I just came across the fact that our Congresswoman, Niki Tsongas,
voted against legislation to approve supplemental funding for our operations in Afghanistan. In her EMail she said:
Yesterday the House of Representatives voted on legislation to approve supplemental funding to support the President's new strategy in Afghanistan as well as to help draw down our forces in Iraq. While I supported many provisions in this bill, a vote in favor of this legislation is fundamentally an acceptance of an open ended military commitment to a regional strategy in Afghanistan and Pakistan whose cost in terms of American lives and billions of dollars has not been sufficiently articulated to the American people. Because of this fact, I could not support the legislation at that time.
While I do not agree with her vote, I do note that she is asking the right questions and further, she is showing the spunk that all of the US Congress, Democrats, Republicans, Socialists and Independents alike, need to show.
During the Presidential Campaign we were told that Iraq was the bad war and Afghanistan was the good war. Little did we realize that it wasn't Afghanistan, it was Afghanistan and Pakistan, with the western part of Pakistan being the center of Taliban and al Qaeda operations.
Thus, it is right and proper for Congresswoman Tsongas to withhold her vote until someone tells her, and the rest of the US Congress and the US People, the "plan." Back in early 2003, when we had just invaded Iraq, then Major General David Petraeus would ask
Washington Post reporter
Rick Atkinson, "Tell me how this ends."♠ It was a fair question then and it is a fair question now.
Asking how something as complicated as war will end is to ask for several different answers, based upon several different scenarios. It is like asking if Niki Tsongas will be in the US House in 2014. She will, unless there are only nine seats after the Census in 2010, but even so, she still might be if either of our Senators step down, and depending on if Martha Coakley or Marty Meehan elect not to run, and if she doesn't become the Ambassador to Greece in President Obama's second Administration. So, if Congresswoman Tsongas is looking for a straight line, there is none. But, she is right to ask such questions.
Congresswoman Tsongas tells us that so far her best answer is from the
Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Admiral Michael Mullen:
'I think it's going to be a while. At what level of combat, what level of troops, that's difficult to predict right now.'
That is still a pretty squishy answer. I think the Congresswoman is correct in wanting a better answer.
That said, we have to ask ourselves about what happens if we pull out. This is not just a political question, it is also a moral question. We have to ask ourselves what we owe the people of Afghanistan (and Iraq). For example, do we owe anything to the women of Afghanistan, who we encouraged to step out and claim full citizenship? Do we owe anything to those school girls in Kandahar, who had battery acid thrown in their faces for
going to school? If we hadn't thrown out the Taliban they would never have thought of going to school. (My vote is yes we do).
Then there is the question of if al Qaeda is finished and with them all the
takfiri, believing in compulsion in religion and the duty to kill those whose beliefs differ from their own. If we pull out of Afghanistan and leave it to the Taliban, it is not a big deal to us. If we pull out of Pakistan, and the nuclear weapons are controlled, it is not a big deal to us if the Government falls to a military dictatorship. However, if we stop pressing al Qaeda, they will be back looking for us, including looking for us in the United States.
If I liked the expression "Bottom Line," and I elected to give one to Congresswoman Tsongas, it would be to invite Dr David Killcullen in for a one-on-one discussion of the issue. And, as a next best option, she could read his book,
The Accidental Guerrilla. If someone calls from the Lowell Office (or EMails me), I will personally pay for a copy to be dispatched to the office via Amazon.
We all need to engage in this discussion.
UPDATED: Added a footnote to reference a quote.
Regards — Cliff
♠ Robinson, Linda,
Tell Me How This Ends, Page 68.