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WikiLeaks Cables Show Obama Sent More Troops to Afghanistan Despite Warnings
Tuesday 18 January 2011
by: Mike Ludwig, t r u t h o u t | Report
Soldiers and Marines walk through a village in
Secret diplomatic cables recently released by WikiLeaks show that the Obama administration increased the United States' military presence in Afghanistan despite warnings that the surge could make 2010 the most difficult and bloody since the 2001 invasion.
US Ambassador to
Eikenberry claimed that Karzai "is not an adequate strategic partner" and "continues to shun responsibility for any burden, whether defense, governance or development."
In a cable dated July of 2009, Eikenberry reported that Karzai did not understand
Eikenberry also issued an alarming and undemocratic description of Karzai and his relationship with the
In these meetings and other recent encounters with Karzai, two contrasting portraits emerge. The first is of a paranoid and weak individual unfamiliar with the basics of nation building and overly self-conscious that his time in the spotlight of glowing reviews from the international community has passed. The other is that of an ever-shrewd politician who sees himself as a nationalist hero who can save the country from being divided by the decentralization-focused agenda of Abdullah, other political rivals, neighboring countries, and the
A key cable written by Eikenberry in 2009 and originally obtained by The New York Times earlier this year asked the Obama administration to consider other options before approving a troop surge as part of former Gen. Stanley Mchrystal's counterinsurgency strategy.
Eikenberry predicted that sending more troops and resources would only deepen
As Eikenberry predicted, 2010 was the deadliest and most expensive year of the
A senior official recently said that the Obama administration wants to begin withdrawing troops from
In his recent trip to Kabul to meet with Afghan President Hamid Karzai, Vice President Joseph Biden said the US does not intend to "govern or nation build" and reiterated the 2014 deadline for the Afghan government to lead and secure its own country, but he also made it clear the US would be available for more hand-holding.
"The United States, if the Afghan people want it, are prepared, and we are not leaving in 2014 ... we are not leaving, if you don't want us to leave," Biden said.
Relations With
The Obama administration's decision to deploy 30,000 more troops to Afghanistan in 2010 was successful in weakening the Taliban's influence in parts of the Afghanistan, but the surge also pushed more enemy fighters to tribal areas across Afghanistan's border with Pakistan, forcing the US to continue spending billions of dollars on improving its shaky relations with Pakistan's unstable government.
Pakistan has simultaneously complained about US predator drone strikes on its territory while asking for more military funding to help the US uproot the terrorists from its soil, but the
After visiting with Karzai this week, Biden went to Pakistan to assure its President Asif Ali Zardari and other top leaders that the US and Pakistan have a mutual interest in fighting extremism and will continue to provide aid to Pakistan. Zardari visited the White House to discuss shared efforts to promote regional stability with President Obama on January 14.
The
But secret documents released by WikiLeaks reveal a dark side to the uneasy and expensive alliance between the
In December 2009, Karzai told US diplomats that he was skeptical of
The 92,000 classified US military documents from Afghanistan released by WikiLeaks in mid 2010 revealed that US and Afghan officials long suspected that Pakistan's Inter-Service Intelligence spy agency was secretly aiding the Taliban even as the US continued to give billions of dollars to Pakistan.
Pakistani leaders have said both publicly and privately that they wish to fight extremists on their border and tribal lands, but the diplomatic cables released by WikiLeaks show that Pakistan is in dire need of economic support and will not completely cut ties with the Taliban in order defend its own security interests in relation to rival India
The Pakistani establishment fears a pro-India government in
The Obama administration has attempted to change this sentiment and win Pakistani loyalty with billions of dollars in aid, and now
Money alone will not/not solve the problem of al-Qaeda or the Taliban operating in
Daudzai said that two years ago when he raised with the Iranians their support for Afghan Taliban, they had flatly denied any involvement. However, over the past half-year, the Iranians, including their Ambassador in Kabul, no longer deny this assertion - now they remain silent, he said. Daudzai attributed the Iranian change in posture to their awareness that [
Mike Ludwig is a Truthout Fellow.
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"The master class has always declared the wars; the subject class has always fought the battles. The master class has had all to gain and nothing to lose, while the subject class has had nothing to gain and everything to lose--especially their lives." Eugene Victor Debs
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