The
Afghanistan Quagmire
By Cesar
Chelala
September
27, 2017 "Information
Clearing House"
- It is impossible to win a war that you cannot
define. That seems to be the main lesson to be drawn
from Afghanistan, where a so-called victory seems
ever more unreachable. It is also the conclusion of
several experts on the region, who fear U.S. forces
would be mired forever in that unjustly punished
country.
Civilians
can sometimes offer insights into a war situation
that professional warriors cannot do. In 2001,
American writer Philip Caputo offered a unique
insight into the Afghan psychology. He had spent a
month in Afghanistan with the mujaheddin as a
reporter, during the Afghans’ decadelong war with
the Soviets.
At some
point in the 1980s, he was accompanying a platoon of
mujahedeen who were escorting 1,000 refugees into
Pakistan. They had to cross a mountain torrent on a
very primitive bridge, consisting essentially of two
logs laid side by side. In front of him was a
10-year-old boy, separated from his family, his feet
swollen from several days of barefoot marching.
When Caputo
realized that the boy was terrified that he could
fall into the rapids below and almost certain death,
he carried him to the other side. With the help of
his interpreter he found the father and handed the
boy to him. The father, rather than thanking him,
slapped the boy in the face and poked Caputo in the
chest, shouting angrily at him. Caputo was obviously
shocked.
He asked
his interpreter about the father’s reaction and the
interpreter explained to him, “He is angry at the
boy for not crossing on his own, and angry with you
for helping him. Now, he says, his son will expect
somebody to help him whenever he runs into
difficulties.”
Caputo
concludes: “Well, that little boy probably learned.
I don’t know what became of him, but in my
imagination, I see our troops encountering him: now
31, inured to hardship and accustomed to combat,
unafraid of death, with an army of men like him at
his side.”
In a few
words, Caputo magisterially captured the strength of
the Afghan soldier, able to fight with the most
primitive weapons against the greatest empires on
Earth. When these soldiers feel their land usurped
by foreign forces, their strength is multiplied. And
this is just one of the obstacles confronting U.S.
and NATO forces in Afghanistan.
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There are
increasing doubts that a plain increase in the
number of soldiers fighting in Afghanistan can lead
to a victory progressively more difficult to define.
Matthew Hoh, a former Foreign Service officer and
former Marine Corps captain who became the first
U.S. official to resign in protest over the war in
Afghanistan, declared to the Washington Post, “Upon
arriving in Afghanistan and serving in both the east
and south (and particularly speaking with local
Afghans) I found that the majority of those who were
fighting us and the Afghan central government were
fighting us because they felt occupied.”
In the
meantime, the costs of the occupation keep mounting.
According to some estimates the total spending in
Afghanistan is now more than $2 trillion, not even
counting the future costs of interest for the money
borrowed to finance the war. Those additional costs
could add trillions of dollars to the total tab.
To those
costs should be added veterans’ medical and
disability payments over the next 40 years, which
could be over $1 trillion. Linda Bilmes, a senior
lecturer in public finance at Harvard’s Kennedy
School of Government, says, “The cost of caring for
war veterans typically peaks 30 to 40 years or more
after a conflict.”
Since the
start of the war, more than 2,350 U.S. troops have
been killed, in addition to thousands of allied
forces. The toll on Afghans has been even greater,
with tens of thousands Afghan civilian and military
who died in the conflict. Afghanistan has been
called the graveyard of empires. It should more
properly be called the graveyard of illusions.
Dr.
César Chelala is an international public health
consultant and a winner of several journalism
awards.
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