Share

The War Stampede

by: Norman Solomon, t r u t h o u t | Op-Ed

photo
(Photo Illustration: Ionia Kershaw / t r u t h o u t; Adapted: isafmedia, Barack Obama)

Disputes are raging within the Obama administration over how to continue the US war effort in Afghanistan. A new leak tells us that Washington's ambassador in Kabul, former four-star Gen. Karl Eikenberry, has cautioned against adding more troops while President Hamid Karzai keeps disappointing American policymakers. This is the extent of the current debate within the warfare state.

During a top-level meeting Wednesday afternoon in the White House, The Washington Post reports, President Obama "was given a series of options laid out by military planners with differing numbers of new US deployments, ranging from 10,000 to 40,000 troops. None of the scenarios calls for scaling back the US presence in Afghanistan or delaying the dispatch of additional troops."

No doubt, there are real tactical differences between Eikenberry and the US/NATO commander in Afghanistan, Stanley McChrystal, the ultra-spun, brainy Spartan who wants to boost the current US troop level of 68,000 to well over 100,000 in the war-afflicted country. But those policy disputes exist well within the context of a permanent war psychology.

What's desperately needed is a clear breakaway from that psychology, which routinely offers "kinder, gentler" forms of endless and horrific war. But predictably, in the days and weeks ahead, some progressives - from the grassroots to Capitol Hill - will gravitate toward Eikenberry's stance.

Fine-tuning the US war in Afghanistan is no substitute for acknowledging - with words and with policy - that there will be no military solution. Adjusting the dose and mix of military intervention is a prescription to do more harm on a massive scale.

A recent spate of media stories has focused on soldiers, veterans and family members struggling with PTSD and other heartbreaking consequences of deployments to Iraq and Afghanistan. One of the key messages is that the government must do a better job of caring for battle-scarred veterans.

To the great extent that such stories don't question continuation of the warfare, they're part of the stampede. As long as the only options put forward have to do with finding better ways to cope with ongoing war, the men and women in the military are framed as people who are most admirable as participants in their own suffering (and, implicitly, as people who are willing to inflict suffering on others).

The suffering of Afghan people, meanwhile, gets short shrift in the USA's media and political discourse. While we hear - though not enough - about traumas that continue to plague Americans many months or years after being in war zones, we hear almost nothing about the traumas that the US military visits upon people living in the occupied country.

After 30 years of war, Afghans do not need more ingenious war efforts by the latest batch of best and brightest in Washington.

Thundering along Pennsylvania Avenue, the stampede for war is hard to resist. It's a stampede that few members of Congress have been willing to directly challenge. So, the "serious" policy arguments, from the White House to Capitol Hill, have remained bullish on war - and eager to find better ways to wage it.

The November 12 edition of the Post reported that Ambassador Eikenberry "has expressed frustration with the relative paucity of funds set aside for spending on development and reconstruction this year in Afghanistan, a country wrecked by three decades of war." The newspaper added, "Earlier this summer, he asked for $2.5 billion in nonmilitary spending for 2010, a 60 percent increase over what Obama had requested from Congress, but the request has languished even as the administration has debated spending billions of dollars on new troops."

The Obama administration is spending upwards of 90 percent of all US funds in Afghanistan on military operations - and what Eikenberry is seeking would add up to mere drops in the bucket compared to what Afghanistan really needs for "development and reconstruction." Nor is the US government in any moral or logistical position to effectively supply such aid.

Right now, the paltry aid from Washington is largely disbursed in Afghanistan as an adjunct to the Pentagon's military operations - and it is widely recognized as such. That's why the resulting projects are so often blown up or burned down by insurgents.

In war-ravaged Afghanistan, one of the poorest countries in the world, effective aid is possible. While woefully underfunded, the National Solidarity Program and the Aga Khan Foundation are prime examples of successes - if the goals are genuine humanitarian aid and development rather than providing "hearts and minds" photo-ops and leverage for the occupiers' military campaigns.

The current dispute over how to continue the war in Afghanistan should not be mistaken for an argument over basic assumptions. And what's wrong with US intervention in Afghanistan is fundamental.

  

»


Norman Solomon is co-chair of the national Healthcare NOT Warfare campaign, launched by Progressive Democrats of America. He is the author of a dozen books including "War Made Easy: How Presidents and Pundits Keep Spinning Us to Death." For more information, go to: www.normansolomon.com.

Comments

This is a moderated forum. Β It may take a little while for comments to go live. Be civil and on-topic, don't threaten or advocate violence, please keep it under 300 words. Thanks for participating.

Exc. N.Solomon. So let's

Exc. N.Solomon. So let's marshal the resistance and move forward. Places like www.antiwar.com list all the war bits. I've been thinking, when listening to parts of Obama at the memorial service at Fort Hood (and I voted for him,too), "It's war porn.". Peace now! We CAN!

Does any one actually

Does any one actually remember "Charlie Wilsons' War"? Seems that Eikenberry is trying to portray Wilson. This whole debacle becomes more insidious as each day passes by. Welcome to your future. Only when the elite have to pick up an axe will things change.

Interestin, a new "plant"

Interestin, a new "plant" that ends up in the "Washington Warmonger Post". First off, there's a reason that US aggression includes USAID no-bid handouts in one "of the poorest nations in the world. " Afghanistan includes unparalled strategic interests - It's more profitable to destroy stuff, blow it up, at this point. No no Norman, this won't change anything. You need to personally knock on doors in Nothern Virginia at the homes of the Multi-millionaire executives who make more money then 100 "progressive" writers. For them, war is peace.

I don't understand this PTSD

I don't understand this PTSD thing as if it is a new something coming from war. So a hummer or some vehicle gets blown up while driving down a road in Afghanistan. What is the difference in being under constant danger by an infantryman being blown up from a shell in WW1,2 or Vietnam? Or a shell from a German 88 blasting the tank soldiers rode in WW2?Way back in the 30's an uncle of mine was shell shocked and anytime a sudden loud noise came he jumped. Isn't that PTSD? In any war combat is stressful. It is not a new thing. Of course the solution is to bring the soldiers home from this unnecessary war. Let the generals go back to pushing pencils. Opposition to this idea says let the generals run the war. Well, the generals have run the war since the invasion and I think someone else should run it. They don't know what is going on. Bring 'em home

Stampede is the right word.

Stampede is the right word. With a Presidential midnight visitation to Dover Air Force Base, his decorating the Tomb of the Unknowns and his eulogizing the dead at Fort Hood to prepare us for the coup de grace after this long "review." It is wrong and wrong-headed for the United States to be fighting a war in Afghanistan: if we were really into "nation-building," as the author points out, those sums are paltry compared to the tremendous cost of running a full-scale military operation a world away. To get a different result, things have to be done differently. We KNOW what General McCrystal wants and why he wants it: he is a warrior and his job is warfare. More troops. When has the military ever said, no more war, folks, we're good to go home now? It will never happen. It's up to the Commander-in-Chief to call it. We expected -- and still hope -- that Barack Obama will say no to continuing to do this particular thing in the same old way. We need him to demand a different outcome, so that we can work on our myriad domestic problems and stop making other civilian populations miserable. Obama might also consider the profound injustice inherent in our running these deadly operations with an all-volunteer military. To me, it all feels like Imperial Rome. There would be no war in Iraq or Afghanistan if every American family had to sacrifice its young to this kind of military service.

Afghanistan is another

Afghanistan is another coliseum, where history is the lion, and we are the unknowing gladiator. History tells us that no-0ne wins a war in Afghanistan, there are too many mountains, too many cave, too many independent tribes, too many leaders, too many hide-outs, too many dead.The wise president would declare a victory and get out. The victory comes from Al-Kaeda and its leaders having already left Afghanistan and fled to Saudi Arabia (where they know we won't go after them.) So there is no reason for us to be there.

War for oil in the age of

War for oil in the age of global warming is the stupidest thing ever. Half of all military spending by the US is to protect oil supplies. Potomac Fever, the only disease that only kills people who do NOT have it.

In the words of the late

In the words of the late great Chet Baker, "Lets get lost."

It's the same on all the

It's the same on all the cable news talk shows. The pundits argue only about strategy, never about the policy. They all accept as a given that the "war" must be "won," that the only question is how. Only occasionally do they discuss why we are there at all, and as soon as someone brings the subject up, he/she is shot down with the same old tired meme, "Because al Qaeda will come back if we leave." As someone recently observed, it sounds suspiciously like the domino theory in the cold war. It is just infuriating and exasperating that no one questions our right to be there in the first place, and what good it could possibly do, and how it can possibly justify the carnage, wreckage, corruption and hatred our military forces cause. Why are we so afraid of a few hundred al Qaedans scattered around the world? And why do we act is if their presence in the mountains of Afghanistan, as they practice their martial arts, is a threat to this country? To attack us, they need to do what they did before, infiltrate and train in this country.

Want to save oil? Shut down

Want to save oil? Shut down the war machine.

If only it were so simple.

If only it were so simple. Does anyone else here, trolls aside, trust Ms. Maddow's analysis? http://www.truthout.org/topstories/111309vh03 The main reason for maintaining a presence in Afghanistan that she and Mr. Hersch discuss was apparent in February, when Mr. Solomon wrote the article "Freeing Up Resources ... for More War." http://www.truthout.org/022509A. It is disheartening that our previous president's focus on Iraq and the suspect intelligence he used to market that war have been ignored in many recent comments posted by truthout readers.

FYI, the Federal deficit

FYI, the Federal deficit spending is doled out to the CORPORATE WELFARE KINGS used to perpetuate wars. It was Reagoon who created the large deficits, simultaneously reducing/eliminating corporate taxes. The proceeds from the bonds used to finance the deficit are then doled out to the CORPORATE WELFARE KINGS. The Pentagon has become the government inbside the government.

FYI;The Pentagon's budget is

FYI;The Pentagon's budget is for the purpose of protecting Corporation investments around the world. The buzz words freedom, democracy are propaganda words used to deflect the real reason for the budget as few American taxpayers simply will not believe this truth and that they are suckers. C orporations should be billed for the protection provided by the Pentagon, a possibility with today's technology. Furthermore, the corporations refuse to even pay taxes for the protections of their assets, whenever they can.

Finally, the proceeds from

Finally, the proceeds from financing the Federal deficits, which are doled out to the CORPORATE WELFARE KINGS, is paid by individual American taxpayers both interest and principal. This can be attributed to the Federal Reserve system and withholding taxes.