Published: November 13 2009
Karl Eikenberry, the US ambassador to Kabul and a former army commander in Afghanistan, set the cat among the Washington pigeons this week when he warned against any further increase of American forces, essentially because Hamid Karzai is not a reliable partner.
These leaked (un)diplomatic cables give a picture of an Afghanistan strategy at sixes and sevens. They nevertheless go to the heart of the agonising debate inside the Obama administration on what sensibly to do about what is beginning to look like a quagmire.
Mr Eikenberry is basically right. The counterinsurgency strategy laid out by General Stanley McChrystal, President Obama’s hand-picked commander on the ground, while totally coherent, is far too ambitious. It requires a level of forces, and a length of time that the US political timetable and shrivelling public support for the war among all the allies is unlikely to sustain. Simply put, few ultimately believe the US and Nato have the stamina for it.
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buzz 6:09 pm on November 13, 2009 | 0 Permalink | Reply
Tags: afghanistan (398), Barack Obama (77), corruption (32), Global War on Terror (7), hamid karzai (13), surge (2)
