Surrender or withdrawal? The Kabul contradiction nobody will talk about
Ryan Grim [badnews@substack.com]
Tuesday, August 17, 2021 6:51 AM
At the heart of the criticism of the way the U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan has unfolded is a contradiction that nobody in the American media or public policymaking space wants to grapple with.
As President Biden acknowledged Monday afternoon, the
images coming out of Kabul are indeed gut-wrenching, and they are also what Donald
Rumsfeld once called, in a different context, “untidy.” But the only way for
there to have been an orderly transfer of power in the wake of the U.S.
departure was for the process to have been negotiated as a transfer of power.
And to negotiate a transfer of power requires acknowledging -- and here’s the
hard part for the U.S. -- that power is transferring.
Therein lies the contradiction: An orderly exit required
admitting defeat and negotiating the unutterable -- surrender to the
Taliban.
Instead, the U.S. preferred to maintain the fiction that
it was handing over power to the Afghan government, whatever that was, and to
former President Ashraf Ghani. We would rather risk the chaos we’re now
witnessing than admit defeat. After all, it’s mostly not our lives on the line
anymore, but rather the lives of Afghans who helped us over the past 20
years.
And no amount of time and preparation would have fully
resolved that problem, because the U.S. immigration bureaucracy, in league with
the State Department’s special visa program, is not designed to work. It can
take an average of 800 days for an application to process, by which time Biden
may no longer even be president. And those are the successful applications. We
are not a country that places any value on helping desperate people migrate to
our shores, and to paraphrase Rumsfeld again, you retreat from war as the
country you are, not as the one you might wish to be.
The same Catch-22 applied to all the military hardware.
Biden has been criticized for letting it fall into Taliban hands, but he was
turning supplies and weapons over to the Afghan National Army. Had he instead
shipped it all home, the army would cry foul, and it would send a signal that
things were falling apart. The same with refugee evacuation -- shipping out
refugees in droves would signal that the U.S. had lost complete confidence in
the government, which would then hasten its downfall. Maintaining the fiction
that the Afghan government was a real and going concern required treating it
like that. Like any confidence game, it lasts only as long as people believe in
it.
In other words, to avoid the scenes we’re now seeing, the
U.S. would have had to negotiate the terms of a surrender to the Taliban.
Nobody in the national security establishment was recommending any such thing,
and if they weren’t, then they have no grounds to speak after the fact. The
contrast with the post-Soviet period is instructive as to what we were actually
building in Afghanistan -- or not building.
In the 1960s and 70s, Herat, Kandahar, and Kabul were all
major stops on what was known then as the Hippie Trail. It wasn’t unusual for
hippies looking to see a new part of the world to spend a few months there.
In 1973, after Timothy Leary escaped prison, the DEA
found him in Kabul. It was a cosmopolitan, forward-looking scene, and its
politics reflected that attitude. Outside of the city centers, life went on
much as it had for centuries. In 1978, a radical element within the People’s
Democratic Party of Afghanistan, or the PDPA, which was the local communist
party, staged a coup and took power. The Soviet Union was alarmed, lacking
confidence the party was ready to govern. What a lot of people don’t understand
about the Soviet Union after World War II is that they spent much of their time
urging their allies around the world not to get too crazy. The Soviets were
partial to the moderate wing of the PDPA and counseled against a number of
mistakes they ended up making. As journalist Christian Parenti has written, the
Soviets rejected 13 requests from the party to come in and help. As one Soviet
official replied: “We have carefully studied all aspects of this action and
come to the conclusion that if our troops were introduced, the situation in
your country would not only not improve but would worsen.”
But it was an assassination that eventually brought them
in. In 1979 President Taraki was assassinated on the order of prime minister
Hafizullah Amin. The Soviets thought Amin had gone too far -- they invaded,
cornered him, and killed him, installing a new leader.
The United States, fresh off its loss in Vietnam, saw an
opportunity to inflict a Vietnam on its enemy, and ramped up its support to the
mujahideen. In February 1989, the Soviet Union finally left. The next month,
the united mujahideen made their move to take over the country, and the Afghan
government fought them off, sending them into disarray. The Soviets hoped the
US would help forge a national reconciliation, and some elements of the Bush
administration wanted to do that, but others argued instead for bleeding the
Afghans as much as possible. So we continued funding the war against
them.
Yet the PDPA, now under Mohammed Najibullah, held strong
for another 3 years before finally falling to our mujahideen. The PDPA, for all
its many faults and abuses, had not been kleptocratic and had genuinely
invested in development.
Once Kabul fell, the lights literally went out, and the
country descended into civil war, which the world was content to ignore. The
Taliban eventually emerged from this Civil War as the victorious faction, and
took over in 1996. Their imported extremism wasn’t popular, but their ability
to actually govern in areas they controlled, and their reputation for
anti-corruption, gave them a base of support. They found Najibullah holed up in
a UN compound in Kabul, grabbed him, tortured him, castrated him -- and killed
him. The Taliban’s rule would only get worse from there, as our one-time asset
Osama bin Laden set up shop in Afghanistan and began plotting the work he’s now
remembered for.
When the US invaded after 9/11, the Taliban quickly
offered to surrender, and also offered to turn Osama bin Laden over to a third
party to be tried. For years, when conflict had ended in Afghanistan, one side
surrendered and was brought back into society. That’s how it works in a civil
war, when your opponents don’t have a country to go home to. That’s how it
worked here for our Civil War. But the US said no, and rejected the surrender,
preferring all out war instead. In the face of the American onslaught, most
Taliban fighters faded from the battlefield, and ceded the country to the
warlords that had previously been in power. Those warlords, however, were not
tasked by their American overseers with creating an inclusive government that
provided for the material or cultural benefit of the Afghan people. Instead,
the main task given them was to find and hunt Taliban or Al Qaeda fighters, to
help with drone strike targeting, and to help build up an Afghan National Army
that, theoretically, could stand on its own once the US left. But there weren’t
many Taliban left, and there were close to zero Al Qaeda, so the warlords
largely manufactured enemies, siccing the US military on internal rivals.
Instead of any serious development, the warlords stole the reconstruction money
and funneled it to bank accounts in Dubai, where many of them are now
headed.
It’s easy to see why the U.S. preferred chaos to
acknowledging that reality.
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