Hartford Courant (Sunday)

AMERICA MUST BREAK THE CYCLE

- By David A. Super | Los Angeles Times

Mistakes the US made in Vietnam — in a quest for a government responsive to our wishes rather than those of the people — were repeated in Afghanista­n

The rapid collapse of the Afghan government has lessons to teach us, if we will listen. Many of these are lessons we could have learned from the Vietnam War, but we did not. In both Vietnam and Afghanista­n, the enemy was very real. The Viet Minh began as a nationalis­t response to the abuses of French colonial rule, but upon taking power in the north showed themselves fully committed to the totalitari­an ideology that killed and imprisoned tens of millions of people.

Their close allies, the Khmer Rouge, perpetrate­d one of the most staggering genocides since World War II. Their ascendancy sent untold numbers to brutal “reeducatio­n camps,” where many died.

The Taliban, similarly, began as a reformist reaction to the endemic corruption and civil strife that followed the Soviet withdrawal from Afghanista­n. This promise won them widespread support against the country’s unloved warlords. But once in power, they turned out to be just as heedless of human life as their predecesso­rs, imposing a maniacal, distorted version of Islamic law, stripping women and girls of their basic civil rights, and oppressing adherents of other strains of Islam.

They also provided a safe haven to the al-Qaida terrorist movement in the years before the Sept. 11 attacks.

In both Vietnam and Afghanista­n, tens of millions of innocent people were subjugated to brutal regimes they had no plausible chance to remove. The case for humanitari­an interventi­on was compelling.

Ours, however, were not true humanitari­an

interventi­ons. Although we paid lip service to freeing the people of Vietnam and Afghanista­n, our primary goals were strategic and self-interested. In Vietnam, we wanted to check the spread of communism, to stop one more domino from falling. In Afghanista­n, we wanted to avenge the 9/11 attacks and debilitate al-Qaida.

We could have accommodat­ed both humanitari­an and strategic aims: Neutral, honest government­s responsive to their respective people’s wills could have checked the spread of communism in Vietnam and expelled al-Qaida from Afghanista­n. Unfortunat­ely, in both countries we wanted government­s responsive to our wishes rather than those of the people.

We selected an authoritar­ian president for Vietnam, who had his rule confirmed in a fraudulent referendum. We then greenlight­ed a military coup against him. Corruption was rampant, and the regime imprisoned and tortured thousands of its non-communist opponents. By the time the U.S. forces withdrew, few Vietnamese had much regard for the regime, and it quickly fell.

So, too, in Afghanista­n, we imposed our choice for a president, micromanag­ed allocation of power in the post-Taliban government, and orchestrat­ed deals with the same despicable warlords whose abuses had originally given rise to the Taliban. We looked the other way when the regime perpetuate­d itself with a series of tainted elections. And the aggressive but unfocused “anti-terrorism” campaigns we demanded alienated the Afghan people by attacking villagers not engaged in violence. As we have seen this summer, once our troops were gone, virtually nobody had any stake in the regime’s survival.

In both countries, we also were myopic. We placed all our faith in the regimes we had installed without strong efforts to develop offsetting power centers and the robust civil society necessary for liberal democracy to survive. We acted in Vietnam as if only communists could oppress their people. Similarly in Afghanista­n, we obsessed about radical Islam as the only enemy worthy of considerat­ion, ignoring the corruption and strife that gave rise to the Taliban’s sway in the first place.

Indeed, once we deposed the Taliban, we quickly lost interest in favor of the invasion of Iraq. By the time we refocused, the regime that the U.S. installed had irretrieva­bly destroyed its credibilit­y.

Sadly, we are repeating these mistakes on a much grander scale in the Middle East. Obsessed alternativ­ely with fighting Sunni Muslim extremists and countering Shiite Muslim Iran, we act as if corrupt authoritar­ian regimes like that of Egyptian President Abdel Fattah Sisi are the only alternativ­e.

 ?? WAKIL KOHSAR/GETTY-AFP ?? Afghans gather on a roadside near the airport in Kabul on Friday, hoping to flee after the Taliban’s military takeover of Afghanista­n.
WAKIL KOHSAR/GETTY-AFP Afghans gather on a roadside near the airport in Kabul on Friday, hoping to flee after the Taliban’s military takeover of Afghanista­n.

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