Seasons Greetings* My Dear ObWingers!

by Eric Martin May all of your holidays be filled with mirth, mischief and merriment.  And may my two month old muster the stamina to make it through our rather crowded Christmas Eve dinner without me needing to rush him out of the dining room in a fatherly panic. Allow me, also, to take this moment at … Read more

The Ayatollahs Beg to Differ

by Eric Martin Matt Duss makes some excellent points (complete with useful links) regarding the growing religious opposition in Iran.  The main takeaway: Islamist mullahs of high standing are attacking the Ahmadinejad/Khamenei regime on Islamic grounds, and the varying attitudes that Islamists take toward democratic principles should inform our understanding of the different strains of Islamism.  Part of … Read more

You Remind Me of My Jeep

by Eric Martin Money Mark Leon Goldberg finds a repugnant example of sexism.  Take a look at this list of finalists for the Associated Press Female Athlete of the Year. (The numbers represent the number of votes they received.)    Serena Williams 66 Zenyatta 18 Kim Clijsters 16 Lindsey Vonn 15 Diana Taurasi 14 Maya Moore … Read more

Playing with Half a Deck

by Eric Martin Jonathan Chait has a fine piece in TNR about the Republican Party's inability to respond to crises and other issues where the necessary response does not come from one of the GOP's predetermined groupings of acceptable policies. I discussed this phenomenon here.  Chait adds his perspective: Several years ago, I wrote in these pages that … Read more

Proceed with Caution

by Eric Martin On Friday, President Obama authorized the use of military strikes in Yemen targeting al-Qaeda operatives active in that nation.  My reactions on this action are mixed (more below).  Gregory Johnsen at Waq al-Waq provides a nice summation, and the blog he co-authors is an invaluable resource on all things Yemen (at least for … Read more

The Fog of Warmongering

by Eric Martin Daniel Larison delivers heaps of wisdom while dispelling a fog of pro-war propaganda in response to some of the recent, if familiar, war drum beating from neoconservative circles with respect to Iran.  In particular, Larison is reacting to Danielle Pletka's claim that a nuclear armed Iran couldn't be contained because Ahmadinejad is "crazy," and even though he's … Read more

Well that Explains It

by Eric Martin Shadi Hamid says that I misunderstood his post on retrospective justifications for the Iraq war (and that Spencer Ackerman made the same mistake).  This is good to know because, as I wrote, I enjoy Shadi's work immensely (and this time I say it without the intention of softening an impending attack). His post seemed strangely un-Shadi Hamidlike, so … Read more

Life Imitates Blog

by Eric Martin Freaky prescience from Robert Mackey.  He noted in his prior post on the preferability of bombers to drones: Actually, there is a lot that drones cannot do. They cannot fly uninhibited into hostile territory like a manned bomber. Simply put, the nature of modern air warfare (jamming, counter jamming and so on) … Read more

Blair Doubles Down: Even Preventive War is for Suckas, Part II

by Eric Martin What difference does it make to the dead, the orphans and the homeless, whether the mad destruction is wrought under the name of totalitarianism or the holy name of liberty or democracy? –Mahatma Gandhi, "Non-Violence in Peace and War" Tony Blair's recent statements unrepentantly reiterating his conviction that invading Iraq was the right … Read more

Blair Doubles Down: Even Preventive War is for Suckas, Part I

by Eric Martin It is understandable, if often regrettable, that politicians are reluctant to admit mistakes while in office.  Such admissions can and would be used against the politician in question in subsequent campaigns, and could lower overall approval numbers and, thus, weaken that politician for the remainder of his or her term.  So admitting mistakes can have serious detrimental effects … Read more

Get Yer Jaw Jaws Out

by Eric Martin Since I've not held back when criticizing those of Obama's Afghanistan policies that I disagree with, it's only fair that I offer praise where due.  From Steve Coll: Of all the messages in President Obama’s Afghanistan speech last week (a speech with so many messages that it sounded like a chorale, and not a particularly … Read more

Of Mercs and Spooks

by Eric Martin The New York Times provides further corroboration of Jeremy Scahill's piece on the use of mercenaries in connection with high level and sensitive military/intelligence operations in Afghanistan/Pakistan.  Iraq too: Private security guards from Blackwater Worldwide participated in some of the C.I.A.’s most sensitive activities — clandestine raids with agency officers against people suspected of being … Read more

We Should Only Be So Lucky

by Eric Martin Some of the more curious disconnects between rhetoric and reality in recent memory surrounded the myriad justifications for the Iraq war which included the ubiquitous and self-satisfying "democracy promotion" and "liberation" narratives.  The problem was that the self-styled do-gooders urging on the expenditure of large quantities of blood and treasure in the ostensibly moral cause of liberating Muslims were frequently the same folks that harbored deep-seated anti-Muslim … Read more

The World Won’t Actually Stop and Melt With Us

by Eric Martin Stephen Walt makes at least a few good points on the costs of the Afghanistan escalation/occupation.  First, it will end up costing more than advertised in real dollars when all is said and done.  Wars always do.  Second, there are serious opportunity costs that rarely enter the equation.  Health care reform and … Read more

This One’s Optimistic

by Eric Martin In the aftermath of Obama's big speech on Afghanistan, Judah Grunstein observed that the prospective plan as enunciated had something for everyone – as well as the potential to disappoint all listeners.  That was my immediate take as well – not that it was a unique or particularly insightful observation.  This push/pull was probably not … Read more

But I’ve Been Unfaithful, I’ve Been Traveling Abroad

by Eric Martin Following up on the recent analysis of the stimulus - which highlighted the stimulative effects of infrastructure projects – this Louis Uchitelle article makes another important point: For the first time in memory, the nation has no outsize public works project under way. The Big Dig, with its three and a half miles of underground highways channeling … Read more

It’s In the Way that You Use It

by Eric Martin Ezra Klein links to a chart put out by the CBO which breaks down which elements of the stimulus bill were the most, well, stimulating in terms of bang for the buck.  The conclusions should not be shocking, though they run directly counter to many of the conservative arguments percolating during the stimulus debate (the same arguments that will … Read more

A Shallower Recovery

by Eric Martin Since Von has been trespassing on my Af-Pak turf, allow me to hijack one of his sturdiest hobby horses: When the Obama administration announced that the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (i.e. the stimulus) had saved or created 640,000 jobs, Republicans quickly launched into a tirade… Well, last night, the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) released its … Read more

Nothing Says “Peace” Like Foreign Mercenaries

by Eric Martin As discussed on this site on numerous occasions, one of the oddest arguments for escalating/perpetuating our military presence in Afghanistan is the stated fear that our withdrawal would destabilize Pakistan.  Implicit in this formulation is the presumption that our ongoing military occupation of Afghanistan (and concomitant military/political activity in Pakistan) is having a stabilizing effect … Read more

This Makes Sense How?

by Eric Martin Nicholas Kristof from a couple of weeks back: President Obama and Congress will soon make defining choices about health care and troops for Afghanistan. These two choices have something in common — each has a bill of around $100 billion per year. So one question is whether we’re better off spending that … Read more

He’s a Man of Faith

by Eric Martin "I have long supported the goal of universal health care," Lieberman told reporters. "Ned Lamont can talk about it. I’ve been doing something about it all the time I’ve been here. –2006  Peter Beinarttheorizes as to the motivations behind Joe "With Us on Everything But the War" Lieberman's recent about face on the issue of affordable … Read more

You Can Go with This, or You Can Go with That…

by Eric Martin Steve Clemons tries to suss out the price tag associated with escalation/continuation in the rudderless conflict in Afghanistan: The White House is suggesting the price tag will be…$1 million per new soldier per year. And can I add that these figures do not seem to include the long term health costs that the US commits … Read more

When Hawks Collide

by Eric Martin Although it won't pass, unfortunately, this is the right idea: Senior House Democrats have introduced legislation that would impose a surtax beginning in 2011 to cover the costs of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. […] “For the last year, as we’ve struggled to pass health care reform, we’ve been told that … Read more

Fear is the Mind-Killer

by Eric Martin Steven Simon, whose work I admire greatly, discusses the negative reaction to the decision to try Khalid Shaikh Mohammed in a civilian court.  After summarily dispensing with the more inane critiques of Obama's decision, Simon takes on the notion that a trial could serve as a platform for KSM to propagandize effectively.  His … Read more

This Constitution Kills Fascists

by Eric Martin Johann Hari has a fascinating piece in The Independentthat recounts his interviews with several British nationals that have made the journey from active participantsin jihadi/terrorist causes and back.  Hari's quest to find out how and why certain people join terrorist groups, or espouse and propagate radical Islamist ideology, had been frustrated by the reticence and dissembling of persons active in those circles.  His … Read more

Big Uncle Knows Best

by Eric Martin Colonel Gian Gentile, the antidote to the epidemic of irrational exuberance invested in the ability of counterinsurgency doctrine (COIN) to solve any insoluble military/political conundrum, offers yet another reality check: History shows that occupation by foreign armies with the intent of changing occupied societies does not work and ends up costing considerable blood and treasure. … Read more

My Father Is by No Means Perfect, but…

by Eric Martin Apropos of nothing in particular, this childhood remembrance by one of Osama bin Laden's sons published in Vanity Fair caught my interest.  A brief excerpt from an otherwise intriguing piece: Since the time I could observe and reason, I have mainly known my father to be composed, no matter what might be happening. That’s because … Read more

Mind the Gap

by Eric Martin Last week, the Washington Post published a story detailing some of the tensions between the Taliban and al-Qaeda, as recently discussed on this site.  According to the Post story, the Taliban is increasingly assuming a dominant role (or returning to a dominant role after the down period that occurred post-US invasion): As violence rises in Afghanistan, the power balance … Read more

To the Victors, but Will it Spoil?

by Eric Martin Nir Rosen has a fascinating piece on recent events in Iraq in the Boston Review.  This portion is about as concise and accurate a recounting of the evolution of the conflict as I’ve come across:  Since the occupation began, Muqtada has been the most controversial public figure in Iraq. A populist anti-American leader, he came from a lineage … Read more

I Like Eik

by Eric Martin The news emanating from the White House is that President Obama is unsatisfied with the various proposals for Afghanistan policy recently submitted by his review team (each of which called for a substantial increase in the number of troops, with indefinite timelines).  He has asked the working group to come back to … Read more

Yeah, but Where Was the Ersatz Pimp?

by Eric Martin I think what we need to do is pass a lawtargeting the entire ACORN organization because some low-level ACORN employees were caught in a video entrapment sting engaging in unethical and, possibly in some instances, illegal behavior (while others behaved quite admirably): Top executives at Blackwater Worldwide authorized secret payments of about $1 million to Iraqi officials … Read more

You Understand Less As the Pages Turn

by Eric Martin

Back in 2006, a wise man said this:

It's time to admit that no amount of American lives can resolve the political disagreement that lies at the heart of someone else's civil war.

And yet, three years and a rather precipitous political ascent later, that same person – now President Barack Obama – is contemplating just how many more troops to add to Afghanistan's roiling civil war – that would be on top of the 21,000 additional troops already deployed by Obama. Nader Mousavizadeh (via) is right about the nature of the conflict in Afghanistan, and our ability to impose a solution through enduring military occupation:

Two conclusions are inescapable from the fiasco of Afghanistan's presidential elections and the McChrystal assessment: There is no electoral solution to Afghan government's crisis of legitimacy, and there is no military solution to the challenge of the Taliban. And when observing the current Afghan conflict not from the perspective of America's post-9/11 intervention, but from Afghanistan's own quarter-century of warfare, a third conclusion becomes still more apparent: What we confront is not, in fact, an insurgency but rather a civil war — one whose resolution can only be found in a new decentralized Afghan politics based on the enduring, if ugly, realities of power there, and not through another decade of Western military intervention.

If there is one lesson to be drawn from the withdrawal of Hamid Karzai's main rival from the second round of the elections — and his own subsequent appointment as president for another term — it is that the ability of outsiders to influence the existing politics of Afghanistan is now near zero, even when the object of our entreaties is a politician whose very existence has long depended entirely on Western support and funding. Like a patient rising from a hospital bed after a near-death experience only to rob his doctor blind on the way out the door, Karzai has conclusively demonstrated that his utility to Western interests — as well as to the Afghan people whom he's grossly robbed of a chance for representative government — is over.

As previously discussed on this Site, while much of the US-based discourse on Afghanistan frames the discussion in terms of defending the "Afghan people" and "Afghan nation" from the Taliban, in truth, the Taliban are a multifaceted, multi-ethnic coalition of cobbled together factions that are, by most accounts, almost entirely comprised of Afghans.  In fact, the term "Taliban" has become a euphemism for any and all groups opposed to the Karzai government and NATO forces.  The euphemism has been so liberally applied that the current compilation of opposition fighters commonly referred to as "Taliban" in government and media reports is, in actuality, almost entirely non-Taliban

Nearly all of the insurgents battling US and NATO troops in Afghanistan are not religiously motivated Taliban and Al Qaeda warriors, but a new generation of tribal fighters vying for control of territory, mineral wealth, and smuggling routes, according to summaries of new US intelligence reports.

Some of the major insurgent groups, including one responsible for a spate of recent American casualties, actually opposed the Taliban’s harsh Islamic government in Afghanistan during the 1990s, according to the reports, described by US officials under the condition they not be identified.

“Ninety percent is a tribal, localized insurgency,’’ said one US intelligence official in Washington who helped draft the assessments. “Ten percent are hardcore ideologues fighting for the Taliban.’’

US commanders and politicians often loosely refer to the enemy as the Taliban or Al Qaeda, giving rise to the image of holy warriors seeking to spread a fundamentalist form of Islam. But the mostly ethnic Pashtun fighters are often deeply connected by family and social ties to the valleys and mountains where they are fighting, and they see themselves as opposing the United States be cause it is an occupying power, the officials and analysts said.

In other words, the conflict in Afghanistan is a civil war.  The civil war has ethnically tinged roots that reach past to the days preceding the US invasion.  Robert Naiman had an informative piece on the subject which, itself, paraphrased some recent Times articles:

Read more