Inkless Wells

Inkless Wells

Paul Wells on all the latest out of Ottawa—along with the occasional post about jazz. Follow Paul on Twitter: @InklessPW

Obama and Afghanistan/Pakistan I: Parsing the President's speech

by Paul Wells on Friday, March 27, 2009 3:58pm - 12 Comments

Obama and Afghanistan/Pakistan I: Parsing the President's speechI’m going to post a bunch of little observations on all of this. First I’m going through Barack Obama’s speech earlier today to pick out what seems important. Blanket observation: what’s been announced looks like a strategy, not just a bunch of moves, and it looks different, in several important ways, from what the U.S. has done until now in Afghanistan. Off we go.

“Multiple intelligence estimates have warned that Al Qaida is actively planning attacks on the United States homeland from its safe haven in Pakistan.”

The language here seems carefully chosen. The suggestion is that the situation in Pakistan is strategically comparable to the situation in Afghanistan in, say, August 2001: Pakistan is an inevitable theatre of operations, of some sort, for any U.S. government that wants to protect “the United States homeland.” The argument is that inaction now would be culpably negligent.

“For the American people, this border region has become the most dangerous place in the world. But this is not simply an American problem, far from it. It is, instead, international security challenge of the highest order. Terrorist attacks in London, in Bali were tied to Al Qaida and its allies in Pakistan…. If there is a major attack on an Asian, European, or African city it, too, is likely to have ties to Al Qaida leadership in Pakistan. The safety of people around the world is at stake.”

This piles on the point made earlier, generalizes the threat — not just the U.S. homeland is threatened, Mr. and Mrs. World, but yours too — and, again, shifts the focus several dozen kilometres eastward, to the other side of the notional Afghanistan-Pakistan border.

“And to the terrorists who oppose us, my message is the same. We will defeat you.”

ALSO BY INKLESS WELLS: Obama and Afghanistan/Pakistan Part II, Part III, Part IV
ALSO AT MACLEANS.CA: An exclusive photo gallery from Pakistan’s dangerous Swat Valley

A contradiction of Stephen Harper’s assertion that the insurgents can’t be defeated? Not entirely, I think. Harper should have said, as he usually does, that they can’t be defeated militarily; and Obama isn’t claiming that the defeat he plans will be only military in nature. As we see a moment later when he says he wants to “enhance the military, governance, and economic capacity” of Afghanistan.

“It’s important for the American people to understand that Pakistan needs our help in going after Al Qaida. This is no simple task. The tribal regions are vast, they are rugged, and they are often ungoverned. And that’s why we must focus on military assistance on the tools, training, and support that Pakistan needs to root out the terrorists”

There is no significant difference between this statement and comments Stéphane Dion made a year ago that led his opponents and others to mock him.

“And after years of mixed results, we will not and cannot provide a blank check. Pakistan must demonstrate its commitment to rooting out Al Qaida and the violent extremists within its borders. We will insist that action be taken, one way or another, when we have intelligence about high-level terrorist targets.”

News reports lately have featured Pakistani complaints that, when the Americans spot a target in Pakistan, they destroy it themselves instead of notifying Pakistani authorities. Here the president says he is willing to notify the authorities but that they must then step up and handle the problem. If they don’t, it’s back to Predator drones and special-ops action.

“Now a campaign against extremism will not succeed with bullets or bombs alone.”

See the bit about purely military victory being impossible, above.

“Later this spring, we will deploy approximately 4,000 U.S. troops to train Afghan security forces… and we will seek additional trainers from our NATO allies to ensure that every Afghan unit has a coalition partner.”

On my two trips to Afghanistan I visited the Combined Security Transition Command-Afghanistan, CSTC-A or “See Sticka,” where most training of Afghan security forces is coordinated. There are about 1,000 soldiers there with operational control over 6,000 more. The training boost that Obama just announced, and the non-U.S. increase to training forces he plans to go get, seems aimed at roughly doubling the military training capability in Afghanistan.

“I’m ordering a substantial increase in our civilians on the ground.”

Here, I think it’s accurate to say — and if I’m wrong, I’d welcome being corrected by specialists — that Canada is ahead of the U.S. on this front. The scale of our “civilian surge” has been small compared to what Obama is about to orchestrate, if he’s as good as his word, but it started a year ago and it has already changed the complexion of Canada’s efforts in Afghanistan.

“We cannot turn a blind eye to the corruption that causes Afghans to lose faith in their own leaders. Instead, we will seek a new compact with the Afghan government to crack down on corrupt behavior and sets clear benchmarks, clear metrics for international assistance so that it’s used to provide for the needs of the Afghan people.”

This strikes me as genuinely new, though its significance will depend a lot on how it’s implemented: instead of bland “support” for the Afghan government, far more pressing demands that the Afghan authorities live up to their citizens’ and the rest of the world’s legitimate expectations. Active corruption, and complacency about that corruption, has been toxic to democratic legitimacy in Afghanistan. I don’t know whether anyone can fix that, but Obama seems to want to try.

“…there will also be no peace without reconciliation among former enemies. Now, I have no illusion that this will be easy. In Iraq, we had success in reaching out to former adversaries to isolate and target Al Qaida in Iraq. We must pursue a similar process in Afghanistan while understanding that it is a very different country. There is an uncompromising core of the Taliban. They must be met with force, and they must be defeated. But there are also those who’ve taken up arms because of coercion or simply for a price. These Afghans must have the option to choose a different course. That’s why we will work with local leaders, the Afghan government, and international partners to have a reconciliation process in every province.”

To understate, this is tricky, and how it’s executed can make the difference between success and far greater problems than before. The idea of “reconciliation” scared the daylights out of Canadian and other coalition authorities I met in Kandahar in December. They fear the stew of tribal allegiances, mercenary profit motives, grudges and opportunism in the South is far too toxic to act as a setting for any Western attempt to play favourites. Much will depend on whether Obama means it when he “understands” that Afghanistan isn’t Iraq, and whether the “reconciliation process in every province” will pay enough attention to each province’s particularities.

ALSO BY INKLESS WELLS: Obama and Afghanistan/Pakistan Part II, Part III, Part IV
ALSO AT MACLEANS.CA: An exclusive photo gallery from Pakistan’s dangerous Swat Valley

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  • http://www.illegalcurve.com AMM

    From the archives of the Winnipeg Free Press, January 25, 2008. My name removed for privacy sake.

    In its rush to criticize Liberal leader Stéphane Dion regarding his comments about a NATO role in Pakistan (Parsing Mr. Dion, Jan. 19), the Free Press editorial board has bought into the argument that Pakistan is a functioning, flourishing democracy and not a lawless land that contributes to the instability in neighbouring Afghanistan. Rather than criticizing Dion for his thoughts, the Free Press should be praising Dion for speaking out accurately about the role that Pakistan plays in harbouring Taliban terrorists, simply because of Pakistan’s inability to secure the border between it and Afghanistan.

    If Pakistan is this tremendous partner in fighting the Taliban, as has been reported, then it is only natural that its fellow allies aid Pakistan in securing its border and preventing Taliban terrorists from freely transferring back and forth between Afghanistan and Pakistan. Dion is only being truthful and accurate when he says that there is a role for NATO in securing this area. The Free Press should be praising him for speaking honestly and refusing to buy into the spin that Pakistan is able to handle its responsibilities without needing additional help.

  • http://carnewsandviews.com jwl

    “News reports lately have featured Pakistani complaints that, when the Americans spot a target in Pakistan, they destroy it themselves instead of notifying Pakistani authorities.”

    From NY Times March 25 ’09:

    The Taliban’s widening campaign in southern Afghanistan is made possible in part by direct support from operatives in Pakistan’s military intelligence agency, despite Pakistani government promises to sever ties to militant groups fighting in Afghanistan, according to American government officials.

    The support consists of money, military supplies and strategic planning guidance to Taliban commanders who are gearing up to confront the international force in Afghanistan that will soon include some 17,000 American reinforcements.

  • conservative

    “And to the terrorists who oppose us, my message is the same. We will defeat you.”

    How about the Tamil terrorists marching by the tens of thousands forcefully shutting down traffic in Toronto, waving hundreds of terrorist flags and carrying hundreds of pictures of the terrorist head of LTTE, can you give us a hand with them? No?

    OK then, the Indian terrorists who seized Douglas Creek Estates through violence, help a brother out? No?

    The JDL, they’re operating here, they’re violent, help us shut ‘em down? No?

    What about the Anti-Racist Action gang, they use violence all the time to achieve their political goals, that’s straight terrorism, can we agree these people should be banned and jailed?

    No? Really? We’ve got terrorists coming out the yingyang here, you don’t care, and you want me to care about a particular brand of terrorist? I don’t think you’re serious about this “terrorism” stuff.

    • http://coyne kc

      Yr right – just kill em all !!!

      • Nelson Mandela

        Are you sure about that? I refused to disavow violence to achieve my political goals; that was the only reason they put me in jail, besides the actual terrorism I committed, which I admitted to at my trial.

        They had a standing offer to let me walk, but I was so insistent on my right to use violence I sat in jail for years, except the times they snuck me out and didn’t report it in the press.

        I think what conservative is getting at is the label “terrorist” is problematic. Is that you Rob Anders? :-)

        • http://coyne kc

          Really! Seems to me his message is basically a nihilistic one, as is yrs! When faced with a regime like the apartheid one, would you eschew violence. To equate Mandela’s aims with those of the taliban is ludicrous!

      • sf

        Why would you want to do that?

  • http://coyne kc

    “We cannot turn a blind eye to the corruption that causes Afghans to lose faith in their own leaders. Instead, we will seek a new compact with the Afghan government to crack down on corrupt behavior and sets clear benchmarks, clear metrics for international assistance so that it’s used to provide for the needs of the Afghan people.”

    As i mentioned earlier [ somewhere/ ] this is the crux for me.If we we can’t sort this, or simply ignore it, as we have done in many other western adventures, then we will probably fail ; and we shall certainly fail the people of Ahghanistan!

    • Mulletaur

      I agree, kc, that is the ‘money’ line for sure. Weak government breeds corruption, but too strong government would do the same. Obama has clearly lost faith in Karzai. The question remains as to what the Yankees/NATO could possibly do about it.

  • http://toyoufromfailinghands.blogspot.com/ Mark Collins

    Post at “The Torch”:

    “Obama’s war indeed”
    http://toyoufromfailinghands.blogspot.com/2009/03/obamas-war-indeed_27.html

    “Gen. McKiernan has got just about everything he asked for last summer, first from President Bush and now from President Obama.

    Mark
    Ottawa

  • Wascally Wabbit

    Ignore the distractions of a few buzzing flies Colleague Wells – I think you have it!
    A good investigative reporter (Wells, Eric Margolis) can cut through the crap and official releases and confirm for himself!
    Kudos to you (and AMM) for giving Stephane Dion his dues – pity the MSM is giving Ignatieff such a free ride though…
    I have got past the mental block of – anything but Harper to – wait a minute – are these guys – Ignatieff and his coterie – any different?
    They may not be when compared to Harper – but they sure are when compared to Dion – the man has perception – and scruples – and was – pretty much as Rex Murphy had Bob Rae last night – just ahead of his time!

    • http://coyne kc

      Dion was no politician -that’s probably to his credit. But the fact remains he couldn’t sell ; integrity and courage alone weren’t enough. [ i think there's some evidence he couldn't take advise either - not good ]
      Iggy i’m not sure about either, maybe he’s con/lite, but i’m mostly conviced now that Harper’s avery bad PM indeed. He’s got to go first – if Iggy can pull that off then i’ll hold my nose. Nobody’s perfect – if i’m forced to choose i know who i’ll support, even if it’s reluctantly.

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