Rantburg

Today's Front Page   View All of Thu 04/25/2024 View Wed 04/24/2024 View Tue 04/23/2024 View Mon 04/22/2024 View Sun 04/21/2024 View Sat 04/20/2024 View Fri 04/19/2024
2014-04-14 Afghanistan
How Obama Lost Afghanistan
Despite the violence and uncertainty surrounding this Saturday's election for a new Afghan President, there's one positive Hamid Karzai, the sitting president and the architect of much of the country's unrest, is not on the ballot this time. But while Karzai must cede power under the rules of the Afghan constitution, the other leader whose mismanagement helped tank Afghanistan abandoned his influence in what he once called "the right war" a long time ago. That leader is President Barack Obama.

The best scenario is a May run-off between the two top candidates the opposite of the chaos of 2009 that left Karzai with a third term. Instead of a statesmanlike exit as father of a new democracy, Karzai's re-election imploded his already troubled legacy. On an election day the UN characterized as Afghanistan's worst episode of violence in fifteen years, Western diplomats accused Karzai and his cronies of at least 100,000 fictitious ballots and over 800 fake polling sites. Some level of corruption is to be expected in a post-conflict war zone, but the rancorous back and forth between Karzai and the Obama administration was a disastrous turning point. Dismissing voting irregularities as "totally fabricated," Karzai dedicated his next five years to severing his relationship with the United States. Always a pacifist a nuance neglected when drafting plans for a more aggressive war strategy Karzai went increasingly public with his anger over civilian casualties, night raids and what he saw as American rejection to take the fight to Pakistan.

Yet for all of Karzai's failings, the Obama administration's craven politics and unrealistic expectations hastened the decline. Immediately after Obama's election, administration officials stressed the need for a "credible partner" in Afghanistan, ignoring the reality that Karzai would likely win even without widespread cheating. To make good on his strong campaign condemnation of the Bush administration failures in Afghanistan, Obama ordered an additional 20,000 troops, then another 30,000, almost doubling the size of the American forces in Afghanistan to nearly 100,000. Obama actually didn't want to surge the troops he took over three months to make the decision to do so but feared political fallout for denying the request of the brass.The additional troops were supposed to "create the space for governance." The strategy depended on Karzai's potential as a leader, but Obama would not play the role of mentor and would not speak with Karzai directly. It didn't work. Already before the contested election, Obama outsourced 'the job against Al Qaida in Afghanistan' to deceased Special Envoy Ambassador Richard Holbrooke, Vice-President Joe Biden, and Ambassador Karl Eikenberry. Though the commander-in-chief should delegate as much as possible, wartime relationships matter. It was a slight from which Karzai would never recover.

Mood stabilizers were yanked for shock therapy. Instead of tolerating Karzai's bipolar mania for his occasional lucidity and cooperation, the Obama model of diplomacy became to antagonize its critical partner. Pander to the very worst of your own and Karzai's personality, to the detriment of the men and women you expect to fight a war you don't believe in (not to mention the men, women, and children who have to live in the world you've wrought in their backyards). If political elites with base similarities in wealth, power, and prestige can't find any common ground, counterinsurgency didn't have a prayer.

Obama made clear where he stood when he quickly undercut his $120 billion investment by announcing a drawdown. Secretary of Defense Robert Gates observed a preoccupation with exit over strategy. "The president doesn't trust his commander, can't stand Karzai, doesn't believe in his own strategy and doesn't consider the war to be his," wrote Gates in his memoir. "For him, it's all about getting out."

Afghanistan today is much more violent than when Obama came into office. Fewer Americans may be dying. But many more Afghan civilians are being killed, according to U.N. statistics. More guns, more warlords, more militias that's Obama's probable legacy. It's what happens when you can't deal with reality and commit one way or the other in wartime you lose.
Posted by Pappy 2014-04-14 00:00|| || Front Page|| [5 views ]  Top

#1 It never was America's to loose. The people are bloody savages who are not going to change no matter what.
Posted by g(r)omgoru 2014-04-14 02:38||   2014-04-14 02:38|| Front Page Top

#2 Everything the regime undertakes has a political component. Champ's goal was the neutralization of Bin Laden. Following the raid on Abbottabad, and the death of UBL, his interest in the failing JPEL effort and Afghanistan began to wane.
Posted by Besoeker 2014-04-14 05:03||   2014-04-14 05:03|| Front Page Top

#3 The problem with Afghanistan is Pakistan.

Are we going to leave India to deal with them?
Posted by Paul D 2014-04-14 06:10||   2014-04-14 06:10|| Front Page Top

#4 Like Paul D. said.
Posted by Uncle Phester 2014-04-14 16:28||   2014-04-14 16:28|| Front Page Top

#5 Tidied up all the non-ascii chars.
Posted by Bright Pebbles 2014-04-14 19:08||   2014-04-14 19:08|| Front Page Top

04:01 Besoeker
03:53 Besoeker
03:46 Besoeker
03:40 Grom the Reflective
03:38 Grom the Reflective
03:15 trailing wife
02:58 Grom the Reflective
02:40 Grom the Reflective
01:42 DarthVader
01:11 Angealing+B.+Hayes4677
00:59 Angealing+B.+Hayes4677
00:48 trailing wife
00:44 Elmaper+McGurque1612
00:36 Elmaper+McGurque1612
00:18 Beldar+Uneter3543
00:11 Skidmark









Paypal:
Google
Search WWW Search rantburg.com