An Open Letter to the President
September 4, 2009
"The best laid schemes o' mice an' men
Gang aft agley" (Robert Burns)
And the poem ends
"But och backward I cast my e'e
On prospects drear!
An' forward, tho' I canna see,
I guess an' fear."
Mr. President, the quotes, from this poem to a mouse, seem to be a perfect metaphor for
our Afghanistan policy. I write this today when scores of civilians have again been killed in
an air strike – this time on two tanker trucks hijacked earlier by insurgents. As we continue
to play into their hands and offer them more and more recruits with our actions, the war is
not going well. That appears to be the gist of your commander's report (Commentary for
Sept 2, 2009 on this site offers a discussion).
We say we are fighting the Taleban who sheltered al-Qaeda. In fact they sheltered foreign
fighters – lauded by President Reagan at the time – who helped them expel the Soviets. Al-
Qaeda itself has no formal organizational structure and seems to have become an idea.
So we have al-Qaeda in Iraq, in Yemen, in Somalia, etc. It is logical to ask, if we must fight
in Afghanistan, why not the other places?
The people we are fighting, Pashtoons, live on both sides of a porous border drawn up
arbitrarily by the British and not recognized by the locals. Families live on both sides and
cross freely – now somewhat hampered by unpopular militaries. No Pashtoon has ever
been involved in any international terrorism. Their quarrel is with the Tajik dominated
central government and our support of it and presence there. Yet, we have forced
Pakistan to violate its treaties with the semi-autonomous Pashtoon tribes living in FATA
(Federally Administered Tribal Areas) and attack them. As a result the largely semi-literate
conservatively religious tribes, whose members often come down to seek construction and
other such jobs in Pakistan proper, are in revolt.
Before 2004, there were no attacks in Pakistan and no Taleban there; now it is suffering
continual suicide bombings with a couple of dozen Taleban groups claiming responsibility.
The heavy-handed approach required by us of the Pakistan military in Swat to combat a
few thousand, whose presence in the valley was a direct result of the earlier army offensive
in the tribal areas, has caused devastation on a scale never seen before in Swat. Homes,
orchards (which take years to grow), livestock destroyed and estimates of two to four
million refugees. The estimates vary because many have moved in with families in other
parts of Pakistan.
Since the border police/military is drawn mainly from local populations, Pakistan is in the
midst of a defacto civil war in Balochistan and the Frontier provinces. Without the
resources for such a protracted conflict and dependent on Balochistan for natural gas
suppplies, it is also facing economic collapse.
There is zero support for the war among liberals here, and now respected Republican
commentators are calling for halt and withdrawal. Mr. President, the country is telling you
something: it is time for dialogue with the insurgents and the planning for a face-saving
departure.
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