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View Full Version : It's Time to Surrender in Afghanistan


HowardCohodas
11-12-2009, 05:57
It's Time to Surrender in Afghanistan (http://www.americanthinker.com/2009/11/its_time_to_surrender_in_afgha_1.html)


It's time to surrender in Afghanistan. Yep, that's right. Surrender.

Let's sign a document of surrender, apologize for our "aggression," withdraw the troops, and let Osama and the Taliban have a ticker-tape parade in the streets of Kabul before they force women back into their burkas, outlaw education for girls, and start executing homosexuals and Christians again.

It might sound a bit odd for me to make such an outrageous proposal. After all, I'm a hawkish, pro-military conservative, and I've been a lifelong adherent of the "nuke 'em 'til they glow" school of foreign policy. But I say we should surrender because the facts are plain: we have already surrendered in deed, if not in name.

On December 7, 1941, we were attacked by a fanatical, suicidal, non-democratic, non-Western enemy who had a disciplined, motivated, state-of-the art military. The attack killed some 2,000 uniformed military personnel on what was then a territorial outpost.

Our response was to conscript 12 million people into our armed forces, detain all members of the enemy's race for the duration of the war, defeat the enemy in less than four years by using nuclear weapons against his cities, and maintain a military presence in the enemy's nation for the next 65 years after his defeat.

On September 11, 2001, we were again attacked by a fanatical, suicidal, non-democratic, non-Western enemy. The enemy had no disciplined military. He employed only improvised and primitive methods of war. The Islamist militants killed 3,000 people, mostly civilians, in New York and Washington, the economic and political capitals of our nation. We identified stone-age Afghanistan as the origin of the attacks.

Our response was to send a few thousand volunteers to Afghanistan. Eight years later, we have failed to defeat Afghan militants that are largely illiterate and have no uniforms, no tanks, no ships, no aircraft, no satellites, and no armored vehicles. They are equipped only with Communist-designed rifles, rocket-propelled grenades, and improvised explosives.

Our problem is not tactical inferiority, but a lack of political will and a surfeit of political correctness. Following the 9/11 attack, President Bush declared that "Islam is a religion of peace." Try to imagine for a moment that FDR held a press conference on Dec. 8, 1941, to declare that "Japan is a nation of peace." You can't.

At this point it's not even true that Afghanistan is the still the primary locus of Islamic terrorism. Iran has been pursuing nuclear weapons for years. Pakistan -- already armed with nuclear weapons, and probably harboring Osama bin Laden -- could become unglued at any moment.

Yet our political pusillanimity has only gotten worse in the eight years since 9/11. Hardly a day goes by that we don't outdo ourselves in craven groveling and self-debasement before the enemy.

One of President Obama's first acts in office was to ban the phrase "war on terror" in favor of "overseas contingency operations" in government usage. He then traveled to Cairo, declared that he had "known Islam on three continents," and falsely claimed that Muslims had "enriched the United States" since its founding and that Islam has a "proud tradition of tolerance." (Perhaps he might ask the folks at Cantor Fitzgerald and United Airlines about Islamic "enrichment" and "tolerance.") He then apologized for American involvement in a coup against Iranian socialist Mohammed Mossadegh in 1953 (a brilliant masterstroke of American foreign policy that kept both the Soviets and the U.S. out of Iran for 26 years), yet stood idly by while the Iranian theocrats rigged their own election this summer. It's now evident that Obama will not prevent the Islamic Revolutionary State from getting nuclear weapons. There will be no military action -- and no sanctions, either. Iran will get the bomb.

In October, only a week after Islamist militants stormed the headquarters of the Pakistani military, Secretary of State Clinton traveled to Pakistan. The radical Yale-educated feminist donned a headscarf in submission -- and the Islamist fanatics responded to her visit by killing hundreds in suicide attacks.

We have reached a point in Afghanistan that the Soviet Union reached in the 1980s: we no longer believe our own propaganda. The Soviets claimed that they lived in a workers' paradise and they were merely bringing the great benefits of communism to Afghanistan. But they knew it was a lie.

Similarly, we say that we're going to bring freedom and democracy to Afghanistan. Maybe we could, of course -- if we wanted to. But we don't. That would require remaking Afghan society the way we remade Japanese society. And President Obama campaigned on the promise of remaking America -- not Afghanistan.

This summer, the president stated that he's "not comfortable" using the term "victory" in Afghanistan. How can he possibly ask troops to risk life and limb in that country after saying that? His subsequent three-month indecision with regard to the Army's request for 40,000 more troops further betrays the fact that we're simply not committed to victory. One can scarcely comprehend FDR openly debating, in full view of Hitler and the world, a request for reinforcements during the Battle of the Bulge.

The assassination of thirteen American troops at Ft. Hood by a Muslim officer in the U.S. Army is the last straw. Despite the overwhelming evidence, our political and military leaders refuse to acknowledge that Maj. Hasan was motivated by militant Islamist ideology. President Obama believes that Hasan just "snapped" from the stress of military life. Homeland Security Secretary Napolitano told an Arab audience that she hopes the assassinations at Ft. Hood don't lead to reprisals against Muslims in the U.S.

And Gen. George Casey -- unbelievably -- actually said that if "diversity" in the military were to suffer, it would be an even greater tragedy than the Ft. Hood murders.

If political correctness makes us unwilling or unable to defeat militant Islam from within the officer corps of the U.S. Army at Ft. Hood, Texas, then it's perfectly evident that we're not going to defeat militant Islam in Afghanistan after eight years of trying.

The enemy has not defeated us in battle. They can't. But the Ft. Hood assassinations show that we've already surrendered. There's no sense putting our troops in harm's way in the field if we won't protect them in Texas.

Pete
11-12-2009, 06:23
Presiden Obama wants a new plan

http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2009/11/12/politics/main5623209.shtml

Eikenberry, Hmmmm.

LongWire
11-12-2009, 06:45
Good article....Thanks...........

Dozer523
11-12-2009, 06:55
I love authors who use words like "pusillanimity". Reminds me of the Wizard of Oz.:rolleyes:
OTOH I respect soldier-statesmen like Ambassador Eikenberry (Former Commander Combined Forces Command - Afghanistan CFC-A) . I've been wondering when his thoughts were going to come to public knowledge.

Warrior-Mentor
11-12-2009, 07:06
Thanks Howard. Great grab.

Dad
11-12-2009, 07:14
I would really like to hear opinions from QP's regarding Gen Eikenberry's position. The diversity of opinion within the military seems to be as wide as in the civilian population. (Which I think is a really good thing). Sometimes I think I am getting more confused daily.
Thank you

Triman19
11-12-2009, 21:47
Concerning this article, I have a question. Maybe this is directed more toward QP's, and maybe those who have good knowledge and understanding. OK, so SF men are quite valuble-almost invaluble. The thinking required and the ability to do more than kick in doors is something that really does seperate SF from other outifts, such as SEALs and PJ's ect. Working with host nations/governments, FID missions; these are abilities and opportunites that put the ODA so closely with foreign goverments. How do you guys (SF) not only do your job -and damn well might I add- when our government and its...ehh umm "leadership" wants nothing to do with what needs to happen? It seems as if our President and others are looking to just pull out of Afghanistan and leave it as it is. :confused: How do you deploy, and do whatever it is you were sent to do, and really accomplish the good that needs to happen for these people? It seems as if you guys are stuck in the middle of a really bad spot. In other words, forget the CIA and whoever else is involved, SF has the training, the resources, the talents to honestly make a difference. And I'm not being cheesy here. It is very frustrating and disheartening to see such an amazing people (SF) work and triain so hard but at times they are sent writing a paper for school and its always good to seek opinions and advice form people who know more and have better ideas. Please feel free to PM if you wouild like. Great article though :)

Richard
11-13-2009, 06:03
Some facts bearing on the problem:


The SecDef has stated we've put about all the 'boots on the ground' we can add for the time being.

A key component of GEN McChrystal's strategy is an Afghanistan government which is not corruptively ineffective, partisan, fractured, and seen as a 'puppet' of the West - this does not now exist nor, after the recent elections fiasco, does it seem likely to occur in the near future.

Our - and the global - economy is such that sustainment of indiscriminate OEF operations in a 'spreading democracy' fashion without careful strategic planning and focus is as great a danger in many ways as the hydra-like forces we seek to render impotent.

Some of the 'key' components of the proposed plans now in existence are missing oe OBE and there is time to carefully rethink our course of action in OEF - although the time to do so is becoming less.

Conclusion(s):

As John Maynard Keynes said, "When the facts change, I change my mind. What do you do, sir?"

IMO - a little more time taken now by those actually wearing the 'mantle of command' may prove the difference between either a more satisfying conclusion to these issues or yet another chapter of 'America and the Revolutionary Tar Baby."

YMMV.

Richard's $.02 :munchin

LongWire
11-13-2009, 06:38
. OK, so SF men are quite valuble-almost invaluble. The thinking required and the ability to do more than kick in doors is something that really does seperate SF from other outifts, such as SEALs and PJ's ect.

If you think that the SEAL's and PJ's primary missions are to kick doors, then you need to read more..............