Some questions for Mr Obama


Letter July 01, 2010

When General Stanley McChrystal was hired by President Barack Obama to run the wars in Afghanistan and Pakistan, I thought how interesting the appointment might prove to be.  Why him, I asked myself. The only justification I could think of was that perhaps McChrystal was employed to reduce civilian casualties by killing more precisely than in the past. That may have been Obama's idea but it did not work because under McChrystal's leadership, civilian casualties (especially in Pakistan) seem to have risen — although it is hard to be precise because there is so much ignorance, compounded by misinformation, about non-western casualties. Civilian casualties have not fallen since McChrystal's appointment. Maybe that was the source of friction between Obama and him. Maybe McChrystal was not doing what he was hired to do.

But why did Obama tolerate McChrystal’s excesses for so long? My guess is that McChrystal claimed the killing was necessary to 'weaken' the Taliban before ‘negotiating’ with them. That would be the textbook account. But unfortunately for American-trained generals and some of their unimaginative and historically ignorant advisers, Afghanistan and Pakistan do not fit textbook theory, nor did Vietnam. The reasons are so simple that they seem to elude the ‘experts’.

For every Afghan civilian killed, a multiple of those killed become willing to die to avenge their deaths. The process softens up no one, it increases the intensity opposition to the foreign invaders. That seems to be obvious to all Afghans, and to most Pakistanis, but invisible to most Americans influential in the occupation of a country not their own.

Another thing Americans have found incomprehensible is that the people they are trying to oppress are often willing to die to defend their rights. They do not engage in cost-benefit analyses, as game theory would predict, so they do not fit the definition of rationality favoured by most contemporary, and especially American, political theorists. They behave irrationally. They give up their lives to get rid of the oppressors, no matter what incentives they may be offered to roll over and surrender. Added to all the historical reasons why Afghans will not tolerate foreign oppressors, their religion forbids them from tolerating non-Muslim invaders. This fact is one no British newspaper has, to my knowledge, been willing to print (I have offered it to all of them).

Afghans and Pakistanis are not engaged in a bargaining strategy, they are obedient to an absolute prohibition laid down firmly during hundreds of years of religious tradition and buttressed by their belief that it is their sacred duty to oppose oppressors, especially if they are not Muslims. Why is it so difficult for non-Muslim strategists to grasp this and adjust their thinking intelligently instead of thinking that if they kill enough people, sooner or later those people will simply give up? They won't. And the belief that they will is a form of culpable blindness, a cultural egocentricity that has had exceedingly brutal consequences for the Afghans and for many Pakistanis ever since the Russian invasion of Afghanistan in December 1979. The strategy of bombing, starving and poisoning a people into submission is grotesquely immoral.

President Obama should do more than sack General McChrystal for insubordination. He should have intelligent, culturally imaginative and well-informed people, free of the arrogance that seems to afflict most Americans, figure out an Afghan strategy that actually takes the welfare of Afghans seriously. While the US spends billions of dollars a year enriching the leaders of its war industries, children are starving on the streets of Kabul and young boys, to save their families from starvation, are selling themselves as male prostitutes to the Afghan warlords whom Uncle Sam has installed to run the country, the mineral wealth of which is why they are there. Meanwhile, we are told that western forces are there to increase the security of western nations and to save Afghans from the excesses of the Taliban. Mr President, if you believe that, you are a fool. But you are not a fool. Who will save the Afghans from the excesses of the American's and their allies? That is the question we should be asking.
Published in The Express Tribune, July 2nd, 2010.

COMMENTS (2)

Sakib Ahmad | 14 years ago | Reply Would that this article had been published in an American or British newspaper! Mr Ferndale makes many valid points and he hints at why the foreign occupation troops are there. It is time we stopped aping the Americans and referring to the Afghan Resistance as "Taliban". Many self-styled Pakistani "thinkers and intellectuals" - quite a few with pockets bulging with wads of USA dollars -worry that there will be a bloodbath if the Americans leave Afghanistan. As if there isn't one already! More Pakistani soldiers have died in FATA alone than the combined American and NATO casualties in Afghanistan. And the civilian deaths in Afghanistan and Pakistan are incalculable. What I find incomprehensible is the mute reaction of our civilian and military leadership to American excesses. I quote from an e-mail I sent to a respected journalist today: "Is it possible that the CIA holds sensitive personal data on our civilian and military leaders, which makes it easy for the USA government to blackmail them into timid submission? To assert that our leadership is somehow not aware of the giveaway prices at which our soldiers, our resources, our vital interests, our honour are being offered to the Americans is something I find quite impossible to accept. In today's world it is difficult to distinguish between reality and illusion as one merges into the other before your very eyes as you look on. Karl Rove, Bush's White House supremo, said some months after the 9/11 farce which dazzled the world: " We’re an empire now and when we act we create our own reality. And while you’re studying that reality we’ll act again, creating other new realities."
faraz | 14 years ago | Reply Afghan culture is not as romantic as you have depicted. when Russian left, the mujahideen groups started killing each other. Pakistan supported Hikmetyar who bombed Kabul for 16 months killing over 10,000 civilians. Pushtoons, Tajiks, Hazaras and Uzbeks ruthlessly killed each other. When Hikmetyar failed to take Kabul, Pakistan started funding Taliban which took control over Pushtoon areas, captured Kabul and moved towards Tajik areas. They massacred thousands of Hazara Shias in Mazar e sharif. After 911, the Tajiks and few pushtoon tribes allied themselves with the Americans and ruthlessly killed Taliban. Warlords like Hikmetyar have men in both the Karzai Govt and the insurgents. 54 % afghanis are non-pushtoon and extremist Sunni Taliban dont represent all the pushtoons. Americans should leave, and let the afghans fight each other.
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