Top Democrats Pressure White House on Afghan War as WikiLeaks Reveals Bloody Realities
Friday 30 July 2010
by: Mike Ludwig, t r u t h o u t | Report

Sen. Russ Feingold (D-Wisconsin). (Photo: Barack Obama / Flickr)
The Afghan war is coming under renewed scrutiny as web surfers across the world browse through the bloody battle scenes and military follies described in the thousands of classified military reports released by WikiLeaks, and now top Democrats are finally expressing concerns over the longevity of a war that has dragged on for nearly a decade.
On Wednesday Democratic Sens. Russ Feingold (D-Wisconsin) and Jim Webb (D-Virginia) sent a letter to the White House asking President Obama to refrain from make any major commitments to Afghanistan without the consent of the Senate. As a senator, Obama supported a similar request sent to President Bush in 2007 regarding Iraq.
The letter was sent just one day after the House finally approved $33 billion in additional spending for the war in Afghanistan. Feingold, whose amendment demanding the White House set a clear timetable for withdrawal was stripped from the supplemental, voted against the spending bill in the Senate, but Webb gave his approval. Obama is expected to sign it.
"We do not believe that a long-term, open-ended presence of U.S. military forces in Afghanistan serves our national interest," the senators wrote.
The letter is a softball compared to the efforts of anti-war Democrats in the House, but it suggests the senators are worried about war without end - and for good reason. The war has cost the US billions of dollars and thousands of lives, but if reports contained in the 90,000 WikiLeaks files are any indicator, the current US counterinsurgency effort to stabilize the region continues to face years of considerable challenges.
For instance, the WikiLeaks documents reveal that improvised explosive device (IED) attacks against coalition forces and civilians increased from 308 in 2004 in to 7,155 in 2009. It's a deadly reminder that guerrilla insurgents refuse to be pacified.
Wahid Monawar, an Afghan diplomat and former chief of the Afghan foreign ministry, said that most Afghans do not support the Taliban, but "it appears the Taliban is as strong as it's every been."
"And to successfully reverse that trend, it is going to be very important for us to depend on our partners in Afghanistan and Pakistan, where in both places, we have no legitimate and effective one," Monawar said in an interview with Truthout.
The WikiLeaks files have added new fire to allegations that supposed US ally Pakistan has secretly supported the Taliban through its Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) agency, which has received billions of dollars in US funding, according to The Guardian UK, a British newspaper that was one of few media outlets allowed to analyze the leaked reports in advance of Monday's historic release. Pakistan has denied the allegations, but the leaks have dampened relations between Islamabad and Kabul.
"If the relation between Kabul and Islamabad does not improve, this insurgency can last as long as it takes," Monawar said. "When I was part of the Afghan government in Karzai's first term, we often raised Pakistan's involvement in Afghan insurgency but we seldom had any audience in the West, the faculty of listening was impaired. It is imperative that this must change."
Monawar has criticized Afghan President Hamid Karzai's government for being weak and corrupt, a major setback for the US counterinsurgency, which cannot risk withdrawing troops until a democratic government can provide stability for its citizens.
Monawar said Pakistan had benefited from conflict in Afghanistan for 30 years, first during the Soviet invasion and withdrawal and then from US outsourcing of Afghan resistance management to the ISI. Monawar said Obama must pursue a "quid pro quo" solution between Kabul and Islamabad.
A stable Afghan government requires stable support of Karzai and coalition forces from Afghan citizens, but Karzai's corruption has cost him popularity, and civilians have suffered thousands of casualties as war has ravaged their homeland. The United Nations reports that in 2009 nearly 6,000 Afghan civilians lost their lives due to armed conflict, the highest number since the fall of the Taliban regime in 2001.
Browsing the WikiLeaks war logs, however, provides a much more vivid account of the pain and trauma suffered by Afghan civilians. Some reports are dry and clinical, composed of jargon-filled accounts detailing dozens of civilians killed and wounded by an IED attack here, or a misguided 2,000 pound "smart bomb" killing 2 civilians and wounding 17 there.
Other reports are disturbingly vivid. On November 16, 2009, two Afghan toddlers were wounded during a firefight between US troops and insurgents that took place near farm fields in southern Afghanistan. The US troops reported that they did not see any civilians in the fields of corn and hemp, but later discovered that a boy named Esan Ullah, age 6, had been shot in the foot, and a 2-year-old girl name Shamsia had been shot in the stomach. It is unclear if the rural children survived.
Coalition forces often offer payments (usually around $2,000) to families and friends of civilians killed by friendly forces, but Monawar warns that the US can't just buy civilian support.
"We can build 1000 of schools and clinics, but if at the end of the day we inadvertently kill someone's cousin, brother or a family member, it will be impossible for us to win hearts and minds," Monawar said. "Afghans are a vindictive bunch, and they love to fight. There is a Pashto expression that translates 'Afghans buy/pay for a fight.'"
Even before the WikiLeaks release, mainstream military analysts were casting doubts that the war in Afghanistan will conclude with a decisive victory.
"Two critical questions dominate any realistic discussion of the conflict," analyst Anthony Cordesman wrote in a report for the bipartisan Center for Strategic and International Studies earlier this year. "The first is whether the war is worth fighting. The second is whether it can be won. The answers to both questions are uncertain."
Both Cordesman and Monawar agree that setting artificial deadlines for troop withdrawal in Afghanistan could tend the Taliban's fire and hurt Afghan morale. Monawar suggested that the Obama administration insert a long-term commitment with the US-Afghanistan Strategic Partnership, which would ease tensions surrounding a 2011 withdrawal deadline and clarify that the US is not stuck in an open-ended commitment.
But Obama is already losing some support among voters and his own party. Support for the war in the US dropped from 91 percent in 2002 to 50-60 percent in 2008 and, by now, a majority of voters may be against the war, according to a Strategic Studies Institute report. The number of House Democrats who voted against the war supplemental nearly quadrupled to 102 since the first House vote on the bill, which had since been stripped of billions of dollars of aid and domestic spending.
After nine years of bloodshed, it appears that Americans and now Washington are beginning to lose confidence in US operations in Afghanistan. For Monawar, it's a vital time to remember how the US ended up in such a quagmire in the first place.
"My personal opinion is that for the past nine years, ever since 9/11, we have always chased to cure the symptoms and completely forgot about the cause," Monawar said. "All 19 hijackers were from Saudi [Arabia], we spent one trillion dollars toppling a regime in Iraq that did not like Al Qaeda, or [did] Al Qaeda [have] any hope of infiltrating Iraq. As long as the Saudi Kings finance these jihadists, American soldiers and Afghan civilians will die."
Deb Weinstein contributed to this report.

This work by Truthout is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 3.0 United States License.





Comments
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Oh, it's a long war, is it?
Fri, 07/30/2010 - 20:44 β Peter Edler (not verified)Oh, it's a long war, is it? So our Rip-van-Winkle Dems
are finally waking up - and how the world has changed!
Better go back to sleep fast, all you conscientious Democrats - the worst nightmares you will have will seem like a picnic compared to what will happen in the real world. Pete Edler, Stockholm
Correction: the 19 hijackers
Fri, 07/30/2010 - 20:57 β EDGEOFNOWHERE (not verified)Correction: the 19 hijackers were not from Saudi Arabia -- they all held Saudi passports and 15 had visas issued by the U.S. consulate in Saudi Arabia. To this date, no one has ever investigated who they really were and how they obtained those visas in the face of consular opposition. "J. Michael Springmann, formerly chief of the visa section at the U.S. Consulate in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, has testified that he rejected hundreds of suspicious visa applications by Saudi Arabian men similar to those named as the 9/11 hijackers when he was head of the consular section of the US embassy in Jeddah, but C.I.A. officers repeatedly overruled him and ordered the visas to be issued. He protested to the State Department, the Office of Diplomatic Security, the F.B.I., the Justice Department and congressional committees, but was told to shut up. He later realized that this was a CIA operation, and wrote about it in the Spring 1997 issue of the journal Unclassified."(US News and World Report 12/12/01)
This war is a lie. 9-11 is a
Fri, 07/30/2010 - 20:59 β Anonymous (not verified)This war is a lie. 9-11 is a lie. The anthrax was sent out by our own government to shut down congress in order to get their story straight. What will it take to wake the American people. They are like a woman in an abusive relationship who repeatedly is beaten but insists that her husband still loves her.
The downing street memos, the WMDs , we will be greeted as liberators, Iraqi oil will pay the cost of this insanity, retired generates hired by the pentagon as talking heads but treated by our corporate media as impartial experts.
My God America, wake up. Listen to the fireman, or the pilots, or the architects or the engineers, or the phyisists. 9-11 was a mass murder conducted by elements within our own government . Do you really have to wake up homeless and bankrupt in a city that can no longer afford teachers, or police or fireman to realize you have been lied to.
Support the soldiers, bring them home!
For decades we have been
Fri, 07/30/2010 - 21:01 β Anonymous (not verified)For decades we have been breeding a type of
"Yes-men" political machinery where the biggest apple polichers are rewarded with promotions and raises in salaries. We are now paying the price in the Iraq and Afghan war, where private contractors have taken over from the Military and
Cash flows like water down a stream. We are expected to believe all the lies and propaganda put out by the War Makers for Profit. The largest
news making organs are now owned and controlled by the Corporate Structure that gains from wars.
I'm gratified there are some
Fri, 07/30/2010 - 23:58 β Anonymous (not verified)I'm gratified there are some heady observers here noticing the rape of the country by corporate raiders. 9/11 was clearly an inside job, an incredible implosion perpetrated by skilled demolitionists using explosives developed for and by the US military exclusively. The fallen steel beams were whisked away with nary an investigation. Bush Jr. stonewalled for well over a year and then the committee was suspect in its methodology. Folks, we are getting the royal shaft daily thanks to the big money folks who pull Obama's strings. Churchill probably perpetrated the sinking of the Lusitania to try and induce the US to enter WW1. Pearl Harbor was conspiracy again. There are silent assassins in our midst, they rule the world. We are just termites digging burrows in the dirt, getting raped by incessant and increasing taxes. It's a conspiracy against the worker class. We are doomed, according to some well informed people. A grand thought, eh? Time to vote out the Dems, and then remove the Kenyan in 2 more years. We cannot afford those who hate the US and would destroy it and build it up again in the form of Obama's Marxism. Live free or die, dammit.
"LONGEVITY"! - Now That's A
Sat, 07/31/2010 - 00:03 β Bill O'Rights (not verified)"LONGEVITY"! - Now That's A Decade Late and a Trillion Dollars Short. The question for both sides of the aisle now is 'now that we are officially bankrupt, and soon to lose US Dollar having world reserve currency status, and with foreign creditors no longer willing to roll over our debt and our Treasury no longer being able to coin the money out of thin air - after which we will no longer be able to finance the war, or any other Federal program - why does T.O. or most of it's readers focus on how the non-existent Federal Budget is going to be spent? What is to stop us from devolving into local police controlled Fiefdoms with little two bit warlords bullying everybody around - will it be the Federal Government somehow coming in to rescue us? Yes, the whole war was a fraud from the start - go visit Architects and Engineers For Truth...
Gratified (23:58) -- good
Sat, 07/31/2010 - 02:36 β Harbinger (not verified)Gratified (23:58) -- good stuff. But then blaming it all on the Dems? This right and left stuff might be a smokescreen... but if you're going to play the game, the Repugs have to go first. They are obviously much more insane than the Dems. And using terms like "Obama's Marxism" clearly shows you have no idea what Marxism is.
"How can one expect people
Sat, 07/31/2010 - 07:32 β J.Swift (not verified)"How can one expect people to follow advice when they won't even heed warnings?"
The Bill of Rights is the
Sat, 07/31/2010 - 13:12 β crowbar (not verified)The Bill of Rights is the purest instrument designed by any government to protect its society,not only from factions in society itself, but from the government itself. It established a Democratic Republic allowing its citizenry to elect its representative individuals, as well as many government workers, from the local J.P. to the U.S. president.
In order for the individual voter to have the knowledge of good judgment in executing this right, it is imperative to seek truthful information relative to to each candidate and his or her philosophy
Here-in lies a big problem...where does one find honest,truthful,factual information when the bulk of information is propagandized and distorted beyond reality by a controlled media.
When one leaves such a media in order to find honest information, thoughtful analysis must be used just as before, but seeking data from all sources broadens the field, thus having a greater supply of chaff to glean, there-by finding grains of truth that would never have been found otherwise.
Since a "Government of the people, for the people, and by the people" is a very delicate social endeavor because of its dependency of Truth, when when deception, obstruction of information, secrecy, and blatant lies contaminate its needed purity, it begins a metamorphosis into something more evil than fascism.
Full-blown Fascism is easily identified, but when the very guardians of This Constitutional Government blocks, or even hinders,Truth from its Citizenry, it becomes a "wolf in a sheep's clothing"...and its citizenry becomes a mindless mob; eventually becoming apathetic to Democracy's very essence: non-contradicting Truth.
In his youth Ghandi lived in
Sat, 07/31/2010 - 15:02 β Ann V Quinlan (not verified)In his youth Ghandi lived in South Africa for 20 years. Although born in India - under British rule - as and Indian he was required to carry papers of his origins. This rule did not apply to white South Africans. His inspiration for non-violence -peace and justice work arose out of this law requiring all Indians to be registered and carry papers. Here we are 100+ years later with Arizona's bill # 1070. This bill clearly targets "the brown people" our neighbors and laborers from south of the border. If we are to enforce immigration laws such as these then let us have them at all border communities regardless of ethnicity or color - including Canada!
Gotta agree with the 9/11
Sun, 08/01/2010 - 18:43 β gladbag (not verified)Gotta agree with the 9/11 truthers. Beyond that, there is a cabal that likes to keep wars going, or at the very least upheavals in various forms, and has been dedicated to this activity for a very long time.
It's not about Democrats, who seem to have no 'nads, or Republicans, who couldn't run a newsstand honestly or efectively. Nothing too wrong with the Constitution as it was laid out. It boils down to ethics, and to the denigration of morale. This can and is being done cynically and purposely.
Thank you to Russ Feingold.
Sun, 08/01/2010 - 20:18 β Liced-christ (not verified)Thank you to Russ Feingold. He never lets up!
To 23:58 You sounded pretty
Sun, 08/01/2010 - 20:33 β Liced-christ (not verified)To 23:58
You sounded pretty smart until you called Obama a Marxist. Have you even read Marx? Do you know the fundamental tenets of Marxism? Do you know even the basic difference between fascism and communism? I doubt it.
Folks, I propose those who
Tue, 08/03/2010 - 15:07 β Anonymous (not verified)Folks,
I propose those who are disappointed with President Obama's "handling" of the Afghan conflict and are pleased that Wikileaks has exposed the smelly underbelly of America's perpetually self-funding "war" making beast and so-called foreign policy "objectives" (exploiting other countries' mineral wealth) consider starting a Legal Defense Fund for Bradley Manning.
The AP story concerning a
Tue, 08/03/2010 - 15:26 β Anonymous (not verified)The AP story concerning a "Study on Afghanistan's Accidental killing of civilians" being "tied to attacks on foreign forces" (Tuesday, 8/3/2010 The Oregonian) speaks to the hypocrisy of the American obsession with pushing, at all cost, its version of cultural imperialism.
I wonder what citizens of states such as Utah, Wyoming or Idaho would do if a foreign army (Chinese, Arab, etc.) invaded their space seeking to put a violent end of the Mormon church and its the remnants of its practices which used to advocate/condone polygamy/polygyny in the name of their god/prophet, their communities' national security and their version of gender equality.
Apparently we Americans have plenty of young impressionable citizens willing to die for their beliefs in a foreign environment they cannot possibly comprehend, knowing that they will be eulogized as "heroes" in the context of the national press, in contemporary textbooks on patriotism and in the memorabilia of their peers.
Feingold for President, 2016.
Thu, 08/05/2010 - 18:13 β Frances in California (not verified)Feingold for President, 2016.
Clearly, US so-called
Thu, 08/05/2010 - 18:24 β Frances in California Again (not verified)Clearly, US so-called "Defense" allowed 9-11 to happen; we've been experiencing blowback ever since . . . but will ANYONE investigate the part played by Pakistani ISI? NOOOooooooo!