creators.com opinion web
Liberal Opinion Conservative Opinion
Alexander Cockburn
Alexander Cockburn
17 Feb 2012
Hypocrisy and Assad

Few spectacles have been more surreal than senior U.S. officials — starting with the president, the … Read More.

10 Feb 2012
Time for the Tumbrils!

Back in the 1960s, Herbert Marcuse pointed out in one of his books that the Pentagon had given up on verbs. … Read More.

3 Feb 2012
The Port Huron Statement -- 50 Years on

Fifty years ago, a group of students in the American Midwest issued a document rather portentously titled … Read More.

War Cries from a Defeated Man

Share Comment

Ritual trumphalism about America's righteous mission in the closing sentences of his speech did not dispel the distinct impression during President Obama's 33-minute address to cadets at West Point Tuesday night that we were listening to a man defeated by the challenge of justifying the dispatch of 30,000 more troops to Afghanistan.

Obama didn't make the case and he pleased few. The liberals seethed as they heard him say that it is "in our vital national interest" to send 30,000 more troops to a mission they regard as doomed from the get go.

The cheers of the right at the news of the deployment died in their throats as they heard his next line, "After 18 months, our troops will begin to come home."

No mature American, seasoned in the ineradicable graft flourishing down the decades in almost every major American city, believes a pledge that corruption will be banished from Afghanistan in a year and a half, or that Karzai has any credibility as the wielder of the cleansing broom.

Each proposition of Obama's rationale collapses at the first prod, starting with the comparison with the conclusion of America's mission in Iraq. It's taken as axiomatic in Washington that the "surge" in Iraq worked — that the extra troops demanded of President Bush by Gen. Petraeus turned the tide.

But what truly turned the tide in Iraq was the victory of the Shi'a in Baghdad and other major cities in their bloody civil war with the Sunni, the majority of whose fighters then saw they had no alternative but to forge an alliance with the hated occupiers and garland the tanks they had been trying to blow up only weeks earlier.

Prime Minister Maliki has at his disposal a large and seemingly loyal army and extensive trained militia and police force to sustain and guard the Iraqi state. The Afghan army is ragtag, barely trained, mostly illiterate and rife with desertion — disproportionately manned and commanded by Tajiks, whom the Pashtuns despise. The police depend for their living on bribes. As University of Michigan Professor Juan Cole points out, "the entire province of Qunduz north of the capital only has 800 police for a population of nearly a million. In contrast, the similarly-sized San Francisco has over 2,000 police officers and rather fewer armed militants."

Core to Obama's argument for intervention is the claim he made at West Point that the fundamental objective of destroying al-Qaida can only be achieved by destroying their hosts, the Taliban, and that this enterprise requires more troops. But there is evidence that across the recent months of infighting over America's options, Obama and his White House national security advisers themselves had no confidence in this proposition.

In the struggle between the White House and Gen. McChrystal, the Pentagon and its Defense Secretary, Robert Gates (a holdover from the Bush years), Obama's security adviser Gen. James Jones mooted to Bob Woodward of the Washington Post the question of why al-Qaida would want to move out of its present sanctuary in Pakistan to the uncertainties of Afghanistan.

McChrystal promptly struck back in his London speech to the Institute of Strategic Studies: "When the Taliban has success, that provides sanctuary from which al-Qaida can operate transnationally."

Days later, The New York Times reported that "senior administration officials" were saying privately that Obama's national security team was now "arguing that the Taliban in Afghanistan do not pose a direct threat to the United States."

Detailing this semi-covert struggle, the Washington-based national security analyst Gareth Porter argues that Obama was boxed in by an alliance of Gates and Secretary of State Clinton plus McChrystal and Admiral Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, in "a textbook demonstration of how the national security apparatus ensures that its policy preference on issues of military force prevail in the White House."

Though Porter makes a decent case, this may be giving a bit too much comfort to those disconsolate but ever hopeful liberals arguing that there really is a "good Obama" battling away against the darker forces.

In a larger time-frame, if anyone boxed himself in on Afghanistan, it was Obama who spent a lot of the campaign last year seeking to deflect McCain's charges that he was a quitter on Iraq, by proclaiming that America's true battlefield lay in Afghanistan.

There were other unusual down-key notes in the speech. Obama is probably the first president of the United States to declare flatly that "we can't simply afford to ignore the price of these wars. ... That's why our troop commitment in Afghanistan cannot be open-ended: because the nation that I'm most interested in building is our own."

Contrast that to the budgetary bravado of President Kennedy proclaiming in his inaugural address in 1961 that "we shall pay any price, bear any burden ... in order to assure the survival and the success of liberty."

In the wake of the speech, the Democrats were glum, well aware that the war is relatively unpopular and they will be saddled with it through the 2010 midterm elections and that Obama will unhesitatingly turn to Republicans in Congress to get the necessary vote for the money to finance the widening war. From the left came pledges to revive the antiwar movement, dormant these past two years.

The American political landscape doesn't offer too much comfort to Obama. On Wednesday came tidings of a right-left alliance in Congress, challenging the reappointment of Ben Bernanke for a second term as chairman of the Federal Reserve, a slap in the face not only for Bernanke but for Obama.

In demanding a hold on Bernanke's reappointment, Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont said, "The American people overwhelmingly voted last year for a change in our national priorities to put the interests of ordinary people ahead of the greed of Wall Street and the wealthy few. What the American people did not bargain for was another four years for one of the key architects of the Bush economy."

The president could scarcely exult publicly at one piece of good news, since it comes at the expense of the lives of four police officers in Tacoma, Wash., shot dead by Maurice Clemmons, an apparently mad black man who had a very lengthy prison sentence commuted nine years ago by Mike Huckabee when the latter was governor of Arkansas.

Huckabee's pardons were estimable, but the prospects of him winning the Republican nomination in 2012 have now shriveled, sparing Obama a witty and resourceful opponent. Obama is no doubt more comfortable with the thought that his opponent might conceivably be Sarah Palin.

Alexander Cockburn is co-editor with Jeffrey St. Clair of the muckraking newsletter CounterPunch. He is also co-author of the new book "Dime's Worth of Difference: Beyond the Lesser of Two Evils," available through www.counterpunch.com. To find out more about Alexander Cockburn and read features by other columnists and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com.

COPYRIGHT 2009 CREATORS.COM


Comments

1 Comments | Post Comment
There seems to be some cosmic force looking over our boy "W". Throughout his life, he has left one mess after another and just walked away scot free while someone else has picked up the pieces for this evergreen frat boy. That, combined with Obama's idiocy of earlier stating that Afghanistan was the good and necessary war, and the hawkish establishment of D.C., Dem and Repub alike, has led us inexorably to our looming disaster. Knowing the shameless clique that both rules and opines about our country, the official history will credit W with winning in Iraq and Obama losing in Afghanistan. It should have been tragic, but Obama, a man who strove for the acceptance of the ruling class while presenting himself as someone representing change, will have fully deserved the contempt history will have for him. This nation was so ready and in need of someone who would at least confront the entrenched interests that seek only their own benefit, but that man, either by nature or because he's really just one of them, is surely not Obama. His 10 months in power have made Bill Clinton look like a man of unshakeable conviction and principle. My only hope is that the coming Repub recovery of power will be so disastrous that someone truly from the left will lead our nation out of the cesspool that we know as our government.
Comment: #1
Posted by: michael nola
Fri Dec 4, 2009 5:32 PM
Already have an account? Log in.
New Account  
Your Name:
Your E-mail:
Your Password:
Confirm Your Password:

Please allow a few minutes for your comment to be posted.

Enter the numbers to the right:  
Creators.com comments policy
More
Alexander Cockburn
Feb. `12
Su Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa
29 30 31 1 2 3 4
5 6 7 8 9 10 11
12 13 14 15 16 17 18
19 20 21 22 23 24 25
26 27 28 29 1 2 3
About the author About the author
Write the author Write the author
Printer friendly format Printer friendly format
Email to friend Email to friend
View by Month
Author’s Podcast
Michelle Malkin
Michelle MalkinUpdated 27 Feb 2012
Marc Dion
Marc DionUpdated 20 Feb 2012
Steve Chapman
Steve ChapmanUpdated 19 Feb 2012

25 Mar 2011 Oh, What a Stupid War!

17 Jan 2008 The Campaign in Black and White

5 Oct 2007 Congress vs. the Country