Obama's cynical Afghan ploy
As a candidate, Barack Obama demanded that we commit ourselves to the "real war" in Afghanistan. Now that he's in office, is he about to declare "mission accomplished?"
David Frum
Those hints we keep hearing from the Oval Office—could they be a warning of the most breathtakingly cynical about-face in recent political history?
For more than half a decade, Democrats blasted the Bush administration for "taking its eye off the ball in Afghanistan." This same point was made in the same words by everyone from presidential candidates down to the lowliest cable TV mid-morning "Democratic strategist."
They'd argue that the Bush administration's war in Iraq had diverted resources from the real war in Afghanistan, America's true top national security priority. You can probably repeat the script from memory.
Conservatives sourly joked that for Democrats, the "wrong war" was whichever war America happened to be fighting at the moment. But that seemed cynical and unfair. First John Kerry and then Barack Obama had surrounded themselves with serious national security thinkers. They wouldn't issue so emphatic a commitment just to score a cheap political point ... would they?
Think again.
In mid-September, the administration's chosen commander in Afghanistan, Stanley McChrystal, delivered a report warning that the 21,000 additional troops sent to Afghanistan since inauguration day will not suffice. Thousands more will be needed, and for an unspecified duration.
The Obama administration has reacted to the call for reinforcements with big, wide, surprised eyes. They must conduct a thorough strategic review before approving such a surprising request—especially since the suspect Afghan national elections on Aug. 20 changed everything.
That's their story, but it's not very convincing.
There is very little that Barack Obama knows about Afghanistan today that he did not know in the summer of 2008. Obama paid a visit to Afghanistan in July of the election year. In-country, he received briefings on both the deteriorating security situation and the corruption and incompetence of the Karzai government. I know this because I visited Afghanistan just a few months later, and talked to many of the military and civilian figures who had briefed the candidate. They presented my group with an unrelievedly bleak assessment—capped by a call for tens of thousands of additional American troops. When asked, "Did you deliver this same message to candidate Obama," they responded discreetly, but clearly: Yes they had.
In particular, everybody acknowledged the failings of the Karzai government—and the likelihood that it would tamper with the 2009 Afghan elections. That topic was so widely discussed that one has to wonder about the Obama administration's decision to stand back as the government ran the election in exactly the corrupt way so many had predicted the year before.
I don't blame the Obama administration for being reluctant to commit to Afghanistan. The war there has always been unpromising. That's exactly why the Bush administration refrained from making the grand commitment demanded by candidates Kerry and Obama.
But here's what Obama should be blamed for, and severely: Virtually every fact about Afghanistan that is discouraging him now was known to him (or anyway, told to him) 15 months ago. He extended the commitment anyway, repeatedly and emphatically. And now it seems he did so first for electioneering purposes, and again, once in office, for equally political ends—to position himself as "tough on terrorism."
More than 60,000 Americans are fighting and dying in Afghanistan at this moment. Can it really be that they remain there not to win a war, but because pretending to support their mission was necessary to win Barack Obama the Democratic nomination and the presidency? And can it be that Obama is now preparing to reverse course on this unfinished war because, from his new point of view in the Oval Office, it's already "mission accomplished"?





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27 Comments
Posted by Janice, Thursday, October 1, 2009, 9:28 am Excellent article. You didn't beat around the bush. I hope this gets widely read. Keep up the good work.
Posted by Geez Louise, Thursday, October 1, 2009, 9:56 am I have a VERY SICK feeling in the pit of my stomach. I don't want to believe that the POTUSwho duly electedrepresents EACH AND EVERY CITIZENand has taken an oath to protect and defend us and our country is playing politics with the LIVES OF OUR SONS AND GRANDSONS. Decisions based on how to get elected and stay elected? Say it ain't so. Perhaps the best thing about this Administration is that weas an electorateare finally growing upthat and combined with the obvious disregard for EVEN the appearance of statesmanship....well...
Posted by Patti, Thursday, October 1, 2009, 10:24 am Great article very sad, too.
Posted by Brendan, Thursday, October 1, 2009, 10:27 am Frum's article, in short: I don't have any insight at all regarding what the president is going to do, in fact, every article on the subject indicates Obama's support for a troop surge even in the face of opposition not only from his party but members of his cabinet as well. But I have a deadline to meet and very little to say, so I'll just string together some speculation and hearsay and collect my dollar a word.
Posted by Mike, Thursday, October 1, 2009, 10:42 am Surprise, surprise! Obama is a cynical Chicago politician. Who would have thunk it. Obama is a thoroughgoing leftist who paraded as a moderate to get elected. The shame is that some on the right, and I believe Frum was one of those, bought into the sham.
Posted by john petrino, Thursday, October 1, 2009, 11:43 am from is just another chicken zionist who will willingly send our sons to fight another war that has nothing to do with our interests.NY zionists and their worldwide websarkosky,brown,berlisconi,arab paid off lackeys,murdoch etc.fabricate the propaganda for war and the idiot americans buy it.americans murderers out of every country on the planet. never forget,you have invaded and you will be thrown out,it is just a matter of time.you are bankrupt because of your overbloated pentagon,change quickly or be prepared to pay a heavy price .
Posted by Scott, Thursday, October 1, 2009, 11:46 am Obama's new Afghanistan strategy: surrender and declare victory!
Posted by Gene-Fairfax, Va., Thursday, October 1, 2009, 11:48 am When you put his Afganistan ploy in the context of other policy decisions, it really becomes clear. The key sentence in the article is: There is very little that Barack Obama knows about Afghanistan today that he did not know in the summer of 2008The same is true of everything else he pledged in the campaign:Close Gitmo Wait, I don't know what to do with the detaineesNeed massive government programs Wow, the deficit will skyrocket.Universal healthcare no way to pay for it.No Taxes on those earning 250k we'll call it a fee instea
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