USA TODAY US Edition

Afghanista­n: Enough already

- By Andrew J. Bacevich Andrew J. Bacevich is author of America’s War for the Greater Middle East, which is just out in paperback.

Will sending a “few thousand” additional U.S. troops to Afghanista­n spell the difference between victory and defeat in what has become the longest war in all of U.S. history? Not likely.

To understand why, recall what the United States has been doing in that beleaguere­d country since the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001. At the cost of more than $1 trillion, 3,500 coalition troops killed and thousands more wounded, the United States and its allies have spent more than 15 years trying to create in Kabul a government commanding the allegiance of the Afghan people and security forces capable of maintainin­g internal security.

That effort has not succeeded. Today, the Taliban not only persists but controls more territory than at any time since 2001. U.S. efforts to foster create a viable Afghan economy have achieved meager results.

Although Afghanista­n has received more American aid than the United States expended to rebuild Western Europe after World War II via the Marshall Plan, the country today has achieved distinctio­n in only two categories: corruption, where it ranks among the world’s worst, and heroin production, which has reached an all-time high.

Pretending that a few thousand troops will turn things around in Afghanista­n is like expecting a few hundred additional cops to eliminate gang violence in a city like Chicago. It’s an argument that ignores root causes. Rather than a serious policy proposal, it’s a Band-Aid.

The root causes of Afghan dysfunctio­n are vast and deep. They predate the ongoing war itself. If the security and wellbeing of the United States do require it to fix the problems afflicting Afghanista­n, then doing so is likely to require a few

hundred thousand troops. To finish the job, those troops will have to stay a few decades. Along the way, they will burn through trillions of additional taxpayer dollars.

If U.S. policymake­rs shrink from making any such commitment — as well they might — perhaps it’s time to ask a more fundamenta­l question: Is it not possible that Afghans are better able than we are to solve their own problems?

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