And yet, over the last few weeks, the progressive community that once pleaded for greater resources and attention to Afghanistan has begun to raise concerns about the idea that additional forces could change that country's increasingly dire situation.
Sen. Russ Feingold launched a major salvo just weeks before the election, when he penned an op-ed in the Christian Science Monitor, questioning the wisdom of sending more troops to Afghanistan. He was pre-dated by former National Security Adviser Zbigniew Brzezinski, who warned about the United States repeating the Soviet Union's ill-thought-out efforts in that region, during an interview with the Huffington Post. On Monday, the scales tipped even further, when the chief of the United Nations mission in Afghanistan warned that a re-intervention into the country would be pointless if not done with deep cultural sensitivities.(...)
"There is a growing dissent," Caroline Wadhams, a Senior National Security Policy Analyst for the left-leaning Center for American Progress. "I think around town there is new thinking: 'Well, what do we actually want to achieve?' The fact that they are doing all those strategic reviews reveals we are suffering the symptom of the same [foreign policy] problems [of the past]: no one is sure what our objectives are and what we should do now."
Now, I don't know what the best course of action is in Afghanistan. It is not a military mission I have ever directly opposed, but at the same time sending more troops after seven years in the country seems a little odd. Beyond concerns of what can be accomplished at this late date, the Soviet Union's long-term occupation of Afghanistan was one of the proximate causes in that superpower's collapse. For us to expand our military presence in the country during an obvious moment of vulnerability in our nation's history thus seems potentially perilous.
Still, like I said, I don't really know. It isn't the policy so much as the debate I find encouraging. Perhaps even more encouraging is that this debate seems to be coming from within President-elect Obama's camp, and is recognized by Obama himself. Obama promised vigorous debate within his White House--a debate that would be inclusive of a wide range of perspectives--and on Afghanistan that appears to be happening. That is good. That is healthy. Debate is good and debate is healthy. It is when we close off such avenues of communication that things will go really wrong. In this instance, we appear to be taking the correct path.
As an anti-spam measure, there is a 24-hour waiting period after registering before new users can comment. blog advertising is good for you
blog advertising is good for you