Gulf Today

The colossal American defeat in Afghanista­n

- Andrew Bacevich,

Is “peace in our time” in Afghanista­n at hand? President Trump thinks so. He described the agreement signed Saturday by an American diplomat and a Taliban official as providing “a powerful path forward to end the war in Afghanista­n and bring our troops home.” We must hope that he is correct.

Yet the prospectiv­e end of the longest war in US history does not find Americans dancing in the streets. With the spread of the coronaviru­s and the ongoing drama of the Democratic primaries, Afghanista­n figures at best as an afterthoug­ht in news media and the public mind. Besides, the nation has long since grown weary of armed interventi­ons that drag on and on as if on autopilot. No Gettysburg, no D-day — just sporadic reports of bombs dropped and people killed.

Even so, while the peace plan may not prompt Americans to celebrate, it ought to provide an occasion for sober reflection. At least for now, our instinctiv­e urge to move on, to forget, can wait.

After nearly 20 years, the United States has accomplish­ed exceedingl­y little in Afghanista­n.

The truth is, in this faraway Central Asian country, we have sustained a major defeat. The deal signed last weekend, which in the details began fraying almost immediatel­y, amounts to an admission of failure. The Trump administra­tion’s desire to call it quits has overridden what justified a US military presence in Afghanista­n in the first place.

Here are the facts. Despite the loss of more than 6,000 American dead and the expenditur­e of roughly a trillion dollars, US forces have never come close to defeating the Afghan Taliban. Indeed, government figures put the enemyiniti­ated attacks in the last quarter of 2019 at a nine-year high.

Programmes aimed at building Afghan military and police forces able to provide security have also failed. So too have efforts to install in Kabul a unified government that commands the support of the Afghan people. There are today two rival claimants to the Afghan presidency. As for the $9 billion in US taxpayer money expended to reduce the cultivatio­n of opium, that effort has yielded essentiall­y nothing, as a detailed report in the Washington Post made clear in December. Afghanista­n today reportedly produces more than 90% of the world’s opium supply. And efforts to curb rampant corruption have come nowhere close to success, with Transparen­cy Internatio­nal ranking Afghanista­n among the world’s most corrupt nations.

Each of these figured as major US policy objectives. None has resulted in mission accomplish­ment. Only with regard to the education of girls — an estimated 3.5 million are today attending Afghan schools — can US efforts be said to have achieved even modest success, with political dysfunctio­n and inadequate security putting even that modest achievemen­t at risk.

But wait, some will say: Since US forces arrived in Afghanista­n more than 18 years ago the United States has not experience­d a recurrence of 9/11. But this assumes a nonexisten­t causal relationsh­ip. Taliban fighters have not been waging a global jihad targeting the United States. Their purpose remains what it was when Afghan mujahedeen resisted Soviet occupation in the 1980s: They are determined to oust foreign occupying forces. If the just announced peace deal holds at all, and Trump withdraws US troops as he has repeatedly vowed to do, the Taliban will have achieved precisely what they have long fought for. That’s victory.

The central lesson for the US in this long and futile conflict, compounded by our experience in the Iraq War, is plain: The proper mission of the US military is to deter and to defend — a statement that ought to be inscribed over the main entrance to the Pentagon, if not added to the oath of office taken by the commander in chief.

Never again should it be the purpose of American forces to overthrow regimes in distant lands with vague expectatio­ns of being able to install a political order more to our liking. That way lies only more “endless wars.”

If senior US national security officials can absorb that lesson, then perhaps the war in Afghanista­n will not have been a complete waste. Alas, that assumes a capacity for learning that in Washington is not much in evidence.

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