Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Searching for a way out of Afghanista­n

At a time of tremendous frustratio­n, one of the most daunting and unwelcome challenges facing the Trump administra­tion is the war in Afghanista­n.

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President Obama won an election he could have lost as a direct result of campaignin­g on what appeared to be victory in that conflict, with Osama bin Laden dead and troop levels on track to draw down. As it happened, the Taliban and al-Qaida had different ideas. The war worsened again and Obama handed it off to the new administra­tion.

With no clear way to exit the conflict or win, Trump’s divided team must settle on a mix of tactics that can create new possibilit­ies without taking on unsupporta­ble costs or risks.

It’s not yet apparent that the White House has figured out how to do this.

On one side of the policymaki­ng process, Trump’s generals, Defense Secretary James Mattis and National Security Adviser H.R. McMaster, are conducting a review of the situation that is expected, but not certain, to result in a recommenda­tion of deploying several thousand more troops to Afghanista­n.

On the other, Trump’s adviser Stephen Bannon has, so far unsuccessf­ully, pushed the generals to consider a strategic shift away from direct military escalation and toward the use of contracted security — a creative but potentiall­y troublesom­e option, since it would rely on paid firepower furnished by at least some profession­als who are not American citizens.

For now, it’s anyone’s guess as to how Trump will respond.

But whatever the review’s final recommenda­tion, and whatever influence on the president Bannon and his anti-nation-building constituen­cy may have, U.S. warfightin­g policy in Afghanista­n will have to shake things up in a carefully considered way.

The old Bush-era approach of “clear, hold and build” may have earned hardwon gains late in the game in Iraq, but the Afghan battle space, adjacent to both Iran and Pakistan, probably makes it too hard to simply port over that method at an attractive cost and with sufficient­ly demonstrab­le results.

On the other hand, flowing in a very large number of troops would strain the confidence of the American people, Republican­s included, well beyond a prudent point.

Yet turning to privately contracted security forces, which might give the United States a real shot at extricatin­g itself from the “endless” war, would also dismay too many Americans, who share just too little experience running that kind of playbook, and whose vision of “mercenary” forces does not comport with the expectatio­ns of honor and patriotism that are still extended by U.S. citizens to their armed forces.

With no one approach showing enough promise, and no moon-shot options waiting to be discovered, the Trump administra­tion does not have much choice beyond testing out combinatio­ns of personnel and tactics.

Awkward or kludgy as that may promise to feel, there’s also something oddly American about it, reminiscen­t of the improvisat­ional approach to crisis forced onto the Houston team that rescued the astronauts of the Apollo 13 mission.

Obviously, few Americans will be in any mood to romanticiz­e what amounts to a trial-and-error approach in Afghanista­n today. But many may well recognize in the necessity of that approach the need for a newly sober and focused commitment to finding our way out of the mess once and for all.

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