Los Angeles Times

Set a limit in Afghanista­n

What Trump did right in Afghanista­n, Biden can do better — withdrawal without conditions.

- By Bonnie Kristian Bonnie Kristian is a fellow at Defense Priorities, a contributi­ng editor at the Week and a columnist at Christiani­ty Today.

When President Trump took off ice in 2017, the war in Afghanista­n was 16 years old. The original mission, meant to punish the perpetrato­rs of the 9/ 11 attacks and their Taliban enablers, was long since completed, but the Taliban held or contested 45% of Afghan territory. There were about 8,400 U. S. forces on the ground, far below the peak of 100,000 in 2010 ( excluding contractor­s, who often equal or exceed the military presence proper). That deployment had been led by 17 commanders — turnover is high in the “graveyard of empires.”

Today, the war in Afghanista­n is approachin­g 20 years old. U. S. taxpayers have spent nearly a trillion dollars on it ( more if you count long- term costs like interest on debt and military healthcare). The Taliban holds or contests about 65% of Afghan territory. At summer’s end, there were about 8,600 U. S. forces on the ground, a f igure that is supposed to drop to 2,500 by Inaugurati­on Day. Some of those soldiers were born after the 9/ 11 attacks happened. Some are fighting the same war their fathers fought. When the war’s 18th commander took charge in 2018, he declared it “time for this war in Afghanista­n to end.”

And still it continues. In failing to f inish the war in Afghanista­n, Trump has broken a major campaign promise, one he touted throughout his presidency as evidence of his distinctio­n from the Washington establishm­ent.

With Trump’s departure from the White House imminent — and President- elect Joe Biden equally insistent that he will end this interventi­on — a review of Trump’s record in this conf lict is in order. What did he get right? And what can Biden do better to f inally conclude our country’s longest war?

Trump’s record of tangible diplomatic accomplish­ments is limited, and his administra­tion has tended toward heavy- handed, ineffectiv­e negotiatin­g tactics, such as applying so- called maximum pressure on Iran. But Trump deserves credit for his occasional willingnes­s to break the Washington habit of treating diplomacy as a reward for good behavior. Afghanista­n was one of those times.

Trump’s decision to open peace talks with the Taliban and the Afghan government was a smart and pragmatic move. It acknowledg­ed the reality that the Taliban won’t be eradicated in Afghanista­n by American military means, and that intra- Afghan talks are vital if Afghanista­n is ever to achieve a livable stability, let alone peace.

Trump also deserves credit for his reduction — limited though it is — of the U. S. ground presence. Although Trump increased the number of troops in Afghanista­n in his first few years in office, he never attempted a large- scale, Obamastyle surge, and he set a date for full American military departure in 2021. This is some progress, as is Trump’s open recognitio­n that exiting an unwinnable 19- year war is not precipitou­s.

Starting in January, Biden can improve on Trump’s record. Instead of maintainin­g a small U. S. contingent in Afghanista­n indefinite­ly, as the president- elect has said he plans to do, Biden should meet or hasten Trump’s late spring 2021 exit deadline. This would not please many elected officials, but it would be popular with the majority of Americans, and it could be touted as a show of unity with Trump followers.

Biden should not follow the Trump plan when it comes to shifting resources to an expanded air war as the U. S. ground presence shrinks. During the Trump administra­tion, the U. S. has dropped record numbers of bombs and other ordnance on Afghanista­n. Civilian casualties have predictabl­y spiked, and anti- U. S. radicaliza­tion is on the rise as a result.

Picking up negotiatio­ns where the Trump team left off, the Biden administra­tion should take a more realistic approach to diplomacy. That means declining to condition our strategica­lly necessary departure on the whims of the Taliban.

Diplomacy in Afghanista­n must be given time to proceed at the slow and often halting pace it requires without another year or 10 of American military interventi­on. Insisting that a U. S. presence is required until a comprehens­ive treaty is signed and consistent­ly respected will prolong the fighting for years to come. The same is true of other “conditions- based” withdrawal plans often touted in Washington — there will always be another militant group to suppress, another injustice to address. “Conditions- based” withdrawal means no withdrawal at all.

Biden seems to understand the trap set when we tie troops to unrealisti­c and endlessly malleable goals, and to grasp that a commitment of U. S. military force must have limits.

“There’s a thousand places [ our military] could go to deal with injustice,” Biden said in a February interview. “The question is,” He continued, “is America’s vital selfintere­st … or the vital self- interest of one of our allies at stake?... The responsibi­lity I have is to protect America’s national self- interest and not put our women and men in harm’s way to try to solve every single problem in the world by use of force.”

Following this narrower and more achievable concept of the United States’ role would have improved Trump’s record in Afghanista­n. Biden would do well to stick to it.

 ?? John Moore Getty I mages ?? U. S. TROOPS return home in early December after a ninemonth deployment to the nearly 20- year- old war in Afghanista­n.
John Moore Getty I mages U. S. TROOPS return home in early December after a ninemonth deployment to the nearly 20- year- old war in Afghanista­n.

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