Obama’s Afghan war – a race against time

(Bernd Debusmann is a Reuters columnist. The opinions  expressed are his own)
By Bernd Debusmann

WASHINGTON,  (Reuters) – By making the war in  Afghanistan his own, declaring it a war of necessity and  sending more troops, U.S. President Barack Obama has entered a  race against time. The outcome is far from certain.

To win it, the new strategy being put into place has to  show convincing results before public disenchantment with the  war saps Obama’s credibility and throws question marks over his  judgment. Already, according to public opinion polls in August,  a majority of Americans say the war is not worth fighting.  Almost two thirds think the United States will eventually  withdraw without winning.

There are similar feelings in Britain, which fields the  second-largest contingent of combat troops in Afghanistan after  the United States. A poll published in London this week showed  that 69 percent of those questioned thought British troops  should not be fighting in Afghanistan.

In the United States, almost inevitably in a country that  never forgot the trauma of the only war it ever lost, 36 years  ago, pundits are conjuring up the ghost of Vietnam. A lengthy  analysis in the New York Times wondered whether Obama was fated  to be another Lyndon B. Johnson, the president who kept  escalating the Vietnam war.
The war in Afghanistan is drawing into its ninth year and  chances are it will still be going when Obama is gearing up for  his campaign for re-election in 2012. According to a study by  the RAND institute, a think tank working for the military,  counter-insurgency campaigns won by the government have  averaged 14 years.

“The insurgent wins if he does not lose,” according to the  U.S. Army’s counter-insurgency manual, “while the  counterinsurgent loses if he does not win. Insurgents are  strengthened by the common perception that a few casualties or  a few years will cause the United States to abandon (the  effort).” A key to winning: “firm political will and extreme  patience.”

Patience is not an American virtue. The first call for  Obama to set a “flexible timetable” for the withdrawal of  American troops came this month, from Senator Russell Feingold,  a Democrat and member of the Senate Foreign Relations  Committee. Not exactly a reflection of firm political will and  extreme patience.

In Afghanistan, the Taliban insurgents not only have been  winning by not losing, they have actually been gaining ground.  In the words of the top U.S. military officer, Joint Chiefs of  Staff Chairman Mike Mullen, the situation in Afghanistan “is  serious and is deteriorating.”

What does that mean? According to Anthony Cordesman of the  Center for Strategic and International Studies, the Taliban  have expanded their area of influence from 30 of Afghanistan’s  364 districts in 2003 to some 160 districts by the end of 2008.  But, says Cordesman, a widely-respected authority on military  affairs, “the military dimension is only part of the story.”

CORRUPTION AND INCOMPETENCE
The other part is a corrupt, incompetent government and an  equally corrupt and inefficient system of disbursing  international aid. In his war-of-necessity speech, Obama  obliquely referred to that aspect of the Afghan war by saying  it could not be won by military force alone. “We also need …  development and good governance.”

Both have been in very short supply. “The Afghan government  lost legitimacy over the past five years,” says Bruce Riedel of  the Brookings Institution, a Washington think tank. Whether,  and how quickly, it can regain it is open to doubt, no matter  who emerges as the winner of the August 20 election in which  President Hamid Karzai was running for a second five-year term.  (Full results are due on September 3. Both Karzai’s camp and  his main challenger, former foreign minister Abdullah Abdullah,  have claimed victory on the basis of partial results.)

The extent of corruption and the lack of good governance  are reflected by two international gauges – the Failed States  Index compiled by the The Fund for Peace and Foreign Policy  magazine and the annual Corruption Perceptions Index issued by  Transparency International, a Berlin-based watchdog group.  Afghanistan ranks 7th on the failed states list and 176th (out  of 180) on the corruption scale.

This is not an environment that lends itself to swift  solutions. There are powerful vested interests in maintaining  what Cordesman calls a dishonest system of power-brokering and  corruption. Jean MacKenzie, a Kabul-based reporter, said in a  recent guest column for Reuters that foreign assistance coming  into Afghanistan was one of the richest sources of funding for  the Taliban.

“It is the open secret no one wants to talk about …  Virtually every major project includes a healthy cut for the  insurgents,” MacKenzie wrote. “International donors, primarily  the United States, are to a large extent financing their own  enemy.”

Until recently, most experts thought that the Taliban was  financed largely from taxes the insurgents levied on the  production of opium, the raw material for heroin. Richard  Holbrooke, Obama’s special envoy for Afghanistan and Pakistan,  said last year (when he was not in government service) that  “breaking the narco-state in Afghanistan is essential or all  else will fail.”

He no longer thinks that the insurgency is mostly funded by  the opium trade. Instead, he says that the volume of money  flowing into the Taliban coffers from sympathizers in Gulf  states and elsewhere exceeds that of the drug trade.

“Obama inherited a disaster,” according to Riedel, “a war  which has been under-funded and under-resourced for six of the  past seven years.”  And what would happen if the Obama’s war of  necessity went wrong and the United States pulled out of  Afghanistan? In the Muslim world, it would be seen as “a  triumph on a par with the withdrawal of Soviet forces” from  Afghanistan after their disastrous nine-year war and  occupation.
Not to mention the impact it would have on Obama’s  political standing.