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      Afghanistan: US Victory in Defeat  
	By Eric Walberg  
	Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, July 4, 2011
 
  There are many parallels 
	between Vietnam and Afghanistan. The recent American mayors’ resolution to 
	“bring our war $$ home” and Obama’s announcement that troops are now being 
	withdrawn are fresh reminders, but the story they tell is grim, says Eric 
	Walberg
  In Baltimore, the nation’s mayors debated and passed a War 
	Dollars Home Resolution at their annual meeting, the first time they have 
	taken a stand on war since they passed a similar resolution in 1971, during 
	the Vietnam war. The anti-war resolution even made the TV news, which has 
	downplayed the fact that the majority of Americans have wanted an end to 
	their illegal wars for years.
  It is a moment flooded with nostalgia 
	for those who cut their political teeth 40 years ago during the Vietnam war, 
	though it is hard to even recognise the State of the Union 40 years on. The 
	“War on Poverty” of LBJ has been replaced by a “war on terror”. Today’s 
	America has a black president, yet is mired in recession, and promises only 
	falling living standards, collapsing infrastructure, and more and more 
	violations of civil rights.  
  Though Jewish Americans are still an 
	essential part of today’s much less flamboyant and less powerful anti-war 
	movement, the pro-war movement is now loudly pro-Israel, unlike the earlier 
	pro-warriors. This reflects the new times, where Israel is no longer just a 
	naughty, temporary occupier of Palestinian land, but America’s most devoted 
	ally, a respected (or rather feared) imperialist in its own right, and a key 
	player in orchestrating the US wars in the Middle East.
  At the same 
	time as the mayors called for an end to the endless wars, Congress censured 
	Obama over his new undeclared war against Libya, now in its third month, 
	though stopping short of denying him funds. Neither the mayoral nor 
	congressional resolutions have any teeth. But, with his generals breathing 
	down his neck, the astute Obama was able to use these two protests to 
	protect his rear as he announced his plans to withdraw 33,000 troops from 
	Afghanistan by September 2012, including 10,000 by the end of this year: 
	“America, it is time to focus on nation-building here at home.”
  
	Obama’s announcement brings to mind another parallel with Vietnam -- Nixon’s 
	announcement in 1972 during his re-election campaign that “peace is at 
	hand”, that he too would wind down the war after negotiations with the 
	enemy, provided that the people gave him his second term. He went on to win 
	one of the largest majorities of any US president in 1972. After winning the 
	election, he was able to convince Karzai (excuse me, Thieu-Ky) to agree to a 
	deal with the Taliban (excuse me, the Communists), which culminated in a 
	memorable evacuation of the US embassy in Saigon by helicopter in 1975, 
	finally freeing Vietnam of its American occupiers. It was not a pretty 
	“plan”, but it worked.
  Just as the majority of Americans by the late 
	1960s had turned against the war in southeast Asia even at the risk of 
	“losing” Vietnam to the Communists, so 56 per cent of Americans today want 
	an immediate pull-out from Afghanistan, though 56 per cent also predict 
	there will be no stable government there and that the Taliban could well 
	return to power. But, like 40 years ago, Americans have lost interest.  
	 The parallel is not exact. Obama would have pulled out of Afghanistan in 
	2009 if the generals had let him. “Obama had to do this 18-month surge just 
	to demonstrate, in effect, that it couldn’t be done,” Bob Woodward quotes an 
	aide in Obama’s Wars. As expected, the surge was a spectacular failure, more 
	like a surge of sitting ducks. Chief warrior Stanley McChrystal was fired in 
	disgrace last year and his equally gung-ho replacement David Petraeus has 
	been shunted off to the CIA, where he has already been told to continue the 
	war by covert means. The remaining generals are furious but are putting on a 
	brave face, with Hillary taking about “reaching out” to the Taliban, no 
	doubt counting on winning their “hearts and minds”. 
  Obama, while 
	disappointing those who expected him to slay the dragon, drive the 
	moneychangers out of the temple, and bring peace on earth, is nonetheless a 
	wily politician worthy of his predecessor Nixon. Like Nixon, he knows 
	perfectly well that it’s time to move on and he’s playing to the crowd: “We 
	are starting this drawdown from a position of strength,” he told Americans 
	solemnly. This pretense and the assassination of Bin Laden will almost 
	certainly give him a second term. 
  The drawdown is none too soon, as 
	defections from the ranks of the coalition started last year with the 
	Netherlands and are continuing, with Canada, German and Italy having 
	deadlines (which, it’s true, shift depending on electoral strategies and US 
	arm-twisting). Britain is already reducing its contingent and a delighted 
	French President Nicolas Sarkozy immediately declared French troops would be 
	home by next summer. 
  “The war is lost. Reaching out to the Taliban 
	is in no way a demonstration of a ‘position of strength’, but a clear sign 
	of America’s weakness,” writes commentator Boris Volkhonsky, though he 
	admits Obama has handled a difficult problem well, calling his speech “an 
	astute recognition of the fact”. Indeed, the only public criticism of Obama 
	is coming from crackpots such as Senator John McCain who said that Obama is 
	denying military commanders in Afghanistan the ability to finally defeat “a 
	battered and broken enemy”. President Hamid Karzai described the 
	announcement that American troops would depart as “a moment of happiness for 
	Afghanistan”.
  A major difference between Vietnam and Afghanistan is 
	the plan to maintain bases in Afghanistan after pulling out. Afghanistan’s 
	neighbours Russia (almost-neighbour), China, Iran, Pakistan -- even the 
	puppet government in Kabul -- vow that this will not happen. As if on cue, 
	Iran’s President Mahmoud Ahmedinejad invited Karzai and Pakistan’s President 
	Asif Ali Zardari to Tehran this week to a conference on terrorism and for 
	one-on-one talks. Apart from US plans for Afghanistan, Zardari’s talks dealt 
	with completing the Iran-Pakistan gas “Peace Pipeline” project, which is 
	strongly opposed by the US. But the US should hardly be surprised at this 
	budding friendship: the downside of the surge and assassination Bin Laden is 
	that Pakistan can finally extricate itself from its deadly American embrace 
	without any apologies. 
  As for Karzai, he sees the writing on the 
	wall, and is eager to survive a few more years, which means courting his 
	neighbours to take the place of the hated Americans. All of them have 
	indicated they will support him. His trip to Tehran should also come as no 
	surprise. The US will almost certainly have to abandon its freshly paved 
	military bases in the north of Afghanistan, prepared as part of the Bush-era 
	“Blackwill plan” to split Afghanistan in two. This neocon fantasy would cede 
	the south to the Taliban with the understanding that they can play at 
	creating a “greater Pashtunistan” if they let the US keep the predominantly 
	Tajik north. Neither Karzai nor Zardari will go along with this. Neither 
	will China, Russia nor Iran. It is very unlikely the Taliban will either. 
	 Iranian Defense Minister Ahmed Vahidi visited Kabul just last week and 
	told Afghanistan’s Vice President Mohammed Fahim, “The great and brave 
	nation of Afghanistan is capable of establishing its security in the best 
	possible form without the interference of the trans-regional forces.” 
	Signing a bilateral security cooperation agreement with his Iranian 
	counterpart, Afghanistan’s Defence Minister Abdulrahim Wardak gushed, “We 
	believe that joint defence and security cooperation between Iran and 
	Afghanistan is very important for establishing peace and security in the 
	region.” 
  The most important -- and very disturbing -- parallel 
	between these American wars is in the perception and the reality of who 
	“won”. The popular perception is that the US lost Vietnam and that it has 
	lost in Afghanistan. But this is misleading, as the US achieved “victory in 
	defeat” in both cases. 
  In the case of Vietnam, it destroyed any 
	possibility of successful developing a strong socialist country as a 
	catalyst in the non-imperial transformation of southeast Asia. Like Cuba’s 
	Fidel, Ho Chi Minh was well-educated and highly respected by his people and 
	-- just as important -- by both the Soviet and Chinese leaders. Without the 
	US invasion of Vietnam, all of southeast Asia would most likely today be 
	communist (in more than just name). The world would look very, very 
	different.
  Similarly, in the Middle East, the US, following Britain’s 
	imperial lead in the Middle East, cultivated the passive and inward-looking 
	Wahhabis and the anti-communist Saudi monarchy, who let the imperialists run 
	roughshod over the region for over a century, all the time providing the 
	West with precious oil. Together with Saudi Arabia, the empire undermined 
	its secular challengers in Iran, Egypt, Afghanistan, Iraq and Libya (still a 
	work-in-progress), and the Islamist challengers in Algeria and 
	post-revolutionary Iran, ensuring that they do not become models for the 
	region -- and threats to the empire.   Like Vietnam in 1975, Iraq and 
	Afghanistan now lie in ruins. Egypt is fatally compromised after four 
	decades of neoliberalism and rampant corruption under US tutelage. Iran’s 
	Islamists have miraculously survived a decade of war with Iraq under US 
	sponsorship, and two more decades of sanctions and subversion by the US, 
	Israel and the gang, but the harsh, austere regime there is not much of a 
	model for, say, Egypt with its Westernised elite and many intimate ties with 
	the decadent West. Without the wars and subversion by the US (not to mention 
	Israel), all of the Middle East would most likely today be united as a 
	latter-day Islamic caliphate, sharing the oil wealth as Islam requires and 
	telling the empire to go to hell.
  So even if the helicopters have to 
	evacuate Karzai and the last US diplomats from Kabul in the near future, the 
	flag-wavers and their neocon henchmen can still celebrate “victory”; in a 
	sense, they are right. 
	***  Eric Walberg can be reached at 
	http://ericwalberg.com His Postmodern Imperialism: Geopolitics and the 
	Great Games is available at
	
	http://www.claritypress.com/Walberg.htm   
       
       
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