Bored to Death in Afghanistan (and Washington)
Mating Déjà Vu with a Mobius Strip in the Graveyard of Empire
One day in October 2001, a pilot for Northwest Airlines refused to
let Arshad Chowdhury, a 25-year-old American Muslim (“with a dark
complexion”) who had once worked as an investment banker in the World
Trade Center, board his plane at San Francisco National Airport.
According to Northwest’s gate agents, Chowdhury
writes in the
Washington Post, “he thought my name sounded suspicious” even though “airport security and the FBI verified that I posed no threat.” He sued.
Now, skip nearly a decade. It’s May 6, 2011, and two New York-based African-American imams, a father and son, attempting
to take an American Airlines flight from New York to Charlotte to
attend a conference on "prejudice against Muslims," were prevented from
flying. The same thing
happened to two imams in Memphis “dressed in traditional long shirts
and [with] beard,” heading for the same conference, when a pilot for
Atlantic Southeast refused to fly with them aboard, even though they had
been screened three times.
So how is the war in Afghanistan going almost 10 years later? Or do you think that’s a non sequitur?
I don’t, and let me suggest two reasons why: first, boredom; second, the missing learning curve.
At home and abroad, whether judging by airline pilots or Washington’s
war policy, Americans seem remarkably incapable of doing anything
other than repeating the same self-defeating acts, as if they had never
happened before. Hence Afghanistan. Almost 10 years after the Bush
administration invaded Afghanistan and proclaimed victory, like
imam-paralyzed airline pilots, we find ourselves in a state that might
otherwise be achieved only if you mated déjà vu with a Mobius strip.
If you aren’t already bored to death, you should be. Because,
believe me, you’ve read it all before. Take the last month of news from
America’s second Afghan War. If nobody told you otherwise, you could
easily believe that almost every breaking Afghan story in the last four
weeks came from some previous year of the war.
Headlines from the Dustbin of History (Afghan Department)
Let me explain with seven headlines ripped from the news, all of
which sit atop Afghan War articles that couldn’t be newer -- or older.
Each represents news of our moment that was also news in previous
moments; each should leave Americans wondering about Washington’s
learning curve.
* “Pentagon reports 'tangible progress' in Afghanistan”:
Here, the headline tells you everything you need to know. Things are
going remarkably swimmingly, according to a recent congressionally
mandated Pentagon report (which cost a mere $344,259 to produce). How many times in recent years has the military claimed “progress”
in Afghanistan, with the usual carefully placed reservations about the
fragility or reversibility of the situation? (Oh, and how many times
have U.S. intelligence reports been far gloomier on the same subject?)
* “Afghan violence rises amid troop surge -- Pentagon”:
The information that led to this headline came, curiously enough, from
that very same upbeat Pentagon report. As the Reuters piece to which
this headline was attached put it: “A surge of U.S. troops into
Afghanistan has dealt a blow to the Taliban insurgency, but total
violence has risen since last fall and is likely to keep climbing, the
Pentagon said on Friday in a new assessment of the war as it approaches
its 10-year mark.” This spring, insurgent attacks have reportedly been
up about 80% compared to the previous year, which might be more startling if the rise-in-violence piece weren’t a longtime staple of Afghan War reportage.
Are you bored to death yet? No, then I’ll keep going.
* "Audit: Afghans don’t know how many police on rolls":
The news embedded in this headline is that a recent audit by the U.S.
special inspector general for Afghanistan has found that some of the $10
billion a year being poured into training, building up, and supplying
Afghanistan’s security forces is undoubtedly missing-in-action. The IG
reports that “the country's police rolls and payrolls cannot be verified
because of poor record keeping,” which means that the numbers “for all
practical purposes become somewhat fictitious.” Put another way, the
U.S. and its coalition partners are undoubtedly paying “ghost”
policemen.
This story could be paired with a recent Reuters piece, “Pentagon’s rosy report of Afghanistan war raises questions,”
which points out that, despite the billions of dollars and years of
time invested in mentoring Afghanistan’s security forces, “there are
currently no Afghan National Police units that are able to operate
independently.” In addition, even that recent “rosy” Pentagon report
indicates that so many Afghan soldiers are deserting
-- six out of every 10 new recruits -- as to imperil the goal of
creating a massive army capable of taking over security duties in the
next several years. It has also been difficult to find enough trainers
for the program, and given all of the above, experts suspect that the
country will not have an effective army in place by 2014.
But here’s the thing: such reports about the massive training program for Afghan security forces, the inability of those forces to operate independently, the wholesale desertions continually suffered, and so on have appeared again and again and again over the last years.
* “With bin Laden dead, some escalate push for new Afghan strategy”:
Here’s the only problem with that “new Afghan strategy” reportedly
being debated in Washington -- it’s not new. It’s drearily old. In
fact, it’s simply a replay on the downhill slide of bitter policy
arguments in the fall of 2009
involving Washington policymakers and the U.S. military. That was a
moment when the Obama administration had set about reassessing Afghan
strategy and trying to choose between counterinsurgency (“the surge”)
and what was then called “counterterrorism plus” (more drones and more trainers, but less combat troops).
Then the debate was narrow indeed
-- between more (an increase of 40,000 troops) and more (an increase of
20,000 troops). There was never a real “less” option. Today, with
almost 100,000 U.S. troops in Afghanistan and despite reports of “war fatigue,” even among Congressional Republicans, as well as plummeting poll numbers
among Americans generally, the new debate is similarly narrow,
similarly focused, and deeply familiar, a kind of less-versus-less
version of the more-versus-more duke-em-out of 2009.
Similar arguments, similar crew. Then, Vice President Biden
spearheaded the counterterrorism-plus option; today, it’s chairman of
the Senate Foreign Relations Committee John Kerry, who quickly made the
parameters of the “new” strategy debate clear:
"I do not know of any serious policy person who believes that a
unilateral precipitous withdrawal from Afghanistan would somehow serve
our interests or anybody’s interests. I do not believe that is a viable
option.”
As
in the fall of 2009, agreement among “serious policy people” that there
should be a continuing American “footprint” in Afghanistan is set in stone.
It seems the only question on the table is how small and how slow the
drawdown should be, with the debaters already evidently settling into an
agreed upon endgame of 20,000 to 30,000
American troops, special operations forces, and trainers post-2014.
Despite the president’s promise of significant troop reductions this
year, early hints about war commander General David Petraeus’s
recommendations indicate that as few as 10,000 may be withdrawn, with no combat troops among them (though pressure to increase those numbers is rising).
Not out of your mind with boredom yet? Then I’ll keep at it.
* “Accusations of Corruption Rampant in Afghanistan”:
Here’s the thing: you don’t even need to know the details of the story
that lies behind that NPR headline. Yes, Vermont representative Peter
Welsh has called on Congress to investigate Afghan corruption, given the
billions the U.S. is squandering there; yes, the Afghan deputy attorney
general admitted that he had arrest warrants for various high officials
on corruption charges but feared trying to bring them in; yes,
headlines like “Afghan war progress at risk from corruption, training lags” are commonplace these days, as are stories about “reconstruction” corruption, protection payoffs to unsavory local warlords or the Taliban, and staggering levels of corruption
in and around the government of Afghan President Hamid Karzai. But
here’s the thing: it’s been that way for years. Corruption stories --
and stories about fighting corruption or the need to force
the government of Hamid Karzai to do the same -- have been the
essential bread and butter of Afghan war reporting for almost a decade.
* ”For Second Time in 3 Days, NATO Raid Kills Afghan Child”: The New York Times
piece under this headline reports on how “NATO” night raiders (usually
U.S. special operations forces) killed a 15-year-old boy, the son of an
Afghan National Army soldier, sleeping in his family fields with a
shotgun beside him. In the incident two days earlier the headline
alludes to, another crew of night raiders killed
a 12-year-old girl sleeping in her backyard, as well as her uncle, an
Afghan police officer. And who’s even mentioning the eight private
security guards killed in an air strike as May began?
As it happens, however, from the moment that a B-52 and two B-1B
bombers, using precision-guided weapons, destroyed a village wedding
party in December 2001, killing 110 out of 112 revelers (only the first of numerous wedding parties to be blown away during these years), such civilian casualties have been the drumbeat
behind the war. The Afghan dead -- slaughtered by Taliban suicide
bombers and IEDs as well -- have risen in a charnel heap high above
those of September 11, 2001.
Accompanying such stories over the years have been passages like this one from the Times piece:
“When morning came, an angry crowd gathered in Narra, the boy’s
village, and more than 200 people marched with his body to the district
center. Some of the men were armed and confronted the police, shouting
anti-American slogans and throwing rocks at police vehicles and the...
government center, according to the district governor and the [local
school] headmaster. ”
This is the never-ending story of the war, the one whose only variations involve whether, faced with such deaths, U.S. military spokespeople will stonewall and deny, launch an “investigation” that goes nowhere, or offer a pro forma
apology. When it came to the death of that girl recently, an apology
was indeed issued, but her father made the essential point: “They killed
my 12-year-old daughter and my brother-in-law and then told me, ‘We are
sorry.’ What does it mean? What pain can be cured by this word
‘sorry’?”
Rogue War
When it comes to the Afghan War, there are other news stories of the
present moment that were also the Afghan news of 2006, 2008, and 2010.
There’s even the newest hot set of rumors about U.S. attempts to open negotiations with the Taliban, whose last iteration ended when American officials discovered
that the Taliban “senior commander” they had flown to Kabul was
actually a clever impostor (who made off with a pile of money). But
let’s consider just one more story, the seventh headline of this moment,
versions of which have headlined many other moments in these years, and
ask whether there isn’t something -- anything at all -- new to be
learned from it.
* “Afghan officer fires on NATO troops, kills 9”: This was breaking news when it happened. On April 25th, a veteran Afghan air force pilot, armed with two weapons
and in a specially guarded and secure area of Kabul airport, suddenly
opened fire on a group of Americans evidently involved in a training
program for Afghan pilots. He gunned down eight U.S. Air Force
personnel, including
a lieutenant colonel, four majors, two captains, and a master sergeant,
as well as a private contractor (himself a retired U.S. military
officer) before being killed. It was “the deadliest episode to date of
an Afghan turning against his own coalition partners.” But hardly the
only one. In a sense, this was no news at all. It was already at least
the fourth time in 2011 that someone dressed in an Afghan army or
police uniform had turned a weapon on U.S. or NATO personnel. Among
such incidents was one just three weeks earlier in which a man wearing a
border police uniform, reportedly “upset over the recent burning of the
Quran at a Florida church,” killed two Americans, and another in
February in which an Afghan soldier, reportedly “offended by his German
partners,” killed three of them, wounding yet more.
By military count, since March 2009, 17 such incidents
have been reported. Since the mass killing at Kabul airport, there has
already been an 18th in which, according to sketchy reports, a man in
an Afghan police uniform opened fire
on two NATO personnel at a “luncheon” in Helmand Province in the
country’s embattled south. In such incidents, at least 34 Americans
have died. (Not counted in this total, evidently, is an incident in
January 2010 in which a Taliban double or triple agent
blew himself up amid a group of CIA employees on a forward operating
base in Eastern Afghanistan, killing seven of them, including the
station chief.)
Such incidents pile up repetitively, without adding up to anything of
significance here. Yes, the literal math has been done and it should
be striking, even shocking, to Americans, and yet these news stories
seldom get much attention and have already fallen into a he said/he said
pattern in which the only crucial question becomes: Was the killer a
Taliban plant or a “rogue” member of the Afghan security forces? As soon as such an attack occurs, the Taliban -- which has made striking strides
in entering the modern age of media spin -- promptly takes credit for
it, claiming that whoever blew away a coalition soldier was one of its
own and the incident a carefully planned operation.
It’s easy to understand why the Taliban would want to associate
itself with such events. Harder to grasp -- though no reporter seems to
give it a second thought -- is the U.S./NATO response. Their
spokespeople regularly hustle out statements insisting that whoever
attacked U.S. or coalition personnel was not connected to the Taliban,
but simply having a truly bad day/life (experiencing, say, financial or psychological stress) and that, as a result, the incident was an “isolated” one, “not part of any organized pattern,” or as an American general summed it up
to reporters, “rare.” And yet the phenomenon turns out to be common
enough that the military has a label for it: “green-on-blue” violence.
Consider this, though: Is the thought that the enemy is capable of
repeatedly infiltrating American or NATO ranks really more devastating
than the thought that, on a really bad day, “our” Afghans, the ones we
are training or regularly working side-by-side with, have a deep-seated,
repetitive urge to blow the foreigners away? That seems to me the
devastating message U.S. military officials are rushing to reinforce.
Can you, in fact, even come up with a comparable historical
situation? Admittedly, when weaponry is everywhere, war is the subject,
and hair-trigger is the attitude, people can die in all sorts of ways,
as “fragging” incidents in the U.S. military in the Vietnam era indicated. (There was, in fact, one such incident at a military base in Kuwait as the invasion of Iraq began and, more recently of course, a disturbed Army psychiatrist, Major Nidal Hasan, went on a rampage, killing 13 people at Fort Hood in Texas.)
Still, where else is there such a record of police and military
personnel blowing away their own trainers and ostensible allies so
often? Isn’t it possible that all those “rogues” are offering a
collective message Americans simply don’t care to hear?
Despite the almost unbroken and certainly repetitive record of three
decades of war and destruction, there are undoubtedly new stories to be
found under the Afghan sun (as well as across the border in
roiling Pakistan). It’s just that you aren’t likely to find them in
American war coverage, in part because you aren’t likely to find them in
American strategic or tactical thinking.
Perhaps the real question is this: What does it tell us when neither a
new policy thought nor a new story can come out of a disastrous war
almost 10 years old?
What does it mean when a great power proves incapable of learning
anything from its own past actions? What does it mean when you can’t
think creatively or reimagine the world in a land that has so often been
referred to as “the graveyard of empire”? Is it really so hard to
guess?
And by the way, is anybody bored to death yet? Then, what if, for
the sake of having one new story to write, we decided to come home?
Tom Engelhardt, co-founder of the American Empire Project and the author of The End of Victory Culture, runs the Nation Institute's TomDispatch.com. His latest book is The American Way of War: How Bush’s Wars Became Obama’s (Haymarket Books).
Copyright 2011 Tom Engelhardt