union were each kicked out of Afghanistan. It's likely the US empire will also be kicked out, eventually. Articles like this one remind me why I voted for Cynthia McKinney for President, who had more foreign policy experience than Obama and more sense of morality than Biden. I'm glad to be non-partisan and not a so-called "progressive" -- a euphemism for liberal Democrat. It would be interesting to find out who is funding this effort to co-opt the Obama voters into supporting an escalation of the Bush Cheney seizure of Afghanistan and ultimately the War on Pakistan, which has the potential to make the War on Iraq seem like a minor dispute.

Yes, small IS beautiful.

Yes, small IS beautiful. (Drone attacks represent Big and the most repulsive kind of warfare.) I believe that profit from the opium crop should be channeled into government coffers via legalizing (decriminalizing) drug sales through licensing and taxing. This could be an example for world-wide control over criminal/gang/mafia drug smuggling and gang wars. It would help to free up acreage for sustainable agriculture and family farms. It would provide a focused turnaround for the poor. an incentive for education and consequent self respect and job security. The military personnel, including troops, would be an asset in helping to accomplish a lot of this in cooperation with NGO organizations and cooperative activities. Afghanistan at this point is a dead-end just like VietNam as far as the US is concerned and demands a concerted corrective effort everywhere by everyone. Please, let's stop the hate and the killing. Life is too short to waste it in such things.

Obama's Afghanistan thrust,

Obama's Afghanistan thrust, aka Bush II policy, will fail-- The rationale for staying in Afghanistan is wacko-we're there to prevent them from attacking here. How many times have I heard this: From Russia, to China, Korea, to Vietnam, to Nicaragua, and on and on--same old story. Everybody is waiting to attack us--these evildoers will slip a bomb in with their underwear in their luggage and leave it in a Times square bus stop--and BLAM--we're done for. Enough! No one will attack us--just stop invading and droning their countries. The so-called progressive alluded to above, are no progressive at all, just part of America's hegemonic ruling elite. SOS DD, same old shit, different day.

There won't be a progressive

There won't be a progressive split on Afghanistan. True progressives will continue to oppose the war, while Obama groupies who think that being a progressive means going along with whatever Obama says will jump on the bandwagon...and never the twain shall meet. Obama is showing himself to be the neutered, middle-of-the-road joke we strongly suspected he was, and we aren't about to get behind him on this issue.

Democracy shmocracy, any

Democracy shmocracy, any government is only as good as the people running it. Ours has been real great lately. Our cultural biases make the radical Muslim attitudes seem fairly normal. We believe that an elected government is infallible, but look how long we have been perfecting it with pitiful results. Because WE THE PEOPLE are a bunch of biased greedy capitalists, who will throw their vote away for a crumb thrown from above. To hell with the country, give me some pork. Please. WAH!!

Intelligence Agency - more

Intelligence Agency - more and more an oxymoron. Seems that the "intelligence agencies" increasingly are pushing war, the delightfully invisible (read fictitious) Al Qaeda and terrorism as a steady fuel for sustained military -industrial full employment acts

Afghans don't like

Afghans don't like foreigners with guns in their country. I listened to someone this weekend who had spend a month before Christmas consulting with civil society groups throughout Kabul. They were uniformly against any foreign troops, and just assumed that resistance by armed groups would continue to increase until the US is forced out...then the Afghans will find their own ways to work out who runs which part of the country, probably not by a process that we in the US approve of. Supporting Afghan-led education and community-based ag development efforts, however distantly to avoid tainting them with Western association, will be one way to help build a more humane future.

I strongly oppose

I strongly oppose negotiations with the Taliban as a politico-religious force. The British opening to the Right (Fundamentalist Saudi and Taliban) has been unhelpful and distasteful. I know of one progressive voice I trust on the subject of Afhaniistan: Sarah Chayes. I suggest that progressives who do not want to ally themselves with religious fanatics, school bombers, and the suppression of women study her website and her recommendations for appropriate action in Afghanistan. http://www.sarahchayes.net/images/Afghanistan_policy_action_plan.pdf http://www.sarahchayes.net/ I have, unfortunately, already been forced to "defund" and unsubscribe from some organizations due to their regressive policy advocacy of religious fundamentalism in Afghanistan and Pakistan. I hope the infection does not spread.

No lies = no pretext for

No lies = no pretext for "war". No militarist economy = no impetus for "war" No self-righteous mythic divinely-ordained amerikan arrogance = no motivation for "war". No media-pentagon-academic-armaments industry-thinktank-psuedo-"progressive" jaw-jacker nexus = no public support for "war". No energy corporation exclusive petroleum-dependence = no need for "war". No mass hypnosis fixated on "leaders" and "experts" = no herd compliance with "war". No conditioning by ancient inexplicable "codes of honor" and other obsolete boys' club bullshit = no recruits for "war". No more "yes" to "war" = NO MORE WAR.

As a former senior advisor

As a former senior advisor in Viet Nam (remember "Vietnamization"?)' I as an artillary officer was expected to tell a Vietnamese officer how to fight his countrymen in a war in his country. Yes, they willingly killed and even murdered for their pay - and at night lobbed mortar rounds at us. Guess what, we were an invading alien force in their country. War mongers and criminals do not care. They don't wake up in the middle of the night remembering blood pouring from a womans or childs mouth, or the horrible sight, sounds and smells of death of people. While lawyers debate and pos pontificate real people are dying and having their lives destroyed in the many ways that war does. STOP the F$$K out of the killing/maiming!!

It is not the CIA's al Qaeda

It is not the CIA's al Qaeda that is the greatest threat to US national security, but US foreign policy. While US war hawks, politicos, and profiteers cry crocodile tears about poppies, the US continues to force, via various threats, other nations to import the world's most dangerous drug: tobacco. Have we forgotten the decisive role of the CIA in flooding US streets with cocaine? Have we forgotten the CIA's importation of heroin to the US via the French Connection? "The Soviet Union and something called communism per se had not been the object of Washington's global attacks. There had never been an International Communist Conspiracy. The enemy was, and remains, any government or movement, or even individual, that stands in the way of the expansion of the American Empire; by whatever name the US gives to the enemy - communist, rogue state, drug trafficker, terrorist." (William Blum, Killing Hope)

A good place to visit

A good place to visit regarding the subject of helping Afghanistan is https://www.ikat.org/