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How Bush Botched the Afghan War

by: Robert Parry  |  Consortium News | Report

The 92,000 classified Afghan War documents, which were just released by Wikileaks, provide a troubling narrative of that conflict’s downward spiral as President George W. Bush concentrated the American military on the neoconservative target of choice, Iraq.

Though the reports don’t directly address Bush’s strategic blunder, they tell the story of badly stretched U.S. forces trying to manage a complex task in Afghanistan while the Taliban, al-Qaeda and their allies in Pakistan regrouped along the border and became a dangerous adversary.

Also indirectly, the reports underscore the successful counter-strategy pursued by al-Qaeda leaders, to keep the United States bogged down in Iraq while they rebuilt their capabilities in their safe havens within the tribal territories of northwest Pakistan.

Some of that strategy was already known. For instance, one of Osama bin Laden’s top lieutenants, called “Atiyah,” wrote in a letter dated Dec. 11, 2005, that “prolonging the war [in Iraq] is in our interest.” The letter was sent to Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, the hyper-violent leader of al-Qaeda in Iraq who was killed by a U.S. bombing raid in June 2006.

Atiyah’s advice to Zarqawi had been to tone down his violence against Iraqis and to proceed more patiently in developing alliances. Al-Qaeda’s leadership in Pakistan was clearly worried that Zarqawi was alienating too many Iraqis by trying to rush the war against the Americans.

It was in that context that Atiyah informed Zarqawi that the broader strategy was to keep U.S. attention on Iraq by “prolonging the war.” Back in Washington, President Bush continued to play into al-Qaeda’s hands by insisting that Iraq was “the central front in the war on terror.”

[To view the “prolonging the war” excerpt as translated by the Combating Terrorism Center at West Point, click here. To read the entire Atiyah letter, click here. ]

Other intelligence information also revealed that in 2004, al-Qaeda understood that its situation along the Pakistani-Afghan border remained precarious and would improve only if Bush continued his blunderbuss approach that was alienating people across the Muslim world.

Al-Qaeda leaders even feared that a rapid U.S. withdrawal from Iraq would cause many of its young recruits to put down their guns and go home. [For details, see Consortiumnews.com’s “Al-Qaeda’s Fragile Foothold.”]

Bin Laden Boosts Bush

In late October 2004, U.S. intelligence analysts concluded that bin Laden released a pre-election video with the intent of helping Bush gain a second term so his war policies would continue.

Bin Laden devoted most of his harangue to denouncing Bush in what looked like a Brer Rabbit ploy of “Don’t throw me in the briar patch” – suggesting to American voters that whatever they do, don’t give Bush a second term – when that was exactly what al-Qaeda wanted.

After bin Laden’s video dominated the news on the Friday before Election 2004, a meeting of senior CIA analysts began with deputy CIA director John McLaughlin observing that “bin Laden certainly did a nice favor today for the President,” according to Ron Suskind’s book The One Percent Doctrine, which relies heavily on CIA insiders.

“Certainly,” CIA deputy associate director for intelligence Jami Miscik said, “he [bin Laden] would want Bush to keep doing what he’s doing for a few more years,” according to Suskind’s account of the meeting.

As their internal assessment sank in, the CIA analysts drifted into silence, troubled by the implications of their own conclusions. “An ocean of hard truths before them – such as what did it say about U.S. policies that bin Laden would want Bush reelected – remained untouched,” Suskind wrote.

If helping Bush was bin Laden’s intent, the strategy appeared to work. Two last-minute polls showed Bush moving from a virtual dead heat with Sen. John Kerry, the Democratic nominee, to about a five percentage point lead. Bush then hung on to win by an official margin of less than three points.

[For more details, see Consortiumnews.com’s “Bush Agrees Bin Laden Helped in ‘04”]

Intelligence Consensus

In April 2006, a National Intelligence Estimate, representing the consensus view of the U.S. intelligence community, formalized some of the analysis about the benefit of the Iraq War to Islamic terrorism. The Iraq War had become a “cause celebre” that was “cultivating supporters for the global jihadist movement,” the NIE said.

Then, through 2006 and 2007, Iraq experienced a staggering level of civil strife, with Sunni and Shiite extremists forming death squads to go after their rival sects – as well as the Americans.

However, several developments gradually tamped down the violence by late 2007, including the fact that beginning in 2006 some Sunnis militants, who had grown disgusted with al-Qaeda’s brutality, agreed to stop killing Americans in exchange for money. The de facto ethnic cleansing that had separated Sunnis from Shiites also reduced the opportunities for sectarian violence.

Still, the conventional wisdom of Washington – significantly shaped by influential neoconservative commentators – held that Bush’s decision to “surge” U.S. forces by about 40,000 troops explained the decline in killings. The myth of the “successful surge” was born as the neocons scrambled to reclaim their status as the U.S. experts on the Middle East.

But another development may have had even a greater effect on the plummeting U.S. death toll in Iraq. American deaths declined into single digits per month when it became clear that the Americans would be forced into a military withdrawal, which became increasingly apparent to Iraqis in 2008 as a new “status of forces agreement” was hammered out.

By late 2008, however, even as the U.S. government finally acquiesced to a military departure from Iraq, the situation in Afghanistan had deteriorated badly. The hard-line Taliban, which had ruled Afghanistan from 1996 until the post-9/11 U.S. invasion, had reorganized with the help of old allies in Pakistani intelligence. Al-Qaeda also was gaining operational strength.

Just as Atiyah had envisioned, “prolonging the war” in Iraq had bought al-Qaeda and its allies precious time to regroup inside Pakistan, which had another appealing feature to bin Laden and friends, its nuclear bombs.

Dangers Mount

The worsening predicament for U.S. troops in Afghanistan is a reality that resonates through the larger narrative presented by the 92,000 documents released by Wikileaks, covering a six-year period from January 2004 to December 2009.

For instance, there are the dramatic electronic messages from Combat Outpost Keating, an isolated American base camp that was part of an undermanned Bush strategy for challenging the Taliban in remote eastern Afghanistan. The strategy had become increasingly untenable as the Taliban regained its fighting strength and began to surround these outposts.

As part of the Obama administration’s early review of the Afghan War, the decision was made to begin abandoning these vulnerable outposts. However, before Keating could be closed down, it came under heavy attack on Oct. 3, 2009, with a concentrated force of militants storming the outpost and breaching its perimeter.

With helicopter gunships some 40 minutes away, the Keating defenders were largely on their own. The electronic messages to headquarters grew increasingly frantic with the base in danger of falling.

“Enemy in the wire at keating,” one defender typed. “ENEMUY IN THE WIRE ENEMY IN THE WIRE!!!”

As the U.S. troops suffered growing casualties, American F-15s bombed several suspected insurgent positions. Eventually, helicopters arrived with U.S. reinforcements forcing the enemy to retreat, but not before eight Americans were killed and nearly two dozen were wounded.

President Barack Obama’s decision last fall to “surge” U.S. forces by 30,000 more troops, bringing the total to around 100,000, has led to a further spike in American casualties, with the total death toll now exceeding 1,200.

However, the bottom line for the nine-year-old war in Afghanistan is that Obama’s escalation may well be a case of too little, way too late. The opportunity to stabilize Afghanistan and to eradicate al-Qaeda appears to have been squandered in late 2001 when the Bush administration pivoted prematurely to Iraq.

Shifting Attention

Even as bin Laden and his top lieutenants were cornered in the Afghan mountains at Tora Bora in fall 2001, the attention of Bush and his neocon advisers had already shifted toward Iraq, which the neocons considered a greater threat to Israel’s security. Neocon theorists also held that by taking Iraq, regime change could then be pressed against Syria and Iran, thus eliminating all of Israel’s major Islamic enemies.

So, when the small American Special Forces team pursuing bin Laden called for reinforcements to seal off his escape routes to Pakistan and to mount an assault on al-Qaeda’s mountain strongholds, their appeals fell mostly on ears already listening to White House demands for Iraq war plans, said an analysis of the Tora Bora battle by the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.

Instead of staying focused on capturing bin Laden and destroying al-Qaeda, Central Command Gen. Tommy Franks was instructed to begin planning for the invasion of Iraq.

“On Nov. 21, 2001, President Bush put his arm on Defense Secretary [Donald] Rumsfeld as they were leaving a National Security Council meeting at the White House. ‘I need to see you,’ the president said. It was 72 days after the 9/11 attacks and just a week after the fall of Kabul. But Bush already had new plans.”

Citing Bob Woodward’s book, Plan of Attack, the Senate report quoted Bush as asking Rumsfeld, “What kind of war plan do you have for Iraq?”

In an interview with Woodward, Bush recalled instructing Rumsfeld to “get Tommy Franks looking at what it would take to protect America by removing Saddam Hussein if we have to.”

In his memoir, American General, Franks said he got a phone call from Rumsfeld on Nov. 21, after the Defense Secretary had met with the President, and was told about Bush’s interest in an updated Iraq war plan.

At the time, Franks said he was in his office at MacDill Air Force Base in Florida working with one of his aides on arranging air support for the Afghan militia who were under the guidance of the U.S. Special Forces in charge of the assault on bin Laden’s Tora Bora stronghold.

Franks told Rumsfeld that the Iraq war plan was out of date, prompting the Defense Secretary to instruct Franks to “dust it off and get back to me in a week.”

“For critics of the Bush administration’s commitment to Afghanistan,” the Senate report noted, “the shift in focus just as Franks and his senior aides were literally working on plans for the attacks on Tora Bora represents a dramatic turning point that allowed a sustained victory in Afghanistan to slip through our fingers. Almost immediately, intelligence and military planning resources were transferred to begin planning the next war in Iraq.”

Losing Bin Laden

The CIA and Special Forces teams, calling for reinforcements to finish off bin Laden and al-Qaeda, “did not know what was happening back at CentCom, the drain in resources and shift in attention would affect them and the future course of the U.S. campaign in Afghanistan,” the Senate report said.

Henry Crumpton, who was in charge of the CIA’s Afghan strategy, made direct appeals to Franks to move more than 1,000 Marines to Tora Bora to block escape routes to Pakistan. But the CentCom commander rebuffed the request, citing logistical and time problems, the report said.

“At the end of November, Crumpton went to the White House to brief President Bush and Vice President [Dick] Cheney and repeated the message that he had delivered to Franks,” the report said. “Crumpton warned the president that the Afghan campaign’s primary goal of capturing bin Laden was in jeopardy because of the military’s reliance on Afghan militias at Tora Bora. …

“Crumpton questioned whether the Pakistani forces would be able to seal off the escape routes and pointed out that the promised Pakistani troops had not arrived yet.”

But the Iraq-obsessed Bush still didn’t act. Finally, in mid-December 2001, the small U.S. Special Forces team convinced the Afghan militia fighters to undertake a sweep of the mountainous terrain, but they found it largely deserted.

The Senate report said bin Laden and his bodyguards apparently departed Tora Bora on Dec. 16, 2001, adding: “With help from Afghans and Pakistanis who had been paid in advance, the group made its way on foot and horseback across the mountain passes and into Pakistan without encountering any resistance.

“The Special Operations Command history (of the Afghan invasion) noted that there were not enough U.S. troops to prevent the escape, acknowledging that the failure to capture or kill … bin Laden made Tora Bora a controversial battle.”

Bush, however, was following the advice of Washington’s neocons who considered Afghanistan essentially a sideshow with the main event awaiting in Iraq and elsewhere in the Middle East, in vanquishing Israel’s enemies.

So, for the next seven years, U.S. forces in Afghanistan had to make do with the limited attention of Washington while the Bush administration obsessed over Iraq.

The narrative of that reversal of fortune in Afghanistan – as the undermanned occupying troops saw their advantage lost to a resurgent resistance – can be found in the 92,000 classified documents published by Wikileaks.

Robert Parry broke many of the Iran-Contra stories in the 1980s for the Associated Press and Newsweek. His latest book, Neck Deep: The Disastrous Presidency of George W. Bush, was written with two of his sons, Sam and Nat, and can be ordered at neckdeepbook.com. His two previous books, Secrecy & Privilege: The Rise of the Bush Dynasty from Watergate to Iraq and Lost History: Contras, Cocaine, the Press & 'Project Truth' are also available there. Or go to Amazon.com

All republished content that appears on Truthout has been obtained by permission or license.

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The war in Afghanistan was

The war in Afghanistan was not "botched" by anyone. It itself was a botch and Obama the murder continues unchecked by Congress in botching more and more innocent lives and creating a horrendously ugly planet.

The wars probably won't be

The wars probably won't be stopped. What probably will happen--in fact there are already Congressional plans afoot to do just that, what with traitor, dual Israeli citizen and dual loyalty(ies), Lieberman--is that they'll shut down the internet, or bring in the "Internet 2" that's been in the offing that will make normal internet access so expensive that only the well-to-do will be able to afford it, and most Americans won't be able to afford it. Or the government will block tons of political sites, especially sites like Wikileaks, Dan Ellsberg's site, and any and all sites which exercise their Constitutional, First Amendment rights and duties to dissent against and criticize the government, particularly the government's completely illegal wars of aggression, and totally fraudulent endless war(s), like they're nothing but carrying out now. From their perspective, they can't have such an available level of truth and free speech continue.

Someone reading this believe "our government" isn't capable of that, or wouldn't do that? Then you don't realize that such is just how bad they have gotten to be. Other than the internet, and non-mainstream media (MSM) news sites, we don't have a free press in "America" anymore; and MSM news organizations are almost nothing but propaganda arms for the government and military now, telling us almost only what they want us to hear and very little else, as well as lying to us in a constant barrage of lies, misinformation, lies-by-omission, etc. If it wasn't for the internet--where, even though most people go around claiming you supposedly can't trust anything on it, which is another one of the HUGE lies, there is so much truth on the internet that it's mind blowing. One just has to develop a sense of discernment to tell the difference between falsehood and truth on the net; and intelligent people do develop that discernment.

Anyhow, for right now, thank God for the internet, for whistleblowers (True Heroes, Americans and Patriots), for websites like Wikileaks, etc.!

I don't think it will succeed, very sadly, anymore than the former's resolution to end the Afghanistan war did, but the timing of Kucinich-Paul's resolution to end the completely illegal incursion(s) into Pakistan, and mass-murder of countless civilians there, probably could not be more auspicious than right now with the release of the Wikileaks greater version of the Afghanistan "Pentagon Papers". Yet, of course, I hope I'm wrong and their said resolution, and perhaps even a renewal of the Afghanistan resolution, DOES succeed.

Imagine a war, speaking of Afghanistan, that has now gone on LONGER the major World War 2, and for which there is no end in site... Except perhaps now with these new revelations and resolutions, and the fact that majority public opinion in the U.S. is for ending it.

And, the ISI (Pakistani "intelligence") works with, if it isn't an actual, direct branch of, which it probably is, of the CIA, aka "al-CIA-duh!" Remember the ISI, Pakinstani General who was in D.C. on 9/11, and who was proven to have received $100,000.oo for Mohamed Atta, the so-called "lead hijacker" who, along with the other so-called hijacker pilots, couldn't even properly fly small planes, let alone carry out miraculous flying maneuvers with jumbo jets that professional passenger jet pilots have said even they, though they were previously military fighter jet pilots, couldn't have successfully carried out, especially the so-called Boeing 757 flight, very close to the ground, into the Pentagon? Yah, a bunch of guys with nothing but box cutters took over passenger jets from pilots trained in combat who would NEVER give up their cockpits without a fight! And my name is Rumpelstiltskin!

Add to that the Israeli Mossad (also connected to the CIA/aka "al-CIA-duh!") agents caught celebrating the fall of the Twin Towers as they were falling, who were arrested, held in jail for three months (I think it was), who were finally and quietly released, and allowed to return Israel without charges. Then add as well the fall of Building 7, which wasn't hit by a plane, or hardly any debris from the collapse(s) of Towers 1 and 2, and had very small fires, hours later at the end of the day on 9/11, falling straight down into its own footprint exactly like a controlled demolition [because it WAS a controlled demolition, as were the perfect free-falls of the Twin Towers, which all would have fallen over sideways if they hadn't been brought down by internal bombs and cutting charges used for controlled demolition(s)]. Add to that the then new owner of much of World Trade Center complex admitting that Building 7 was "pulled", a controlled demolition term...

And the extensive list of evidence that 9/11 was an inside job goes on and on and on. Therefore...

9/11 WAS AN INSIDE JOB!!!!!

Check out the following websites for the proof:

911Blogger

911Truth

9-11 Research (.com and .WTC7.net)

9/11 Synchronicity

9-11 Visibility Project

AE911Truth [Architects & Engineers for 9/11 Truth (Richard Gage, AIA; et al.)]

Complete 911 Timeline

Fire Fighters for 9-11 Truth

Journal of 9/11 Studies (Prof. Steven E. Jones, Ph.D.; et al.)]

Lawyers for 9/11 Truth

Medical Professionals for 9/11 Truth

Patriots Question 9/11

Physics 911, by "Scientific Panel Investigating Nine-Eleven"

PilotsFor911Truth

Political Leaders for 9/11 Truth

Religious Leaders for 9/11 Truth

Scholars for 9/11 Truth

Scholars for 9/11 Truth & Justice

The Science of 9/11

Veterans for 9/11 Truth, Operation Vigilant Truth

Link directly to the foregoing websites via my blogroll in the sidebar of my blog at:

http://www.wolfbritain.com/#9/11-Inside-Job-Evidence-Websites

BRING THE TROOPS HOME NOW AND END ALL OF THESE WARS, AND THE FRAUDULENT, ENDLESS WAR OF TERRORISM, NOW; WHICH ARE ALL INTERNATIONAL CRIMES, CRIMES AGAINST THE PEACE, CRIMES AGAINST HUMANITY, AND WAR CRIMES!!!!!

AND, TRUTHOUT, COVER AND TELL THE TRUTH ABOUT 9/11!!!!!

The majority of this if not

The majority of this if not all is old news to many of us. With the further widespread distribution of the information and its acceptance it does illustrate one more reason that Bush and his henchmen should be prosecuted for their actions and lack of actions in office.

I agree with S. Wolf

I agree with S. Wolf Britain, the "War on Terror" needs to be exposed for the FRAUD that it is! Just like the great threat of Communism.

Robert Parry with articles like this, and his recent podcast with Peter B. Collins isn't helping!

CORRECTION(S) AND/OR

CORRECTION(S) AND/OR ADDITION(S) [in capital letters]: I should have, rather, said the following:

...Imagine a war, speaking of Afghanistan, that has now gone on longer than the major World War 2, AND VIETNAM (at least officially), and for which there is no end in site... Except perhaps now with these new revelations and resolutions, and the fact that majority public opinion in the U.S. is for ending it...

I have checked the war diary

I have checked the war diary entries of Oct. 3 2009 and I do not find the incident to which you are referring.

Found It. I have read many

Found It. I have read many of the entries, mostly up to 2007. What I got from the reading is that the military has an incredibly complex job. The entries reflect their time and efforts in "establishing a relationship with the people". The entries of meetings with leaders and locals alike show that they spend a lot of time checking on infrastructure projects, consulting with local leaders to make sure things are proceeding according to previous agreements. Many reports detail specific needs for villages. I think the military has done a great job in trying circumstances.