It is
amazing to watch politicians trying to weasel their way around their promises.
President Obama is providing us with a good illustration of the art.
During the
latest presidential campaign and in the final televised debates, both Obama and
Vice President Joe Biden were adamant in asserting that the US would be leaving Afghanistan and ending the war in that country
at the end of 2014–a goal most
Americans profoundly want. Biden, in a heated debate with his Republican
opponent Paul Ryan, said the US would “absolutely” be “out” of Afghanistan at the end of 2014. Obama, a week
later, said, “By 2014, this process of transition will be complete and the
Afghan people will be responsible for their own security.”
I’m
reminded of President Clinton, a lawyer who, when pressed under oath by a
special prosecutor hounding him over the details of whether he had had sex with
a young White House intern, said that the answer hinged on “what the meaning of
the word ‘is’ is.”
This past
weekend, it was reported that Obama and the generals at the Pentagon are
planning on keeping at least 10,000 US troops stationed in Afghanistan
indefinitely after that 2014 deadline for ending the war and withdrawing from
that war-torn land.
Just to
make it clear what we’re talking about here, 10,000 troops would represent an
army half the size of the entire army of either the Netherlands or Denmark , two countries which currently have
troops assigned to the NATO forces posted in Afghanistan as allies in the 12-year-long US
war there.
The notion
that these 10,000 post-2014 soldiers would just be “training” the Afghan
military is simply absurd. Parris Island , the famed boot camp in South Carolina for the US Marine Corps,
which boasts what probably is the toughest training program of any of the
branches of the US military, churns out 17,000 new
Marines a year with a training unit of 600 uniformed personnel.
That’s one
trainer per 170 recruits. At that rate, the 10,000 US “trainers” in Afghanistan could be training 1.7 million new
recruits for the Afghan army each year! Even allowing for the typical
top-heaviness of the US military, if only a third of those
10,000 “trainers” were actually drill sergeants and their staff, we’re talking
about a training force capable of producing over 500,000 new Afghan soldiers
per year! But Afghanistan ’s army today, which the US claims is already largely trained
and ready to protect the country, has only a total of some 200,000 active duty
soldiers altogether.
So let’s
get serious here. These 10,000 soldiers that Obama and the Pentagon are talking
about stationing in Afghanistan after the war is “ended” in
December 2012 are not really going to be trainers.
Besides,
how do you “end” a war by simply having one side say it’s over, unless you
actually do stop fighting and walk away? Certainly the invading side in a
foreign war can call that war quits, but if the other side doesn’t, and the
invader stays on the battlefield — which in Afghanistan is the whole county —
you haven’t ended it at all. The other side will continue to hit you until
you’re gone.
In other
words, clearly that force of 10,000 US troops, whatever they are called
officially, will be in a state of war, because there is no way that the Taliban
in Afghanistan will quietly allow them to be there training an army to fight
them, without taking the battle to the “trainers.”
So how
then, can Obama, Biden and the generals be promising that the war will be ended
in 2014?
The answer
is that they are not calling what will be happening after 2014 a “war.”
They will be changing the definition of the word “war.”
It is
totally predictable that the unfortunate soldiers who are ordered over as part
of that 10,000-member force of “trainers” after 2014 will be subjected to
attacks by Taliban fighters, by suicide bombers, and by IED mines. Their bases
will be hit by mortars and rockets. When they travel, their vehicles will be
the targets of RPGs. They will also be subject to attack by members of the
Afghan military whom they are ostensibly training, since the Taliban have
already learned that infiltration of the country’s army is a great way to get
close to the American forces, the better to hit them when their guard is down
or their backs are turned.
Inevitably,
the US forces will be forced to fight
back, and to take the offensive too. There will certainly continue to be US
airstrikes, and we can be sure that armed attack drones will be widely employed
also, guaranteeing the creation of plenty of new enemy forces sworn to punish
and drive out the US .
None of
this will, of course, be described as “war” by the US , or by the compliant corporate
media in America .
There is a
model for this kind of thing. America has been fighting a war in Colombia for years against the FARC, marxist
rebels operating in the jungles of that country at the northern end of South America . Only this has never been described
as a war in the US media or in reports from the
Pentagon. The soldiers sent down there, we are informed, are just “training”
and “advising” the Colombian military, which we are told is fighting against
“drug lords.”
The same
was true for years in El Salvador , a little country in Central America that endured a decade-long
revolution and civil war, in which the US was backing a vicious oligarchy and
supporting a brutal military that regularly sent death squads out into the
slums and the countryside to murder those who supported the rebels. American
forces there were always described as “trainers” or “advisors,” though their
roles were far more active, and bloody, than that, as was occasionally exposed
when they’d get caught in rebel ambushes (as happened to the 12
Green Berets staying at a hotel that rebels temporarily captured during
an offensive in the country’s capital).
Putting
military forces in a country and calling them advisors or trainers is an old
propaganda stand-by for the US . The only thing that sets this
latest fraud apart from earlier imperial interventions by US military forces
this time is the numbers involved. Even that legendary Bill Clinton obfuscator
would have a hard time making anyone believe that a force of 10,000 heavily
armed US troops are just “trainers.”
> The
article above was written by Dave Lindorff and is reprinted from
Counterpunch.
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