By Moon Of Alabama
February 24, 2021 "Information
Clearing House" - The forever war on
Afghanistan will continue.
The U.S. and its NATO proxy force have spent
nearly 20 years and a trillion dollars to "do
something" in Afghanistan. What that something was
to be was never clear. There were attempts to impose
some kind of enlightened model of governance on the
Afghan people. But anyone with knowledge of that
country knew that this would never work.
Bribes were handed out left and right and Afghan
warlords, many of whom hold government positions,
enriched themselves by scamming the occupation
forces. They naturally do not want that to end.
There are also Afghans who do not want to live under
the heel of corrupt warlords and ignorant occupation
troops. They are called Taliban and get support from
Pakistan and Arab countries which the U.S. calls
'allies'. The occupation forces tried to fight them
but after nearly 20 years of wars the Taliban again
rule over half of the country. Even while the
warlords still have military support from the
occupation forces their troops are losing in nearly
every engagement.
Militarily the war against the Taliban has long
been lost. Even with the 100,000 'western' troops
the Obama administration had sent there was no way
to win it.
President Donald Trump made efforts to end the
useless war on Afghanistan. He negotiated with the
Taliban to remove all 'western' forces by May 1. The
agreement also commits the Taliban to not attacking
those forces and to negotiate with the warlord
government in Kabul on power sharing. They agreed to
that after the U.S. promised that Taliban prisoners
of war, held by the Afghan government, would be
released.
The Afghan government had and has of course no
interest in losing power. At least not as long as
still gets sponsored by 'western' money. It also did
not want to let prisoners go as those would just
turn around and again fight against it. A year ago
the Trump administration
threatened to withhold money should the Afghan
government not follow the negotiated terms:
Facing collapse of Afghan peace talks before
they even start, the Trump administration has
threatened to withhold up to $2 billion in aid
unless President Ashraf Ghani and his main rival
put aside their political differences and open
negotiations with the Taliban.
...
The threat was the sharpest sign yet that the
Trump administration is distancing itself from
its Afghan ally and moving closer to the
Taliban. The longtime U.S. adversary has in
effect become a wary partner as President Trump
seeks to withdraw thousands of American troops
before the November election and end America’s
longest war.
...
The Kabul government is heavily dependent on
international assistance. U.S. aid was expected
to total $4.3 billion this year, all but $500
million of which was earmarked for training and
equipping the Afghan army.
The threat worked as expected. But when it became
clear that a new management would take over the
White House the Afghan government again tried to
stall the process. Today the talks
resumed but they are unlikely to achieve any
results:
Peace talks between the Taliban and the Afghan
government have resumed in the Qatari capital
Doha after weeks of delays, escalating violence
and a change in US diplomatic leadership as the
Biden administration began.
Taliban spokesman Mohammad Naeem tweeted on
Monday night the resumption of the talks, which
were the outcome of an agreement between the
Afghan armed group and the US in February 2020.
But the administration of President Joe Biden
is reviewing the agreement, which was aimed at
ending the longest war the US has fought.
...
When talks ended abruptly in January, days after
they began, both sides submitted their wish
lists for agendas which they now have to sift
through to agree on negotiation items and the
order in which they will be tackled.
The priority for the Afghan government,
Washington and NATO is a serious reduction in
violence that can lead to a ceasefire, the
Taliban have until now resisted any immediate
ceasefire.
Washington is reviewing the Doha peace
agreement the previous Trump administration
signed with the Taliban as consensus
mounts in Washington that a delay of the
withdrawal deadline is needed.
The Taliban have resisted suggestions of even a
brief extension.
Without financial pressure there is no chance
that the Afghan government and the Taliban will ever
reach a power sharing deal. Even if there would be
an agreement there is little chance that it will be
upheld by all sides. The conflict would likely
reignite and the Taliban would win.
The obvious consequence should be to just follow
Trump's plan and to leave as soon as possible.
But Trump was bad and thus the Biden
administration is discussing
three options:
If the US leaves in the next three months, it’s
likely the Taliban will overrun the US-backed
Afghan government and once again make life worse
for millions of Afghans, especially women and
children.
Staying in Afghanistan just a little bit
longer would likely delay that takeover, but
would also expend any diplomatic capital the US
has left with the Taliban and keep US troops in
harm’s way.
Finally, violating the terms of the agreement
and remaining indefinitely will almost certainly
lead the Taliban to restart its campaign, put on
hold ahead of the May 1 deadline, to kill
American service members in the country.
Biden could follow Trump's agreement with the
Taliban and order the troops home. He could sell
that as a victory and a fulfillment of a campaign
promise.
But with the blob again in power that option had
little chance to survive:
The opinion editors at The Washington Post and
The Wall Street Journal may not agree on much,
but they are both determined to oppose bringing
forces out of Afghanistan as our war there
approaches its 20th anniversary, raising the
specter of “withdrawing irresponsibly.”
Meanwhile conservative establishmentarians like
Washington Post columnist
Max Boot, and his cohort on the center-left
side of the dial,
David Ignatius, as well as
Madeleine Albright, make common cause for
keeping troops in Afghanistan as Biden’s “best
option.” Today’s “stay” advocates, which include
Republicans like
Lindsey Graham making the media rounds, may
all be coming from different plot points on the
Washington political grid, but keeping the
United States committed to a desultory,
unwinnable conflict unites them. Their messages
are circulated and amplified by social media
and establishment friendlies, and among big
cable news outlets. Thus, a consensus is born.
The blob is usually fond of claims that "all
options are on the table". Here it was keen
to take one away:
Multiple US officials told me in recent days
that the administration’s Afghanistan policy
review is nearing its end, with one telling me
they expect Biden to make a decision “very
soon.”
“I don’t know which way the president will
go,” said this official, who like others spoke
with me on the condition of anonymity to talk
freely about a sensitive national security
deliberation. Another person familiar with the
Afghanistan discussions told me it’s clear
a full withdrawal by May 1 is “off the
table.”
This again demonstrates that the U.S. is no
longer agreement capable. By staying longer than May
1 the Biden administration will breach an
international agreement the previous administration
had made.
No Advertising - No Government
Grants - This Is Independent Media
It is unlikely that the Taliban will agree to a
prolonged stay of any troops from such an unreliable
entity. They will rescind the ceasefire and the war
will again enter a bloody phase:
[F]ew think Biden will withdraw all US troops by
May 1, which means he will be keeping US service
members in the country with or without the
Taliban’s approval. If he does it without their
approval, that could lead the insurgents to
attack and kill American personnel as they
overtake major Afghan cities, perhaps even
Kabul.
At that point, withdrawing from Afghanistan
would be harder, experts say, because the
administration won’t want to look like it’s
running away from the fight. A return to a
larger war, then, would likely ensue, leading to
more death and woes for the millions of Afghans
who’ve already suffered tremendously.
Unfortunately the decision by the Biden
administration was utterly predictable. The
military-industrial complex will not allow a retreat
from a profitable battlefield and Biden is way too
weak to resist its pressure.
Source