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Posted: 15 Oct 2012 08:12 PM PDT
Regardless of who wins
this election in a few years the final planes carrying the last soldiers will
shake off Afghanistan's dust and take to the sky. They will leave behind a
limited number of advisers, ex-military civilian contractors and a whole
bunch of diplomats running out the clock in Kabul. A few years later when
Islamist mobs are roaming the streets and rocket attacks on the US embassy
have become routine, the helicopters on the roof will be back and the
surviving diplomats will be on their way to new assignments in more peaceful
parts of the world like Baghdad and Cairo.

The war in Afghanistan
is lost and that loss is mostly unspoken. Had Obama never been elected then
the left, in coordination with their Democratic big brothers, might have
elevated the defeat to the level of another Vietnam. But that dream, nurtured
in the early years of the Bush Administration, is a done deal after the Son
of Jimmy Carter who ran on a platform of beating the Taliban. Instead of
another Vietnam, the long war will be an unremarked defeat.
Neither side wants to talk about it and the American people just want to
leave. The ending is written the cemeteries are full and all that's left is
to shake off the dust and go home.
Defeats however have to be learned from and no one intends to learn the
lessons of Afghanistan. The people responsible for 1,500 deaths in
implementing a directive to beat the Taliban without breaking a single
fingernail on an Afghan civilian, even if he's a Taliban gunman hiding behind
a Burqa, will not pay the price for this. They will go on to lucrative gigs
as lobbyists or leadership trainers, herding corporate executives around golf
courses and trading on anecdotes about the time they almost came under fire.
They will not be held accountable, because when they sacrificed 1,500
American soldiers they were just following orders and the orders came from
generals and the generals were following orders from Valerie Jarrett and
Susan Rice and Hillary Clinton and the entire diploarchy on a desperate quest
to win the war and end the occupation by getting the Taliban to the
negotiating table and getting Obama to the Mission Accomplished jet in time
for the election.
There's no General Westmoreland to hang here. The closest thing to him is
General McChrystal, a man who badly wanted to be the hip cool general, the
Obama of Afghanistan, and cost far more lives than General Custer did in the
process. McChrystal was just following the new trend that said that wars
aren't won by violence, but by winning hearts and minds changing social
conditions. The new warrior was no longer a soldier, but a social worker, a
diplomat and a comparative religions scholar. And if 1,500 social workers had
to die so that the Afghans would come to love us... then so be it.
The war in Afghanistan was lost because it became a kindergarten with guns, a
social welfare agency with heavy artillery that couldn't be used in the
proximity of civilians. And it was run by the same type of people who
turned domestic urban centers into hellholes by pandering to criminals while
making it impossible for law enforcement to do their job.
Don't think of Afghanistan as a distant country. Think of it as New York in
the 80s. Think of it as Detroit or Chicago. Think of all the social workers
constantly shouting about justice and demanding an end to police brutality.
Think of the lawyers helping grinning thugs out of prison. Think of the slimy
pols pressing the flesh with neighborhood gang leaders and paying homage to
them. That's what happened in Afghanistan.
But that's not why we lost the war. It's why we lost so many good men losing
it.
We
didn't lose the war in Afghanistan. When we went in the Taliban were crushed,
driven out and broken down. It took them years to recover, but they were
always bound to recover so long as there were neighboring Muslim countries
like Pakistan and Iran who were invested in their recovery. The futility of
fighting a proxy war against an insurgency in a country with a high
population and a low income was known before Vietnam. It was certainly known
before we tried to secure Afghanistan.
Ten years ago we didn't beat the Taliban by patrolling roads and having tea
with the local elders. We did it by finding people who wanted to beat the
Taliban and providing them with supply lines and air support. We didn't do it
by winning hearts and minds, we did it by dropping bombs and more bombs. We
won by winning.
The idea of winning by winning has become antiquated. The post-everything
sensibility is to win by losing. To win by making so many concessions and
bending over so far backward that the enemy either comes to love us or is
completely discredited. This never works, but it's the properly liberal war
to approach any conflict with people who aren't rich white men.
Winning by winning, a deep thinker will tell us, is futile. Trying to win by
winning is the road to defeat. You may kill one terrorist, but a thousand
will take his place. You may win a battle but by going to war you have
already lost the war.
Don't laugh. Such deep thoughts are the intellectual DNA of the diplomats and
the generals, the experts in regional studies who sneer at the idea of
winning wars instead of lining up all the stakeholders in a conflict and
convincing them to build a working society, instead of blowing themselves up
outside police stations.
So we didn't try to win by winning. We tried to win by convincing that it was
in everyone's interest to let us help them win by living in peace. This has
worked out about as well as expected in a society where winning is a zero sum
game and cooperation is a temporary truce in which each party waits to stab
the other in the back. Instead of winning by winning, we lost by losing. It's
the Post-American way.
And yet that isn't why we lost the war either. It's why we don't understand
why we lost the war.
Before these pernicious doctrines took hold, we had already adopted a nation
building model that relied on restoring stability through occupation, rather
than shattering the enemy's main strength and moving on.
We didn't lose the war in Afghanistan. We lost the nation building. We lost
the hopeless effort to cobble together coalitions of the corrupt and to
patrol the resulting territories while pretending that a democratic election
in a country with no concept of legal equality or civil rights meant that we
were making progress because the savage lands were now turning out to be just
like us.

American soldiers became Karzai's security guards. American
soldiers became Afghanistan's army. American soldiers were tasked with trying
to keep the peace in a society where peace is alien and life is cheap. We
lost that war to stabilize and democratic the land, but there isn't anyone
who could have won it. Even the Russians proved not to have the stomach for
the kind of massive bloodshed that it would have taken to stabilize
Afghanistan under their kind of government. We certainly don't.
Our mistake was resetting our victory condition from inflicting massive
damage on the Taliban and Al Qaeda, while empowering their enemies, to
turning Afghanistan into a stable and healthy society. We had drunk the
stability snake oil and come to believe that Afghanistan was just like
Germany and Japan, that if we could teach the natives to build healthy
democratic institutions, stability would follow. We were wrong.
We lost Afghanistan because we forgot that we never had it. We lost the war
because we forgot that it was a war and decided that it was a humanitarian
mission. We lost because we had come to believe that no war was moral unless
it ended in the moral redemption of the foe. We lost the war because we could
no longer justify a war to ourselves in the interests of our own defense,
only in the interests of saving another people and another society from
themselves. We lost Afghanistan because we still knew how to fight, but we no
longer remember why we fought.
Daniel Greenfield is a New York City based writer and blogger
and a Shillman Journalism Fellow of the David Horowitz Freedom Center.
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