As US
Empire Fails, Trump Enters a Quagmire
By Kevin Zeese
August
29, 2017 "Information
Clearing House"
- A
quagmire is defined as a complex or unpleasant
position that is difficult to escape. President
Trump’s recently announced war plans
in Afghanistan maintain that quagmire. They
come at a time when
US Empire is failing
and its
leadership in the world is weakening.
The US will learn what other empires have
learned, “Afghanistan is the graveyard of
empires.”
During
the presidential campaign, some became convinced
that Trump would not be an interventionist
president. His tweets about Afghanistan were one
of the reasons. In January of 2013, he tweeted,
“Let’s get out of Afghanistan. Our troops are
being killed by the Afghanis we train and we
waste billions there. Nonsense! Rebuild the
USA.” Now, we see a president who carries on the
interventionist tradition of US Empire.
While Afghanistan has been a never-ending active
war since 9-11, making the 16-year war the
longest in US history, the truth is the United
States became directly involved with Afghanistan
some 38 years ago, on July 3, 1979. As
William Rivers Pitts writes
“On that day, at the behest of National Security
Adviser Zbigniew Brzezinski, President Jimmy
Carter signed the first directive in an
operation meant to destabilize the
Soviet-controlled government of Afghanistan.” In
fact when the US
dropped the MOAB bomb,
Trump was bombing
tunnels built with the assistance of the CIA in
the 1980′s for the mujaheddin and Bin Laden.
Trump’s Afghan policy is inaccurately described
as a new approach but has only one element that
is new – secrecy, as Trump will not tell us how
many soldiers he will send to this war. His
so-called new strategy
is really a continuation
of the permanent war quagmire in Afghanistan,
which may be an intentional never ending war for
the empire’s geopolitical goals. Ralph Nader
reviews 16 years of headlines
about Afghanistan, calling it a “cruel
boomeranging quagmire of human violence and
misery… with no end in sight.”
Another
Afghan Review Leads To Same Conclusion: More War
During
his campaign for president, Trump called for the
US to pull out of Afghanistan. Early in his
administration, President Trump announced a
review of the Afghanistan war. This week when he
announced escalation of the war, Trump noted
this was his instinct. Unfortunately, the
president did not trust his previous instincts
and missed an opportunity to end the war.
We have
seen how President Trump refuses to admit
mistakes, so it is highly unlikely he will
change course from this mistaken path. His
rationale is so many US soldiers have given
their lives that we must stay until the United
States wins. This is the quandary – the US must
continue the war until we win because soldiers
have died but continuing the war means more will
die and the US must stay committed to war
because more have died.
After we read
President Trump’s Afghanistan war speech,
we went back and re-read
President Obama’s Afghanistan war speech
given in March 2009. It is remarkable how
similar the two speeches are. When Russian
president Putin was interviewed by filmmaker
Oliver Stone as well as when he was interviewed
by Megyn Kelly, he made a point proven by US
policy in Afghanistan, “Presidents come and go,
and even the parties in power change, but the
main political direction does not change.”
Both
presidents conducted a lengthy review early in
their administration and both talked with
generals and diplomats who convinced them to
escalate rather than end the war. Both
presidents put forward what they claimed was a
new strategy but in reality, was just doing the
same thing over again: more troops, building up
Afghanistan’s military by working closely with
them, using economic and diplomatic power and
putting pressure on Pakistan not to be a safe
haven for the Taliban and those fighting against
the United States.
To
ensure a quagmire both presidents said that
decisions would not be based on a timeline but
on conditions on the ground. Both promised
victory, without clearly defining what it would
mean; both raised fears of the Taliban and other
anti-US militants using Afghanistan to attack
the United States again. Trump had the advantage
of knowing that President Obama’s approach had
failed despite repeated bombings in Pakistan and
working with Afghan troops, but that didn’t
alter his course.
Afghanistan Victims of a February, 2012 US air
strike that killed 8 children in Kapisa,
Afghanistan.
Failure To
Learn Lessons Ensures Repeating Them
According to Mike Ludwig, since
President Obama approved a troop surge in 2009,
the war in Afghanistan has claimed at
least 26,512 civilian lives and injured
nearly 48,931 more. In July, the United
Nations reported that
at least 5,243 civilians have been killed or
injured in 2017 alone, including higher numbers
of woman and children than previous in years. Trump
seems less concerned than previous presidents
with killings of civilians.
Trump
noted that the Afghanistan-Pakistan region was
now the densest part of the world when it comes
to anti-US militants, saying there were 20
terrorist groups in the area. President Obama
added tens of thousands of troops to the
Afghanistan war, dropped massive numbers of
bombs and the result was more terrorism. The US
was killing terrorists but the impact was
creating more anti-American militants. Trump
failed to connect these dots and understand that
more US attacks create more hatred against the
United States.
After
Obama failed to ‘win’ the war by adding tens of
thousands of troops, with more than 100,000
fighting in Afghanistan at its peak, Trump
should have asked his generals how adding
thousands more (reports are between 4,000 and
8,000 soldiers) would change failure to success.
Wasn’t there anyone in the room who would tell
Trump there is nothing new in the Trump strategy
that Obama and Bush had not already tried. Steve
Bannon was the most opposed to war in the
administration and reportedly fought against
more war, but he was not in the room. Did anyone
in the room stand up to the hawk-generals?
The policy of working more closely with the
Afghan military in order to build them up ended
in disaster in the Obama era. The
New Yorker wrote
in 2012: “We can’t win the war in Afghanistan,
so what do we do? We’ll train the Afghans to do
it for us, then claim victory and head for the
exits.” But, the US discovered that it could not
train the Afghans in the ‘American way of war.’
In 2012, the Obama administration ended the
program of fighting alongside Afghan soldiers to
train them because those soldiers were killing
US soldiers. How many US soldiers will die
because Trump was ignorant of this lesson?
Trump
also took the wrong lesson from the Iraq war and
occupation. He inaccurately described the
so-called withdrawal from Iraq as hasty. He
points to the rise of ISIS as created by the
vacuum in Iraq when the US reduced its numbers
of troops. Trump said the US “cannot repeat in
Afghanistan the mistake our leaders made in
Iraq.”
In
fact, ISIS rose up because the killing of
hundreds of thousands, some reports say more
than a million, of Iraqis, displacement of more
than a million more, the destruction of a
functioning government as well as war crimes
like the Abu Gharib torture scandal made it easy
to recruit fighters. Furthermore, the training
and supply of weapons to Sunnis during the
‘Awakening’ created armed soldiers looking for
their next job.
It was
US war and occupation that created ISIS. The
seeds had been planted, fertilized and were
rapidly growing before the US reduced its
military footprint. Trump is repeating the
mistake of more militarism, and in the end ISIS
or some other form of anti-US militancy will
thrive.
The US
does not want to face an important reality – the
government of the United States is hated in the
region for very good reasons. Bush lied to us
about 9-11 when he claimed they hate us for our
freedoms. No, they hate the US because US
militarism kills hundreds of thousands of people
in the region, destroys functioning governments
and creates chaos.
Victory
Means Something Different to an Empire
In
trying to understand why the US is fighting a
war — a war that has been unwinnable for 16
years — it helps to look at a map and consider
the resources of an area.
Larry Wilkerson, Colin Powell’s
former adviser,
predicts the US will be in Afghanistan for the
next 50 years. Indeed, that may be the ‘victory’
the empire seeks. Afghanistan is of geopolitical
importance. It is a place where the US can
impact China’s ‘One Belt One Road’ to Europe
where China can take the place of Russia and the
United States in providing wealthy Europeans
with key commodities like oil and gas. Just as
the United States has stayed in Germany, Italy
and other European states and Japan after WW II,
and in Korea after the Korean war, the empire
sees a need to be in Afghanistan to be well
positioned for the future of the empire.
Terrorism is not the issue, economic competition
with China, which is quickly becoming the
leading global economic power, is the real
issue.
And, competition with Russia and China is at the
top of the list of the bi-partisan war party in
Washington. Pepe Escobar
points out that
“Russia-China strategic partnership wants an
Afghan solution hatched by Afghans and
supervised by the Shanghai Cooperation
Organization (of which Afghanistan is an
observer and future full member). So from the
point of view of neocon/neoliberalcon elements
of the War Party in Washington, Afghanistan only
makes sense as a forward base to
harass/stall/thwart China’s Belt and Road
Initiative.”
Afghanistan is next to China, India and
Pakistan, three nuclear powers that could pose
military risks to the United States. Having
multiple bases in Afghanistan, to allegedly
fight terrorists, will provide the forward
deployment needed to combat each of those
nations if military action is needed.
Afghanistan also borders on Iran, which could be
a near-future war zone for the United States.
Positioning the US military along the
Afghanistan-Iran border creates a strategic
advantage with Iran as well as with the Persian
Gulf where approximately 18.2 million barrels
of oil per day transit through the Strait of
Hormuz in tankers.
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Afghanistan’s land contains $3
trillion in rare earth minerals
needed for computers and modern technology
including rich deposits of gold, silver,
platinum, iron ore and copper. The US has spent
$700 billion in fighting a failed war and
President Trump and empire strategists are
looking to make sure
US corporations get access to those minerals.
Since the US Geological Survey discovered these
minerals a decade ago, some see Afghanistan as
the future “Saudi Arabia of lithium”, a raw
material used in phone and electric car
batteries. US officials have told
Reuters that
Trump argued at a White House meeting with
advisers in July that the United States should
demand a share of Afghanistan’s mineral wealth.
Jeffrey St. Clair reminds us
not to forget the lucrative opium trade.
Afghanistan is the largest source for heroin in
the world. He writes:
Since the start of Operation Enduring
Freedom, opium production has swelled, now
accounting for more than one-third of the
wrecked Afghan economy. In the last two
years alone, opium poppy yields have
doubled, a narcotic blowback now hitting the
streets of American cities from Amarillo to
Pensacola. With every drone strike in the
Helmond Province, a thousand more poppies
bloom.
The
decision on a never ending war — with no
timetable for exit — is evidence that the
Pentagon and intelligence agencies are in charge
of US foreign policy with Trump as a figurehead.
Of course, the war also ensures immense profits
for the war industry. St. Clair emphasizes that
“in 2016, the Pentagon spent $3.6 million for
each US soldier stationed in Afghanistan. A
surge of 4,000 to 10,000 additional troops,
either as ‘private military units’ or GIs, will
come as a welcome new infusion of cash to the
dozens of defense corporations that invested so
heavily in his administration.”
The firing of Steve Bannon just before the
meeting that decided Afghanistan’s future was
not coincidence as he was the opponent of
escalation.
Glenn Greenwald writes
in the Intercept that this permanent power
structure has been working since his election to
take control of foreign policy. He also points
to the appointment of Marine General John Kelly
as chief of staff and how National Security
Adviser, General McMaster, has successfully
fired several national security officials
aligned with Steve Bannon and the nationalistic,
purportedly non-interventionist foreign policy.
The deep state of the permanent national
security complex has taken over and the Afghan
war decision demonstrates this reality.
With these geopolitical realities, staying
Afghanistan may be the victory the Pentagon
seeks — winning may just be being there. The
Intercept reported
this week that the Taliban offered to negotiate
peace, but peace on the terms of the Taliban may
not be what the US is seeking.
Call for
an End to War for Empire
It would be a terrible error for people to blame
Trump for the Afghanistan war which began with
intervention by Jimmy Carter, became a hot war
after 9-11 under George Bush, escalated under
Obama and now continues the same polices under
Trump. The bi-partisan war hawks in Congress for
nearly 40 years have supported these policies.
Afghanistan is evidence of the never ending
policy of full spectrum dominance sought by the
US empire. The bi-partisans warriors span the
breadth of both parties,
Jeffrey St. Clair highlights
the Afghanistan war cheering by Senator John
McCain and Senator Elizabeth Warren.
Throughout recent decades the United States has
failed to show what
Kathy Kelly called the courage we need for peace
and continues the cowardice of war. In fact,
many ask why are we still at war in Afghanistan:
Osama bid Laden is dead, other alleged 9-11
attack attackers are caught or killed. This
shows that calling Afghanistan the longest
running Fake War in US history is right — fake
because it was never about terrorism but about
business. If terrorism were the issue, Saudi
Arabia would be the prime US enemy, but Saudi
Arabia is also about business.
We share the conclusion of human rights activist
and Green vice presidential candidate in 2016
Ajamu Baraka who wrote for the Black Alliance
for Peace that:
In
an obscene testament to U.S. vanity and the
psychopathological commitment to global
white supremacy, billions have already been
wasted, almost three thousand U.S. lives
lost and over 100,000 dead. It is time to
admit defeat in Afghanistan and bring the
war to an end. Justice and common sense
demand that the bloodletting stop.
When we
understand the true motives of US Empire, that
conclusion is even worse — to steal resources
from a poor nation and put in place permanent
bases from which to conduct more war. US
hegemony is costly to millions of people around
the world and at home it sucks more than 54% of
discretionary spending from the federal budget
and creates an empire economy that only serves
the wealthiest corporate interests that profit
from transnational military dominance while
creating a record wealth divide where most
people in the United States are economic slaves.
It is not only time to end the Afghanistan war
but to end US Empire.
This
article was first published by
Counterpunch
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