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January 24, 2008

Afghanistan, the other victim

Posted in: "War on Terror", Afghanistan

While a few dozen Iraqi deaths a day is somehow hailed as progress and while that occupation’s financial costs spiral ever upward, the other place — the generally bi-partisan Afghanistan occupation continues to limp along to its inevitable conclusion — failure.

For the past several months we have been hearing that NATO is winning, that the insurgency is running out of steam. Each suicide attack is a last gasp, a sign that the Taliban are becoming desperate.

As the enemy melts away only to regroup, we are expected to believe that this time, surely, they will stay put in their hideouts. The head of the Afghan National Security Directorate described the Serena attack as a sign of the Taliban’s weakness. “An enemy that cannot hold territory, an enemy that has no support among the people, has no other means than suicide bombing,” the security chief, Amrullah Saleh, told assembled reporters.

But those of us who have covered the steady decline of hope in Afghanistan over the past three years know where the relative strength lies.

Not with the central government, whose head, Hamid Karzai, has largely lost the respect of his people with his increasingly bizarre behavior: weeping at the plight of children in Kandahar, begging the Taliban to send him their address, confessing that he is powerless to control the warlords, auctioning off his silken robe to feed widows and orphans.

Not with the foreign troops, who have been unable to provide security or usher in the development that Afghanistan so desperately needs. Civilian casualties, often hushed up or denied, have made NATO a curse in some parts of the country.

Not with the international assistance community, with its misguided counter-narcotics policies, high-priced consultants and wasteful practices. Out of the billions that have supposedly come into the country, only a trickle has been used to good effect.

The Taliban, under whose brutal regime Afghanistan became an international pariah, are steadily regaining ground. Even those who deplore their harsh rules and capricious behavior welcome the illusion of security they bring in their wake.

Forget several months, that’s pretty much the story of Afghanistan for the last four plus years. It is the story ever since Iraq became the "Central front in the War of Bush’s biggest Screwups".

Related posts:

  1. Afghanistan: Mission Creep in Action
  2. In Exclusive Interview, Matthew Hoh Says Escalation in Afghanistan a “Terrible Way to Prove a Point”
  3. Afghanistan: Karzai Agrees to Runoff Election
  4. Doing it Right in Afghanistan: You and Whose Army?
  5. To COIN or Not To COIN: Afghanistan-Pakistan Policy Needs Public Debate, Consensus

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