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OBEY STATEMENT ON AFGHANISTAN
POLICY
“We owe it to our
troops to bring hardnosed realism to whatever
we ask them to
do”
WASHINGTON –
Congressman Dave Obey (D-WI), the Chairman of
the House Appropriations Committee, released
the following statement
today:
“When the
Appropriations Committee approved the
supplemental request for Pakistan and
Afghanistan funding earlier this year, we made
it quite clear in the Committee Report that the
Administration needed to evaluate the tools
available to implement whatever strategy the
United States decided to
follow.
“The point we tried to
make is that the United States government could
have the most coherent policy in the world, but
if it did not have the tools to implement it,
that policy would be futile. Unfortunately, the
only tools available to the United States in
that part of the world are the Afghani and
Pakistani governments.
“In
Pakistan, we have virtually no boots on the
ground, so whatever we seek to achieve, in the
end, has to go through the Pakistani
government. The disadvantage of that is
that the Pakistani government, up to now, has
been a mighty weak reed to lean on. The
advantage of that is that we will probably
encounter less resentment targeted against the
United States then we would encounter if we had
a larger military footprint; and that is a good
thing. And if the Pakistani government is
belatedly focusing on the dangers presented to
regional stability by the Taliban instead of
being distracted by their previous focus on
India, then hooray – perhaps we have a chance
to achieve some degree of stability in that
country. The odds are against us, but the
recent change in Pakistani attitudes may give
us a chance.
“In Afghanistan, the
situation is even bleaker. There are two
issues that we confront immediately in that
country. The first is whether the number
of American combat troops in Afghanistan should
be increased substantially as General
McChrystal has apparently recommended.
The second is whether or not a counter
insurgency approach (in plain English, nation
building) has any real chance to
succeed.
“The problem with
increasing the number of troops is that we
become the lightening rod, and our presence
runs the risk of inciting more anti-American
sentiment that can become a recruiting tool for
the very forces we seek to curtail. The
threat to the American homeland is posed by Al
Qaeda, not by the loosely-defined
Taliban. Yet the more U.S. troops we send
to Afghanistan to fight the insurgency, the
more we risk hardening them into an implacable
enemy. If any adjustment is made in U.S.
troop levels, it would be much better if those
troops were focused on the job of training
Afghani troops and police to take on the job of
securing the population and maintaining law and
order. But even there, we have to ask
what is achievable. My understanding is
that there have never been more than about
90,000 troops under the sway of the central
government. Now we are told that the goal
is to train up to 400,000 soldiers and police
personnel. I think it is reasonable to
ask whether that is a realistic and achievable
goal. It is imperative that, even on this
issue, we keep our expectations realistically
modest.
“The second issue is
whether we should in fact engage in the kind of
counter-insurgency nation-building that the
General is apparently proposing.
Intellectually, that might be the most coherent
approach; but if we do not have the tools to
accomplish it, that policy would be
futile. And my honest assessment is that
we don’t. Our primary tool, the Afghani
government, is bordering on the useless in that
regard.
“The other huge
disadvantage to this approach is that, in my
view, it is highly unachievable. If we
were to engage in that kind of strategy, even
its advocates tell us that it would require the
willingness to make a commitment of a good ten
years, and maybe double that. And the cost
would be astronomical. The military cost alone
would approach a trillion dollars or more. And
that does not count the cost of economic and
civilian aid to either Afghanistan or
Pakistan. I simply do not believe that
that kind of long term commitment is
sustainable in this country. I do not believe
the American people will buy it. A policy
that is not sustainable is no policy at all; it
is a Hail Mary pass that even Brett Favre would
be highly unlikely to
complete.
“And there is a third
disadvantage to this approach. Because it would
drain the spirit of the country over that long
period of time as well as drain the U.S.
treasury, it would devour virtually any other
priorities that the President or anyone in
Congress had.
“I wish I did not
believe what I believe on this matter, but I
was in Russia when the Russians were mired down
in Afghanistan. At the height of the
Soviet occupation of Afghanistan, they had
100,000 troops on the ground – which is what we
would have if General McChrystal’s reported
recommendations are approved. I was shocked at
how openly Soviet leaders would admit that the
very fabric of their political system was being
devoured by their misadventure in
Afghanistan. I saw what it did to their
country. We are a much richer and a much
stronger country then they were, but we would
still pay a price that is far too
high.
“That’s why I believe we
need to more narrowly focus our efforts and
have a much more achievable and targeted policy
in that region, or we run the risk of repeating
the mistakes we made in Vietnam and the
Russians made in Afghanistan.
“There are some fundamental
questions that I would ask of those who are
suggesting that we follow a long term
counterinsurgency strategy:
1. As an
Appropriator I must ask, what will that policy
cost and how will we pay for it?
We are now in the middle of a fundamental
debate over reforming our healthcare system.
The President has indicated that it must cost
less than $900 billion over ten years and be
fully paid for. The Congressional Budget Office
has had four committees twisting themselves
into knots in order to fit healthcare reform
into that limit. CBO is earnestly measuring the
cost of each competing healthcare plan.
Shouldn’t it be asked to do the same thing with
respect to Afghanistan? If we add 40,000
troops and recognize the need for a sustained
10 year or longer commitment, as the architects
of this plan tell us we do, the military costs
alone would be over $800 billion. And
unlike the demands that are being made of the
healthcare alternatives that they be deficit
neutral, we’ve heard no such demand with
respect to Afghanistan. I would ask how much
will this entire effort cost, when you add in
civilian costs and costs in Pakistan? And how
would that impact the budget?
2. Do we
really believe that there is an international
consensus for such a long-term endeavor, or
will we in fact, with the exception of some
tokenism, be going it alone? Are we
really prepared to “go it
alone”?
3. What
policy is in fact achievable? We
should be asking not what policy is
theoretically the most intellectually coherent,
but which policy is actually achievable given
the only tools we have in the region; the
Afghani and Pakistani governments. Is there
sufficient leadership, popular support, and
political will, not in the United States but in
Afghanistan, necessary for effective governance
to take hold?
4. What
makes us think that a much more aggressive and
expansive role for U.S. troops will not harden
elements of the Taliban and make them a more
potent force, forcing them to stand up to the
“occupier”?
5. Does it
all add up? The so-called COIN, or
counterinsurgency strategy, calls for a certain
number of troops and police based on a
country’s population. In Afghanistan that
equates to 600,000 people in uniform. But the
Afghani government has never maintained more
than 200,000 before. Can they really
sustain a three-fold increase?
6. Do we
really have the tools to overcome language,
culture, history and a 90% illiteracy rate to
sufficiently transform such a
country?
“Our military
personnel have always responded with what we
have asked them to do with dedication and
distinction. We owe it to them to bring
hardnosed realism to whatever we ask them to
do.
“Lastly, after the healthcare
reform effort is completed, this country still
has four huge long-term challenges that will
require a sustained national
effort:
1.
The need for further action to repair the
fragility of our own economy and rebuild the
capacity of our economy to provide desperately
needed job
growth;
2.
The need for a long-term commitment to
strengthen our national security by
dramatically reshaping our energy policy – an
effort that will require sustained and
meaningful sacrifice by all elements of our
society;
3.
The need for long-term action to restore fiscal
soundness by reining in the federal deficit;
and
4.
The need for long-term action to extend the
fiscal soundness of Social Security and
Medicare.
“All of those efforts
will require incredibly skilled leadership and
a long-term willingness of the entire society
to face hard facts.
“Will we
really be able to sustain sufficient long-term
public willingness to attack those problems if
our national determination is drained by ten
more years of what is already the second
longest war in American history?”