I am opposed
to the war in Afghanistan
because it will continue to cost the United States – and the least well-off communities
within the country – people and material resources that we cannot afford.
I believe Vice President Joe Biden has a point
that President Barack Obama should not send tens of thousands more American
troops into that sink hole to die. Obama has
the right angle on this, in that he wants to design the right strategy
for our presence in Afghanistan,
then commit the resources to the strategy: I
don’t think it should be done any other way. One of the big problems with
George Bush was that generals ran the war, not the civilian authority
because the key civilian, Vice President Chaney gave them free reign to
do whatever they wanted. This is a civilian responsibility according to
the Constitution and the military should follow the policy of the Commander-in-Chief,
President Barack Hussein Obama.
Biden’s problem and mine
is that Obama is likely to give too much credence to the generals and
to the Republicans who say they will support him in sending more troops.
In crafting a new strategy, I worry that it is one that will look very
much like that in Iraq where fought a wide-spread
counter-insurgency war supported by an expensive nation-building strategy.
Obama suggested that this is a “war of necessity” meaning that the intension
is to find and met out justice to Osama bin Laden and break the back of
Al Queda in return for 9/11. The problem I and
others have is whether this can be done indirectly by fighting the Taliban
and building up Afghanistan’s military and socio-economic capability.
That is a long and costly route and the Republicans who say they support
the long-term military effort are not asking what it cost; compare this
to their approach to health care and other social programs where cost
is the main consideration.
Over 3,000 people were killed on 9/11 at the World Trade Center twin towers in New York City; but over 3,000
have died in the Iraq
war and casualties are moving up now in Afghanistan. How many more should die; how many
more trillions should be spent in the project of retaliatory violence?
The polls show that the American people are not ready for another long
war, especially when they are losing their houses, jobs, and opportunities
for education and financial upward mobility. So, I think that we should
use much less costlier assets to track Osama bin Laden to his lair over
time using intelligence, gained from electronic screening, infiltration
of the Taliban and Al Queda, smaller and focused
military operations, all of which suggests that at some point they will
make a fatal mistake and we will be there to exact justice.
I fear that this is another instance where President
Obama wants to appear bi-partisan and stoke the favor of the military-industrial
complex that benefits from such wars, just as Chaney and his cronies extracted
untold financial benefits from the Iraq war. But Obama is setting up historic another
scenario where many of his social objectives will be put under unrelenting
financial pressure by the military project he is pursuing in the Middle East. What the country needs at this moment in history is a serious
counter-insurgency strategy aimed at the discrete objective of neutralizing
Osama bin Laden and keeping Al Queda off balance,
not propping up an entire country to do that job.
Don’t get me wrong, patriotism is a legitimate objective
in this case, but that too must be subject to realistic limits and this
country is in such a crisis that fixing it will cost a lot of money. George
Bush hid the cost of these wars by putting them off-budget and paid for
them by not investing in things the country needed. Now that Obama has
pledged to affect transparency by putting the cost of the wars on budget,
he will get Congressional majorities for war spending by Democrats who
are nervous about seeming to be unpatriotic and Republicans who are gung-ho
warriors. So, in the additional pressure Republicans and Blue-dog Democrats
will put on Obama to balance the budget, whose interests will suffer in
the competition for resources? I know and so do you.
There should be a serious anti-war movement started
now by the very folks, college aged youths, who love Obama and who show
up by the thousands for his events. Yes, they should love and support
him, but they should also make it clear that they don’t want their future
jeopardized by a long-term policy in the Middle East
that harnesses domestic resources to a never-ending military operation
that could be fought with a smart strategy and die a natural death.
BlackCommentator.com Editorial Board member
Dr. Ron Walters is the Distinguished Leadership Scholar, Director of the
African American Leadership Center and Professor of Government and Politics
at the University of Maryland College Park. His latest book is: The Price of Racial Reconciliation (The Politics of Race and Ethnicity)
(University
of Michigan Press). Click here
to contact Dr. Walters.
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