Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Realistic choices must be made in Afghanista­n

- Georgie Anne Geyer Georgie Anne Geyer

When summer ends and autumn begins, one tends to feel instinctiv­ely, if foolishly, that other things will end and begin, too.

That’s certainly not true when it comes to America’s far-flung wars.

When President Trump spoke recently on Afghanista­n, he posited the choices we face in the war as essentiall­y only two.

We could suddenly withdraw, leaving the Middle East in utter chaos, or we could stay in for the long run, adding a small number of American troops and praying for a miracle (and thus also leaving the Middle East in chaos)..

Meanwhile, the president went so far as to say: “From now on, victory will have a clear definition.

Attacking our enemies, obliterati­ng ISIS, crushing al-Qaida, preventing the Taliban from taking over Afghanista­n and stopping mass terror attacks against America before they emerge.”

So, fellow citizens, this is where we are — once again. Our leading military men say repeatedly that we can’t “win” in Afghanista­n in any convention­al sense of the word.

Our problem, exemplifie­d by the Afghan war, is that we are overextend­ed as a nation.

We have 800-plus military bases across the world. We have spent at least $1 trillion in Afghanista­n, while we are 20 times that amount in debt.

We talk about nation-building, but in truth, we are doing more nation-destroying.

This problem is to be found almost everywhere we look.

The U.S. Navy has been involved in four — FOUR! — accidents this year resulting in the tragic and unnecessar­y deaths of multiple American sailors in the Pacific and the South China Sea.

The situation was considered so serious that U.S. Navy ships worldwide were ordered to pause their activity so the Navy could investigat­e whether ships are being overused and whether the deployable battle force, at 277 ships, is smaller than what is needed to meet demand.

In short, our Navy is overextend­ed.

Many immediatel­y jumped into the discussion over Afghanista­n, blaming the military.

It is easy to say that it’s the generals who want war, but that is actually not true.

Vietnam was created by civilians filled with ego after American victory in World War II.

Iraq and Afghanista­n were pushed by Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, who was ambitious to have “his” war, and by Vice President Dick Cheney and his group of civilian Pentagon “neocons,” who saw attacking Iraq as a means to defend Israel.

Yet even were we to have a president and leaders in the Pentagon and State Department who were not so ambitious for war on their watches, that wouldn’t solve today’s war in Afghanista­n.

The only way now to come out of it with some dignity and some minimal sense of a purpose fulfilled is to force the conflict to a negotiated end with the Taliban and the Islamic terrorist groups.

But most important, somewhere along the line — and sooner rather than later — we are going to have to learn how to make better practical and moral choices about our actions in the world.

That fact should be clear to anyone who thinks, in President George H.W. Bush’s favorite word, “prudently.”

And it should also be clear that the great and generous nation we still are will be destroyed if we don’t stop and rethink our priorities and, above all, our realistic limits.

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