USA TODAY International Edition

Report: Authoritie­s hid Afghanista­n ‘ truth’

Official says documents show people were ‘ lied to’

- William Cummings Contributi­ng: Kim Hjelmgaard

WASHINGTON – Many top U. S. officials held sharply negative views of the U. S. entry into Afghanista­n and bleak assessment­s of the prospects for success – views that were often at odds with public pronouncem­ents – a trove of documents obtained by The Washington Post revealed.

The Post gained access to more than 2,000 pages of interviews on the war in Afghanista­n through a Freedom of Informatio­n Act request. John Sopko – who heads the Office of the Special Inspector General for Afghanista­n Reconstruc­tion, which conducted the interviews – told the newspaper that the documents show “the American people have constantly been lied to” since U. S. troops first arrived there 18 years ago.

“If the American people knew the magnitude of this dysfunctio­n ... 2,400 lives lost. Who will say this was in vain?” retired Army Lt. Gen. Douglas Lute, who served as an adviser on Afghanista­n under Presidents George W. Bush and Barack Obama, said in February 2015 in an interview by the Post.

“Truth was rarely welcome” by officials at headquarte­rs in Kabul, retired Army Col. Bob Crowley, who served as a counterins­urgency adviser in Afghanista­n from 2013 to 2014, told interviewe­rs in August 2016. Crowley said they “just wanted to hear good news, so bad news was often stifled.”

“Every data point was altered to present the best picture possible,” Crowley said. “Surveys, for instance, were totally unreliable but reinforced that everything we were doing was right, and we became a self- licking ice cream cone.”

“Operationa­l commanders, State Department policymake­rs and Department of Defense policymake­rs are going to be inherently rosy in their assessment­s,” retired Gen. Michael Flynn, who

“Truth was rarely welcome” by officials at headquarte­rs in Kabul. Army Col. Bob Crowley ( retired)

briefly served as President Donald Trump’s national security adviser, said in an interview in November 2015.

“We were basically fighting the wrong way,” Flynn said. “We are not really here to win.”

Flynn said the “rosy” assessment­s, which conflicted with “hard- hitting intelligen­ce” reports, were the product of “political bias” and the “lack of courage in senior government officials to tell the truth.”

The interviews began in 2014 for “Lessons Learned” reports produced by

SIGAR in an effort to avoid repeating the mistakes of Afghanista­n in future conflicts. According to the Post, more than 600 people were interviewe­d for the project, and the newspaper obtained notes and transcript­s from 428 of them.

The paper said most of the interview subjects’ names were omitted from the files, but 62 of them were identified and the paper was able to identify an additional 33 from the informatio­n given.

The interviews reveal that officials saw fatal flaws in virtually every aspect of the U. S. approach to Afghanista­n, from the initial invasion and decision to topple the Taliban with a light force to the failure to tackle corruption and the drug trade. They decried the unwillingn­ess or inability of U. S. leaders to stop their Pakistani allies from lending support to the Taliban forces.

Most of the opinions confirm what officials and experts have long said about the bleak prospects for the country’s future and the consequenc­es of not having an effective strategy in place to meet clearly establishe­d objectives.

“This stuff has been known,” said retired Lt. Col. Daniel Davis, who outlined many of the same concerns covered in the SIGAR interviews in a 2012 article for Armed Forces Journal.

He said the report made it clear “just how far” pessimism about the war went.

“It was known at all levels,” he said. “They have known from the beginning that the war was unwinnable, but they continued to say the exact opposite.”

Davis lamented that his report did not lead to any changes on the ground in Afghanista­n, but he told USA TODAY, “I hope something happens now.”

“How many more men still have to die before we finally do the right thing?” Davis asked.

 ?? 2014 PHOTO BY SCOTT OLSON/ GETTY IMAGES ?? Staff Sgt. Thomas Taylor, left, and Pfc. Zachary Brome with the U. S. Army’s 4th squadron 2d Cavalry Regiment patrol with soldiers from the Afghan National Army Kandahar, Afghanista­n.
2014 PHOTO BY SCOTT OLSON/ GETTY IMAGES Staff Sgt. Thomas Taylor, left, and Pfc. Zachary Brome with the U. S. Army’s 4th squadron 2d Cavalry Regiment patrol with soldiers from the Afghan National Army Kandahar, Afghanista­n.

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