"I find specious the reasons we ask for bloodshed and sacrifice from our young men and women in Afghanistan."
--Matthew Hoh
Foreign Service Officer Matthew Hoh’s resignation letter is a stunning refutation of Gen. Stanley McChrystal’s proposal to escalate the war in Afghanistan. Hoh, a former Marine officer who fought in Iraq, was a senior civilian official in Zabul Afghanistan.
"I feel that our strategies in Afghanistan are not pursing goals that are worthy of sacrificing our young men and women or spending the billions we're doing there," Hoh wrote. "I believe that the people we are fighting there are fighting us because we are occupying them -- not for any ideological reasons, not because of any links to al Qaeda, not because of any fundamental hatred toward the West. The only reason they're fighting us is because we are occupying them."
Yep.
That summarizes the delusion of American neoconservative foreign policy since World War II: that we can make the rest of the world follow us by kicking everyone’s teeth in.
One can safely argue that America saved the world three times in the 20th century, by winning the two World Wars and the Cold War. What we’re doing now amounts to nothing more than keeping our military industrial complex afloat.
There is no hope of making the official government in Afghanistan legitimate. The runoff election will be every bit as crooked as the previous one. There is no reason for us to waste more national treasure or blood there.
As Hoh notes, "The September 11 attacks, as well and the Madrid and London bombings, were primarily planned and organized in Western Europe; a point that highlights the threat is not one tied to traditional or geographic boundaries."
And as I have said repeatedly, the only sanctuary modern terrorists need in order to plan and coordinate operations is a pocket big enough to hold an iPhone.
We have no stake in Afghanistan, other than the fact that President Obama foolishly called it a "war of necessity," a mistake the neocons have flung in his face at every opportunity.
Richard Holbrooke, the administration's special representative for Afghanistan and Pakistan, told the Washington Post he disagreed that the war "wasn't worth the fight," but did agree with much of Hoh's analysis. This is the same Richard Holbrooke who, when asked what success in Afghanistan would consist of, replied, "We’ll know it when we see it."
That’s "don’t ask, don’t tell" warfare. Don’t ask us what we’re trying to accomplish because we can’t tell you, because we don’t really know.
The self-satirizing "strategy" for Afghanistan that Obama’s security team jiffy-popped back in March was a disgraceful piece of pedantic carpentry. We’ll disrupt terror networks, we’ll turn Pakistan and Afghanistan into real countries, and we’ll get the rest of the world to help us do it. Squirt!
McChrystal’s proposal would have us put a World War II level of effort into Afghanistan. We’d need two or three soldiers in country to protect every thousand local civilians, and we’d need to send over at least as many of our own civilians to build the country up from the Stone Age to the 21st century, then we would require more combat troops to protect the civilians. We’d need more diplomats to smooth over ill feelings created among the locals because of all the collateral damage all these extra combat troops caused, then we’d need to hire mercenaries to protect the diplomats who would create even more collateral damage.
Once escalation starts, it never stops. Missions creep until they come to a crawl, and then they destroy the empire. Hitler could have had his thousand-year Reich if he hadn’t committed history’s most egregious example of strategic overreach.
There was no reason for Nazi Germany to invade Russia. Russia has always known how to defend itself: give up space for time, wait for winter to come, then counter-attack. The strategy worked on Napoleon as well as it worked on Hitler. But the Russians never made a major invasion of Western Europe until the end of World War II, and it wouldn’t have been able to do so then if we hadn’t been foolish enough to allow them to. Russia was a non-threat that two megalomaniacs impaled themselves on.
Even Alexander the Great never really conquered Afghanistan. Attempts by Britain and Russia to subdue the country proved to be their downfall.
Matthew Hoh’s actions were indeed brave. Almost nobody wants to walk away from this bad war because of the signal it sends the troops: your sacrifice is in vain. You are being used. The officers above you are wrong. Your president is wrong about what you’re in being a "war of necessity." But that’s the truth of the matter. In Hoh’s words:
I do not believe any military force has ever been tasked with such a complex, opaque and Sisyphean mission as the U.S. Military has received in Afghanistan. The tactical proficiency and performance of our Soldiers, Sailors, Airmen and Marines is unmatched and unquestioned. However, this is not the European or Pacific theaters of World War II, but rather is a war for which our leaders, uniformed civilian and elected, have inadequately prepared and resourced our men and women. Our forces, devoted and faithful, have been committed to conflict in an indefinite and unplanned manner that has become a cavalier, politically expedient and Pollyannaish misadventure.
We’re about to repeat the nonsense we pulled in the Iraq surge. $1.3 billion of the defense budget will go toward bribing members of the Taliban into switching sides. We’ll hand out guns and money to bad guys, and then wonder why they turn on our puppet government and us when the handouts dry up. How is it that we think we can reform a corrupt, violent society by flushing bribes and guns into it?
Afghan President Hamid Karzai’s brother, Ahmed Wali, is on the CIA’s payroll. Ahmed, suspected to be a major player in the Afghan opium trade, has been on our spy agency’s dole for eight years.
What a country!
Commander Jeff Huber, U.S. Navy (Retired) writes at Pen and Sword . Jeff's novel Bathtub Admirals (Kunati Books), a lampoon on America's rise to global dominance, is on sale now.