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Showing posts with label Outcome. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Outcome. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 22, 2011

Obama's Afghanistan Drawdown: Why Troop Levels Won't Affect the War's Outcome (Time.com)

President Barack Obama will on Wednesday announce the size of the troop withdrawal from Afghanistan he will order in July in keeping with the symbolic drawdown he promised to begin this summer. His top military men appear to want to keep most combat troops in the field for at least another two years; other advisers want the withdrawal that begins this summer to involve substantial numbers of troops and on an accelerated schedule. But the number of U.S. troops deployed in Afghanistan appears increasingly unlikely to decisively determine the outcome of the war.

Soon after he arrived in office, President Obama buckled to pressure from the Pentagon and doubled down on the U.S. commitment of blood and treasure in Afghanistan, sending an extra 30,000 soldiers as part of the Afghan "surge". Whatever tactical gains have been made in that time - and are likely to be made in the next two years even if current force levels were maintained - Obama will be well aware that a decade of warfare in Afghanistan has failed to qualitatively transform the strategic equation. The key argument from the generals and Administration figures like Defense Secretary Robert Gates in support of keeping the full complement of fighting men in Afghanistan is that the gains made in recent years are "fragile". Of course they are: Experience has shown that there's no reason to expect any area "cleared" by NATO forces will remain that way once they reduce their force levels there. It was ever thus, and there's little reason to expect any different in a conflict that pits a foreign armies against an indigenous insurgency backed by a significant section of the population and with sanctuary in a neighboring country. But who'd want to be the President who has to call time on a failed expeditionary war? (Watch "A New Season of Fighting in Afghanistan.")

Obama's track record suggests the withdrawal he announces for this year will involve a desultory figure of less than 5,000 of the 100,000 troops the U.S. currently has deployed in Afghanistan. But expect, also, to see the President define downward the benchmark of success, focusing it narrowly on protecting the American mainland from another transnational terror attack by al-Qaeda, and using the killing of Osama bin Laden to underscore the fact that the job is almost done. The terror network, much reduced by a decade of pummeling, today operates more from Pakistan than Afghanistan.

The Afghanistan mission's more ambitious nation-building goals originally proclaimed by the Bush Administration, however, are plainly beyond reach for the foreseeable future. The U.S. finds itself propping up a corrupt and ambivalent Karzai government knowing it has limited ability to win hearts and minds in the war zone, but also that it has no better alternative. The argument that the U.S. needs to be in Afghanistan to stop Pakistan falling to the Taliban has always been specious, for the simple reason that those currently in power in Pakistan see the Afghan Taliban as an ally that, unlike the U.S., shares Islamabad's strategic interests in Afghanistan. And Pakistan's generals act accordingly. Pakistan has been the headquarters of the Afghan Taliban's leadership shura ever since U.S. forces and their Afghan allies swept the movement from power in late 2001. The generals who make Pakistan's decisions didn't stop seeing Afghanistan as a key front in their existential strategic rivalry with India just because it became the initial geo-strategic focus of the U.S. "war on terror".

Afghanistan on June 7 superseded Vietnam as the longest war in U.S. history, having dragged on twice as long as American involvement in World War II. The more relevant comparison, however irksome it may be to American exceptionalists, may be to Soviet Union's nine-year debacle in Afghanistan - a milestone the U.S. passed last November.

Sure, there are plenty of differences between the two cases - Moscow hadn't suffered terror attacks originating in Afghanistan; it faced insurgent opposition in all of Afghanistan's major ethnic groups whereas the Western presence is opposed from within the Pashtun majority, but has found willing allies the Tajik, Uzbek and Hazara communities whose leaders were traditionally grouped in the Northern Alliance that had fought Taliban rule. And, of course, U.S. counterinsurgency warfare is far smarter and more effective than the Red Army's. (See pictures of medevac in Afghanistan.)

Still, like the Soviets, the U.S.-led operation controls only part of the country; the writ of the feckless government it has propped up doesn't extend much beyond the capital; Pakistan continues to function as a rear base for the insurgents; and the long-term trend lines offer no reason to expect that the insurgents will be eliminated.

The U.S. is not going to be routed in Afghanistan, like some 19th Century British expeditionary force. But nor is it able to vanquish a foe that, in traditional guerrilla style, simply melts away to form up elsewhere whenever the foreign army concentrates its forces. The Taliban doesn't need to storm Kabul to win. As Henry Kissinger famously noted, in an insurgency of this type, the guerrilla army wins by not losing; the conventional army loses by not winning.

And the U.S.-led NATO operation is clearly not winning, even if it's managing to tread water in areas where it has concentrated its forces. Polls show that a majority of Americans no longer believe the war is worth fighting. And that's an opinion long shared by the majority of Afghans in the Pashtun war zone.

The comforting prospect offered to Americans looking for an end to a war that is costing upward of $100 billion a year and a slow but steady drip of U.S. casualties is that the U.S. is training and equipping Afghan security forces projected to number 300,000 by October. But few Western military observers have much confidence that this force will be either able or willing to continue NATO's fight once Western troops leave, ostensibly in 2014 - although the rump Northern Alliance elements will certainly fight tooth and nail to protect their turf from any Taliban return. Right now, Kabul doesn't exactly control much of the territory of which it is the sovereign capital, and that's unlikely to change no matter who's in power there. (See what it will take to finish the job in Afghanistan.)

Washington appears to have recognized that the only way to relieve itself of an open-ended burden in Afghanistan is to negotiate a peace agreement with the Taliban enemy it had originally hoped to destroy. Defense Secretary Robert Gates acknowledged last weekend that preliminary negotiations are already under way, although with little expectation of near-term progress.

The purpose of the NATO war effort, over the past two years, has been to set the negotiating table more favorably to the Western side, hoping to forcefully "demonstrate" to the Taliban that it can't prevail on the battlefield and therefore that it needs to be more amenable to U.S. terms for peace. And, of course, the Taliban's purpose has been the exact opposite - to demonstrate the futility of the NATO effort, so as to give it a better chance of imposing its own terms at the peace table.

Despite the "surge", the Taliban doesn't appear to be feeling squeezed to accept U.S. peace terms. On the contrary, right now it seems to playing hard to get, believing that time and circumstance work in its favor.

So outcome of the Afghanistan war is unlikely to be determined by the troop numbers to which President Obama commits on Wednesday. Instead, it will be shaped by what the U.S., the Northern Alliance, and Afghanistan's key neighbors, most importantly Pakistan, are willing to accept by way of a political compromise.

Watch "Joe Klein: Crisis in the Afghan War Policy."

See TIME's Pictures of the Week.

View this article on Time.com

Most Popular on Time.com:


Yahoo! News

Obama's Afghan Drawdown: Why Troop Levels Won't Affect the War's Outcome (Time.com)

President Barack Obama will on Wednesday announce the size of the troop withdrawal from Afghanistan he will order in July in keeping with the symbolic drawdown he promised to begin this summer. His top military men appear to want to keep most combat troops in the field for at least another two years; other advisers want the withdrawal that begins this summer to involve substantial numbers of troops and on an accelerated schedule. But the number of U.S. troops deployed in Afghanistan appears increasingly unlikely to decisively determine the outcome of the war.

Soon after he arrived in office, President Obama buckled to pressure from the Pentagon and doubled down on the U.S. commitment of blood and treasure in Afghanistan, sending an extra 30,000 soldiers as part of the Afghan "surge". Whatever tactical gains have been made in that time - and are likely to be made in the next two years even if current force levels were maintained - Obama will be well aware that a decade of warfare in Afghanistan has failed to qualitatively transform the strategic equation. The key argument from the generals and Administration figures like Defense Secretary Robert Gates in support of keeping the full complement of fighting men in Afghanistan is that the gains made in recent years are "fragile". Of course they are: Experience has shown that there's no reason to expect any area "cleared" by NATO forces will remain that way once they reduce their force levels there. It was ever thus, and there's little reason to expect any different in a conflict that pits a foreign armies against an indigenous insurgency backed by a significant section of the population and with sanctuary in a neighboring country. But who'd want to be the President who has to call time on a failed expeditionary war? (Watch "A New Season of Fighting in Afghanistan.")

Obama's track record suggests the withdrawal he announces for this year will involve a desultory figure of less than 5,000 of the 100,000 troops the U.S. currently has deployed in Afghanistan. But expect, also, to see the President define downward the benchmark of success, focusing it narrowly on protecting the American mainland from another transnational terror attack by al-Qaeda, and using the killing of Osama bin Laden to underscore the fact that the job is almost done. The terror network, much reduced by a decade of pummeling, today operates more from Pakistan than Afghanistan.

The Afghanistan mission's more ambitious nation-building goals originally proclaimed by the Bush Administration, however, are plainly beyond reach for the foreseeable future. The U.S. finds itself propping up a corrupt and ambivalent Karzai government knowing it has limited ability to win hearts and minds in the war zone, but also that it has no better alternative. The argument that the U.S. needs to be in Afghanistan to stop Pakistan falling to the Taliban has always been specious, for the simple reason that those currently in power in Pakistan see the Afghan Taliban as an ally that, unlike the U.S., shares Islamabad's strategic interests in Afghanistan. And Pakistan's generals act accordingly. Pakistan has been the headquarters of the Afghan Taliban's leadership shura ever since U.S. forces and their Afghan allies swept the movement from power in late 2001. The generals who make Pakistan's decisions didn't stop seeing Afghanistan as a key front in their existential strategic rivalry with India just because it became the initial geo-strategic focus of the U.S. "war on terror".

Afghanistan on June 7 superseded Vietnam as the longest war in U.S. history, having dragged on twice as long as American involvement in World War II. The more relevant comparison, however irksome it may be to American exceptionalists, may be to Soviet Union's nine-year debacle in Afghanistan - a milestone the U.S. passed last November.

Sure, there are plenty of differences between the two cases - Moscow hadn't suffered terror attacks originating in Afghanistan; it faced insurgent opposition in all of Afghanistan's major ethnic groups whereas the Western presence is opposed from within the Pashtun majority, but has found willing allies the Tajik, Uzbek and Hazara communities whose leaders were traditionally grouped in the Northern Alliance that had fought Taliban rule. And, of course, U.S. counterinsurgency warfare is far smarter and more effective than the Red Army's. (See pictures of medevac in Afghanistan.)

Still, like the Soviets, the U.S.-led operation controls only part of the country; the writ of the feckless government it has propped up doesn't extend much beyond the capital; Pakistan continues to function as a rear base for the insurgents; and the long-term trend lines offer no reason to expect that the insurgents will be eliminated.

The U.S. is not going to be routed in Afghanistan, like some 19th Century British expeditionary force. But nor is it able to vanquish a foe that, in traditional guerrilla style, simply melts away to form up elsewhere whenever the foreign army concentrates its forces. The Taliban doesn't need to storm Kabul to win. As Henry Kissinger famously noted, in an insurgency of this type, the guerrilla army wins by not losing; the conventional army loses by not winning.

And the U.S.-led NATO operation is clearly not winning, even if it's managing to tread water in areas where it has concentrated its forces. Polls show that a majority of Americans no longer believe the war is worth fighting. And that's an opinion long shared by the majority of Afghans in the Pashtun war zone.

The comforting prospect offered to Americans looking for an end to a war that is costing upward of $100 billion a year and a slow but steady drip of U.S. casualties is that the U.S. is training and equipping Afghan security forces projected to number 300,000 by October. But few Western military observers have much confidence that this force will be either able or willing to continue NATO's fight once Western troops leave, ostensibly in 2014 - although the rump Northern Alliance elements will certainly fight tooth and nail to protect their turf from any Taliban return. Right now, Kabul doesn't exactly control much of the territory of which it is the sovereign capital, and that's unlikely to change no matter who's in power there. (See what it will take to finish the job in Afghanistan.)

Washington appears to have recognized that the only way to relieve itself of an open-ended burden in Afghanistan is to negotiate a peace agreement with the Taliban enemy it had originally hoped to destroy. Defense Secretary Robert Gates acknowledged last weekend that preliminary negotiations are already under way, although with little expectation of near-term progress.

The purpose of the NATO war effort, over the past two years, has been to set the negotiating table more favorably to the Western side, hoping to forcefully "demonstrate" to the Taliban that it can't prevail on the battlefield and therefore that it needs to be more amenable to U.S. terms for peace. And, of course, the Taliban's purpose has been the exact opposite - to demonstrate the futility of the NATO effort, so as to give it a better chance of imposing its own terms at the peace table.

Despite the "surge", the Taliban doesn't appear to be feeling squeezed to accept U.S. peace terms. On the contrary, right now it seems to playing hard to get, believing that time and circumstance work in its favor.

So outcome of the Afghanistan war is unlikely to be determined by the troop numbers to which President Obama commits on Wednesday. Instead, it will be shaped by what the U.S., the Northern Alliance, and Afghanistan's key neighbors, most importantly Pakistan, are willing to accept by way of a political compromise.

Watch "Joe Klein: Crisis in the Afghan War Policy."

See TIME's Pictures of the Week.

View this article on Time.com

Most Popular on Time.com:


Yahoo! News

Sunday, April 3, 2011

Romney's Strategy Hopes to Reverse 2008 Outcome

AP

FILE: Former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney and his wife, Ann, are greeted in Bartlett, N.H. on March 5. .

In his first presidential run in 2008, Mitt Romney sought back-to-back victories in Iowa and New Hampshire to propel him to the Republican nomination. He won neither, the two-state sprint failed and so did his candidacy.

This time his strategy is more of a multi-state marathon, with economically suffering Nevada an important round in what advisers predict could be a protracted fight to be the party's 2012 nominee.

On his first trip this year to Nevada, the former Massachusetts governor toured a neighborhood north of Las Vegas that has been hit the hardest in the U.S. by foreclosures. He was expected to focus on the economy in a speech Saturday at a meeting of the Republican Jewish Coalition.

Nevada is third in line to vote on the 2012 Republican primary calendar to choose delegates to the party's presidential nominating convention. It has the highest U.S. unemployment rate, at 13.6 percent in February, and that gives Romney a chance to hone his central campaign theme: President Obama's policies are hurting the economic recovery and I'm the best Republican to challenge the Democratic incumbent on that issue in the general election.

Romney is the closest to a front-runner in a field that lacks one. He's expected to enter the race later in April and has readied for a second act since falling short to Arizona Sen. John McCain in 2008.

Allies and aides who outlined the path that Romney is charting to the nomination spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to publically discuss private strategy sessions.

The strategy calls for big showings in New Hampshire and Nevada to boost momentum. After that come strong fights in enough other states so Romney enters the party convention in Tampa, Florida, next fall with more convention delegates pledged to him than any other Republican.

Romney's planning seeks to seize on a change in how the party chooses its nominee.

Candidates who won a state used to get all its delegates in a winner-take-all system. Republicans now will award delegates proportionally, meaning finishing second or third in a state is worth it. That could benefit a wealthy candidate such as Romney. In 2008, he spent $110 million, $45 million of his own money.

His hopes aren't without hurdles. There's the health care law enacted in Massachusetts on his watch. It's similar to Obama's national health overhaul, which conservatives despise.

Romney must overcome a record of changing positions on social issues such as gay rights and abortion. His shifts have left conservatives questioning his sincerity and his Mormon religion.

In 2008, Romney spent $7 million on Iowa airwaves and built an enormous statewide organization. Yet he never won over social conservatives who dominate the early decision-making.

This time, signs point to a token Iowa effort.

"Right now, Iowa is sort of the Christian Coalition primary and he's not really playing," said Doug Gross, a Des Moines lawyer who managed Romney's caucus campaign in 2008 but hasn't signed on to a campaign this time. "He doesn't have to win Iowa. If he finishes third in Iowa, that would be seen as a positive thing."

Romney plans to make his first big stand in New Hampshire, which borders Massachusetts. He finished second there in 2008 and has maintained strong ties to the state, where he owns a vacation home. He's helped the state party raise money and has kept a political team in place in preparation for a second run.

Nevada's up next on the nominating calendar and is ripe for Romney to do well.

He won the state in 2008, though his competitors largely overlooked the caucuses because they assumed the state's heavily Mormon population would vote overwhelmingly for one of their own.

"I honestly do believe a Mormon in office would help our country," said Jennifer Fung, a Mormon who met Romney as he walked through her neighborhood in North Las Vegas on Friday. "All the people that I associate with, everybody says they voted for Mitt Romney in the election."

U.S. Rep. Ron Paul of Texas came in second place, underscoring a libertarian streak in the state.

"Romney, should he run, walks into this as a front-runner in that he's got an organization left over from last time," said Ryan Erwin, a senior adviser in Nevada during Romney's last campaign. "He has a lot of friends here but crazy things happen."

The Republican primary electorate is shaping up to be more conservative than it was four years ago, because of the emergence of the tea party. Former Utah Gov. Jon Huntsman, a Mormon who served as Obama's ambassador to China, is expected to compete strongly in Nevada if he runs, and that could cut into Romney's support.

Unlike four years ago, South Carolina isn't likely to get lots of attention from Romney. He worked the state for over a year in 2008, only to place a distant fourth. Religious conservatives who hold great sway in the state never warmed to Romney.

Romney's advisers anticipate working hard in Michigan and Florida.

Romney won the 2008 primary in Michigan, where his was father was governor. He'll shoot for a repeat before turning to Florida, where he hopes his economic message will play well with the state's large retiree population.

He narrowly lost to McCain in Florida. Within days, he dropped out of the race, endorsed McCain and started looking ahead to 2012.

Now, it's here.

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