In Iraq, the Bush administration has had so little success meeting its own benchmarks, officials have quietly thrown out its list of goals and redefined “success” by moving the goalposts closer. In Afghanistan, regrettably, it’s more of the same.
A White House assessment of the war in Afghanistan has concluded that wide-ranging strategic goals that the Bush administration set for 2007 have not been met, even as U.S. and NATO forces have scored significant combat successes against resurgent Taliban fighters, according to U.S. officials.
The WaPo story is really worth reading in its entirety, not only because it paints a dejecting picture of a policy that isn’t working, but also because it shows administration officials trying to spin what is clearly bad news.
For example, U.S. troops are performing brilliantly, and successfully racking up battlefield victories. And then, there’s everything else: “the Taliban’s unchallenged expansion into new territory, an increase in opium poppy cultivation and the weakness of the government of President Hamid Karzai as signs that the war effort is deteriorating.”
The contrasting views echo repeated internal disagreements over the Iraq war: While the military finds success in a virtually unbroken line of tactical achievements, intelligence officials worry about a looming strategic failure.
This really doesn’t make a lot of sense. If the U.S. has a policy for Afghanistan, and a strategy to help the country advance, what difference does it make if there are “tactical achievements”? It’s like praising a marathon runner who can run really quickly in the wrong direction — the speed is certainly impressive, but it’s still a pointless exercise.
Over the past year, all combat encounters against the Taliban have ended with “a very decisive defeat” for the extremists, Brig. Gen. Robert E. Livingston Jr., commander of the U.S. task force training the Afghan army, told reporters this month. The growing number of suicide bombings against civilians underscores the Taliban’s growing desperation, according to Livingston and other U.S. commanders.
But one senior intelligence official, who like others interviewed was not authorized to discuss Afghanistan on the record, said such gains are fleeting. “One can point to a lot of indicators that are positive . . . where we go out there and achieve our objectives and kill bad guys,” the official said. But the extremists, he added, seem to have little trouble finding replacements. […]
Overall, “there doesn’t seem to be a lot of progress being made. . . . I would think that from [the Taliban] standpoint, things are looking decent,” the intelligence official said.
The WaPo added that, at least privately, senior White House officials “express pessimism about Afghanistan.”
That seems appropriate. It’s not every president who can say he’s had two war policies fail.