1 The Guardian, March 20, 2009, Julian Borger, “In real terms, Nato is losing.”
2 Portside.Org, Sept 11 09 “Foreign Policy in Focus,” Conn Hallinan, “Afghanistan: What are these people thinking?”
The field manual on counterinsurgency recommends a ratio of 20 counterinsurgents per 1,000 residents: for Afghanistan, population 33 million, that would be at least 660,000 specially trained soldiers. Also see
The International Herald Tribune, September 5, 2009
, Mark Moyar (professor of national security affairs as the US Marine Corps University) writes that Dennis Blair, director of national intelligence proposes a ratio of 25 troops for each 1,000 Afghans.
The New York Times, Oct 11, 2009, AP “Afghan Outlook Bleak as Taliban Grabs Territory:” “…a former top commander there, US. Gen Dan McNeill, said in an interview with NPR last summer that ‘well over 400,000 troops’ are needed to tame the country. He then called it ‘an absurd figure,’ because Afghanistan will never see that many troops…More troops would mean more forces driving over increasingly lethal roadside bombs.” The basic government text is
The U.S. Army [&] Marine Corps Counterinsurgency Field Manual. Published by the University of Chicago Press in 2007, it has forewords by General David Petraeus and Lt. General James Amos and Lt. Colonel John Nagl.
3 Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, January 2009, Gilles Dorronsoro, “Focus and Exit: An Alternative Strategy for the Afghan War.”
4 UPI, September 2, 2009, Arnaud de Borchgrave, “Commentary: Strategic retreat.” He points out that when President Kennedy was assassinated we have 16,300 formal advisers redesignated as fighting troops in Vietnam. Five years later, there were 536,000.”
5 The New York Times, September 2, 2009, James Glanz, “Contractors Outnumber U.S. Troops in Afghanistan.” According to the Congressional Research Service, they averaged 65% of all Pentagon forces in Afghanistan.
6 The Toronto Globe and Mail, June 12, 2008, Anatol Lieven, “The Dream of Afghan democracy is dead.” “In recent meetings involving Nato officials I have been struck by the combination of public acknowledgment that, to achieve real and stable progress in Afghanistan, western forces will probably have to remain there for a generation at least…”
7 Congressman John Murtha, the chairman of the subcommittee on military appropriations, has said that expenditures will pass $1 trillion next year.
The New York Times, November 15, 2009, Christopher Drew, “High Costs Weigh on Troop Debate for Afghan War.”
8 See my book,
Violent Politics (New York: Harper Collins, 2008) where I discuss the study made by Nobel Prize Laureate economist Joseph Stiglitz and former Assistant Secretary of Commerce Linda Bilmes. They calculate that the
real cost to America, as it would be figured by standard accounting methods, is between one and two
trillion dollars. They have since revised their estimates upwards. Indeed some other economists think the costs are more realistically set at about $6 or even 7 trillion or over half of the yearly Gross National Product of America. As we check the individual costs of Afghanistan, it is unlikely to be a bargain. For example, shipping fuel to Iraq cost about $40 a gallon whereas in Afghanistan just the shipping cost is reputed to $400 a gallon.
9 The Washington Post, November 14, 2009, Ann Scott Tyson, “U.S. soldiers’ morale down in Afghanistan.”
10 I deal with these matters in my book
Understanding Iraq (New York: HarperCollins, 2006).
11 I am indebted to Dr. Hans Noll, American Cancer Society Professor of Genetics and Molecular Biology, for the following information: when depleted uranium shells strike their targets, the heat of the impact mutates the uranium into an aerosol of. U3O8 . “It settles as a fine dust, which enters the body in a variety of ways. Uranium oxide is an extremely potent neurotoxin with a high affinity for DNA. This DNA fragmentation, which results in genetic defects like cancer and malformation in developing fetuses. The dust particle, because of its high toxicity, is much more harmful than the low radioactivity associated with it. Inhaled as dust, uranium oxide is accumulating in the lungs, liver and kidneys and affect the nervous system within weeks.
12 The New York Times, October 25, 2006. Nicholas D. Kristof, “On Minute in Iraq = $380,000.
13 The Guardian, August 15, 2009, Ghaith Abdul-Ahad ‘, “Inside the Taliban: ‘the more troops they send, the more targets we have.”
14 International Herald Tribune, March 4, 2009, Celestine Bohlen, “’Graveyard of empires’ with a lesson for U.S.”
15 IPSnews, September 23, 2009, Gareth Porter, “U.S. Afghan Campaign Plan Says Key Groups Back Taliban.” Mr. Porter points out that by leaking his report to the President, General McChrystal, had made an “obvious effort to force the hand of a reluctant President Barack Obama to agree to a significant increase in U.S. troops.”
16 TomDispatch.com, Ma 23, 2009, Tom Engelhardt, “”Gen. McChrystal, Grim Reaper: Obama’s New Afghan Commander Will Send Death Toll Soaring.”
17 International Herald Tribune, October 5, 2009, Henry Kissinger, “Afghanistan’s cruel options.”
18 Andrew J. Bacevich, “The Long War,”
The London Review of Books, March 26, 2009.
19 The New York Times, November 13, 2009, Mark Landler and Jeff Zeleny, “Ambassador’s U.S. Ambassador General Karl W. Eikenberry, a former military commander in Afghanistan, who opposes sending more troops.
20 The Taliban has developed quite sophisticated tactics which they have set out in a detailed training manual. See
The Daily Telegraph, August 18, 2007, Isambard Wilkinson and Ashraf Ali, “How to be a jihadi: Taliban’s training secrets.”
21 International Herald Tribune, September 16, 2009, Ansar Rahel & Jon Krakauer, “Save Afghanistan, look to its past.” [Rahel, a lawyer, advised King Muhammad Shah’s
loya jirga committee.]
22 New York Times, October 20, 2008, John F. Burns, “An Old Afghanistan Hand Offers Lessons from the Past.” He commented that “The more foreign troops you have roaming the country, the more the irritative allergy toward them is going to be provoked.”
23 Christian Science Monitor, August 20, 09, Thomas H. Johnson(research professor at the Naval Postgrad school in Monterey) and M. Chris Mason (a retired FSO who worked in Paktika province, is a fellow at the Center for Advanced Defense Studies in Washington), “Democracy in Afghanistan is wishful thinking.”
25 The Financial Times, February 12, 2008, Gideon Rachman, “Too Soon to Give Up in Afghanistan.”
26 The Guardian, August 18, 2009, Ghaith Abdul-Ahad, “Face to face with the Taliban.” He points out that one of the Taliban government locations which he visited was only 500 meters, roughly 600 paces, from a fortified police station.
27 Gilles Dorronsoro, Op. cit. “In fact, there have been no splinter groups since its emergence, except locally with no strategic consequences.”
28 The Washington Post, October 9, 2009, Scott Wilson, “Emerging Goal for Afghanistan: Weaken, Not vanquish, Taliban.”
29 I have analyzed a dozen insurgencies throughout the world over the last two centuries in my book,
Violent Politics (New York: HarperCollins, 2008). All exhibit this characteristic.
30 The New York Times, October 11, 2009, Scott Shane: “A Dogged Taliban Chief Rebounds, Vexing U.S.”
Mr. Shane quotes Richard Barrett, a former British intelligence officer now monitoring al-Qaida and the Taliban for the United Nations, who argues that Mullah Omar has learned the lesson of 2001. “If the Taliban regains power,’ he said, ‘they don’t want Al Qaeda hanging around.’”
31 Aljazeera.net. October 7, 2009. Gulbuddin Hekmatyar said that the 9/11 attack was neither planned in Afghanistan nor carried out by Afghanis. “Those who carried it out were people born in the US and Europe and they were trained there. They were not Afghanis and they never got training in Afghanistan.”
32 International Herald Tribune, August 27, 2009, James Risen and Mark Landler, “Karzai’s No. 2 puts U.S. in predicament.” “…the decision to turn a blind eye to the warlords and drug traffickers…was a fundamental strategic mistake of the Afghan war. It sent a signal to the Afghan people that the most corrupt warlords had the backing of the United States…”
33 The Nation, Nov 17, 2008, Tariq Ali, “Operation Enduring Disaster” and
International Herald Tribune, October 5, 2009, Henry Kissinger, “Afghanistan’s cruel options.”
34 United States Army Combined Arms Center, Leavenworth, Kansas, Handbook 09-27 April 2009. “Center for Army Lessons Learned.” Also see the Department of State,
Counterinsurgency for U.S. Government Policy Makers: A work in Progress, October 2007, Department of State Publication # 11456.
35 International Herald Tribune, Sept 17, 2009, Andrew Wilder [research director at Tufts University Center] “Squandering hearts and minds.”
36 Russian ambassador Zamir N. Kabulov pointed out that during their occupation the Russians spent billions on education, building roads, dams and other infrastructure as well as education and programs designed uplift women, “to no avail.” See
New York Times, October 20, 2008, John F. Burns, “An Old Afghanistan Hand Offers Lessons from the Past.”
37 The latest figures, reported in
The New York Times, November 15, 2009, David Barboza, “China’s Sprint for the Gold,” show a U.S. trade deficit of $422 billion with China holding an amazing $2.273 trillion in foreign currency, much of it obligations on the United States.” The U.S. budget deficit for the fiscal year is estimated at $1.4 trillion according to Christopher Drew, op. cit.
38 The Guardian, December 14, 2008, Ghaith Abdul-Ahad, op. cit. Mr. Ahad, one of the few foreign reporter who went into insurgent-held territory and met with Taliban leadership. One of the men told him that while he had not approved of the Taliban, the new organization, known as Threki Taliban, “was not the same” as the group that had ruled before.
39 The New York Times, January 2, 2009, Dexter Filkins, “Bribes Corrode Afghans’ Trust in Government.” As Mr. Filkins wrote, “Kept afloat by billions of dollars in American and other foreign aid, the government of Afghanistan is shot through with corruption and graft…Everything seems for sale.” The drug traffic reaches into the presidency. See
The International Herald Tribune, October 6, 2008, James Risen, “Reports link brother of Karzai to drug trade.” On police corruption,
The New York Times, April 9, 2009, Richard A. Oppel, Jr. “Corruption Undercuts Hopes for Afghan police.” And on troops and police passing ammunition to the Taliban see
The International Herald Tribune, May 20, 2009, C.J. Chiver, “In captured Taliban munitions, clues to leaks.’ Henry Kissinger, a supporter of the war, admits that ‘Reform…will require decades.”
International Herald Tribune, February 27, 2009, “The Way Forward.”
40 The Nation, October 14, 2009, Tom Hayden, “Kilcullen’s Long War.” Mr. Hayden says that the plan was hatched in 2005. Also see Bacevich, op. cit. and the British view, as outlined by General Sir David Richards, the newly appointed Chief of the British General Staff, is set out by Sam Marsden, “Afghan mission ‘could last 40 years’.”
The Independent, August 8, 2009.