In a fake country, still real problems for the U.S.
Afghanistan has changed but many of the issues remain the same
FREE VIDEO |
What has military learned since '01? Col. Jack Jacobs, U.S. Army, (Ret.), reflects on the fifth anniversary of the U.S.-led invasion of Afghanistan and talks military tactics and strategy with MSNBC.com's Dara Brown. msnbc.com |
SPECIAL REPORT: FLASHBACK TO MAY 2001 |
In early 2001, then-MSNBC.com reporter Preston Mendenhall traveled to Afghanistan for an up-close look at its repressive Taliban regime. Here are features from the report he filed after the trip, "Pariah Nation: A Journey Through Afghanistan." _____________________________________ |
Slide show |
Then: The 2001 war in Afghanistan View images looking back at the U.S.-led post-9/11 invasion of Afghanistan. |
Slide show |
Now: Life in Afghanistan in 2006 View images chronicling the state of the country today, five years after the U.S.-led war. |
Because there was such an obvious ink between the Taliban government and the 9/11 attacks, the American military effort in Afghanistan has always seemed to be a righteous fight.
This perception has become more heightened as events in nearby Iraq have demonstrated that poor planning and inadequate resources have exacerbated the folly of a half-baked attempt to bring democracy to a country where many don’t understand what the word means.
But recent events in Afghanistan have demonstrated clearly that righteousness is no guarantee of success, as a resurgent Taliban has caused increasing security problems in and around Kandahar and along the rugged border with Pakistan.
In the end, the achievement of a stable, unified Afghanistan will be less a function of American military power than of classic nation-building. Meanwhile, the problems continue. Here, five years on, is an assessment of where the U.S. and its allies stand in Afghanistan.
A complicated ethnic situation
Like many modern nations, particularly those created by European colonizers, Afghanistan is an artificial country.
It came into being at the end of the 19th century, the result of the British foreign minister of the time drawing a boundary along the Hindu Kush mountain range as he decided how to administer English colonial holdings. In the process, the line separated the Pashtun, who form the largest ethnic group in Afghanistan (about 40 percent), with similar numbers in neighboring Pakistan. Among these people, allegiance to either country is negligible and identification with local tribal leaders is very strong.
As a result, any successful Afghan central government is likely to be weak and will have to rely on the ability of local chieftains to control their people. In addition, its borders will continue to be porous. Strength at the center has never been the Afghan way, and a strong Afghan national army is unlikely ever to become a reality.
Thus, American efforts to shape a new Afghanistan will succeed only to the extent that local leaders become the agents of security, change and development. This is by no means impossible, but history has shown that most revolutions — and this is certainly a revolution in every sense — have consequences that are only vaguely sensed at the beginning.
A tougher-than-tough terrain
By any measure, Afghanistan is a tough environment. Much of the country — a series of high plateaus squeezed between mountain ranges — looks, quite literally, like the surface of Mars. Communication and commerce, and thus national cohesion, require huge effort and lots of patience.
Afghanistan has thousands of square miles of trackless wasteland, and tribes move frequently. In the east, along the border with Pakistan, lie steep, rugged highlands that make any kind of movement difficult and, in the snowy winters, impossible. The largely Pashtun Taliban takes advantage of the terrain by hiding among fellow Pashtuns inside Pakistan and emerging at will after the snows have melted. I have been on the border and can report that finding the enemy in the mountains is very hard indeed.
And talking of the border, there has been much criticism of Pakistan’s President Musharraf for not making enough effort to eliminate the Taliban safe havens in his country, but the truth is that the Pakistani army has little inclination to patrol this inhospitable and rugged area, even if all their troops were loyal to Musharraf. Which they are definitely not.
Invasion hard, occupation harder
Unable to defend against massive American military power, the Taliban was routed quite easily in 2001. But, as events in Iraq demonstrate, that’s where an inviolable military principle (call it Jacobs’s Second Law of Land Warfare) comes in: It is easier to take an objective than to hold it.
The hoped-for rapid reduction of American military strength after the elimination of the Taliban government has proved to be more than a little premature, and we now have more than 20,000 American troops there (only a couple of hundred fewer than at the height of the invasion).
Among these Americans is an unusually high concentration of intelligence agents, special operations forces and other unconventional operators -- and properly so, too, because success in Afghanistan will depend on the development of actionable intelligence, the use of special tactics and, perhaps most important, the training of indigenous forces.
After being a “forgotten war” for several years — especially in light of the Iraq conflict — we Americans have become concerned about the fate of our Afghan operation because of the recent increase in Taliban activity and their employment of terror tactics, infrequently seen there before now, like suicide bombings and improvised explosive devices (IEDs). While IEDs are dramatic and often devastating, a massive effort to neutralize them will merely waste resources that will be more productively employed in destroying the infrastructure that produces them.
For instance, we've spent about $1.5 billion on a program to find sophisticated ways to detect and neutralize IEDs. But it's effective only at the margins. The best way to combat them is to prevent their emplacement in the first place. I've been ambushed many times, but never on a road. You should never drive down a road that hasn't been cleared, but we don't have enough troops to keep the roads safe.
Furthermore, if we were to conduct proper counterinsurgency operations — and we know how to do that, too...we would make the enemy's situation untenable — but we don't have enough troops for this, either.
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