Password:
Registration

Also in this section:

AMERICAN NMD AND THE «GREATER ROMANIA» PROJECT

PEACE PRIZE OR PANDORA PRIZE?

AXIOMS OF GEOPOLITICAL EXPERIENCE. Part I. Russia, Turkey and the geopolitical retrospection

WHAT DO OBAMA AND SARKOZY HAVE IN COMMON?

NEW JAPANESE GOVERNMENT: Portrait features

WILL ALGERIA BE THE NEXT TARGET? Interests of the USA, France and Al-Qaida have tied into a single knot

WAR AT THE HOLY LAND MAY BE THE END OF THE ARAB SPRING. PART II

LESSONS OF SIRTE AND BANI WALID. Are London and France going to occupy Libya?

EXPROPRIATION OF «SAFETY CUSHIONS». Norwegian and Libyan ways

CASPIAN THEATER OF THE ENERGETIC WAR

Main | Geopolitical School | (05/07/10) WAR IN AFGHANISTAN: Will the sum change if we switch the summands’ places?



WAR IN AFGHANISTAN:
Will the sum change if we switch the summands’ places?

"Occupation" — is a double-edged term and applying it to Russia is fraught with the risks of hearing the same accusations in reply. Note that U. S. administration may hear them not from the Kremlin itself, but rather from the citizens of the very countries that America is trying to "bring to the democracy and progress". "Person of the Commander-in-Chief — whether it’s McChrystal or Petraeus — doesn’t matter" — said the "Taliban" representatives. Our position is crystal clear: we’re going to fight occupants until they’re out of our country.




Scandalous retirement of General Stanley McChrystal from the posts of Commander of the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) and Commander of U. S. Forces Afghanistan (USFOR-A) and his replacement with General David Petraeus is commented by nearly every media source in the world. It is either called the huge success of the White House or the evidence of complete failure of Barack Obama’s foreign policy on the field of the longest war in American history. The much-talked-about article named "Runaway General" in the "Rolling Stone" magazine gave the whole story quite an unpleasant smell.

Informal chat of McChrystal and dexterous journalist that dragged on due to the Icelandic volcano explosion — had it been no explosion, these two would have just flew asunder — allowed the common Americans as well as the rest of the world to read about the American Commander-in-Chief disrespecting and calling the U. S. Vice President and the Ambassador of the United States in Afghanistan names. Readers also came to know what does the General’s closer environment think of the Head of State (it turned out, they didn’t thought too good of him) and another curios details of conversation with such high-ranked military official, completely deprived of sense of harmony. Conclusions that Obama has made are well-known: General has hit the road for insubordination and his former chief Petraeus was appointed to the vacant place (it seems that for the last one it was a demotion).

Some analysts considered this to be a strong move of Obama’s administration: they’ve implied that Petraeus is a very experienced military commander who used to head the USAF in Iraq and the American leadership has shown it unwillingness to back down in the Afghan war. "Washington Post" has written about it, having enthusiastically named the article "Obama’s 5 foreign-policy victories". Authors placed the Afghan reshuffling to be the first one. By the way, on the last place there’s a call for Russia to stop "the occupation of Georgia" (White House speechwriters are especially honored for usage of the daring word "occupation"). The article, eulogizing the President and his surrounding, however, is made in a manner that is painfully familiar to everyone who was born in the USSR: workers greet the achievements of party and the government in an every possible way.

Still, there are some different opinions about the McChrystal-Petraeus intrigue. So, the "World Politics Review" believes that the replacement of the Afghan chessboard figures can be reduced to replacing the chaise longs at the deck of the "Titanic". According to the numerous observers, the USA are inevitably approaching the complete failure of the war in Afghanistan and, despite the foreboding of evil, they are frantically searching for some political mascara, capable of temporarily removing the symptoms rather than curing the very disease.

But what is done by night appears by the day and serious Afghan-based conflicts between the Pentagon and White House loudly hit the surface, having shaped as the annoyed McChrystal’s statements. Obama has won the elections mostly thanks to his nearly pacifist promises. He used to say that USAF would leave Iraq and concentrate its efforts on Afghanistan and then — having quickly defeated Talibs — would withdraw the troops from there, too. Even the date of pulling out the troops was specified — July of 2011. Generals do not share his optimism and they still have a very skeptical attitude towards the plans of politicians.

There’s an impression of a dead-end: the USA cannot pull the troops out of Afghanistan as long as the strategic goal wasn’t achieved but everyone understands that they have to deal with the situation somehow. The price that military is willing to pay are the massive manslaughters of the enemies without distinguishing civilians from the militants. "We’ve shot an amazing number of people there" — Rolling Stones cited these words of McChrystal in their remarkable article. His leadership, though, cannot allow this to happen (at least formally). All the more, despite the successful military operations, the USAF is incapable of securing even the areas under their control from the Talibs who are engaged in the severe guerilla fights. Comparing this campaign to the Vietnam has long ago become the generality that implies the inevitable defeat in this war as well. General Petraeus himself has admitted that the situation in Afghanistan is actually worse than the one in Iraq.

Hope for the puppet authority of Hamid Karzai — who was entrusted with the impossible mission to oust the radical powers, having strong-armed them with the authority and popularity among the citizens — is obviously rather delusive. Corrupted government dances to the American tune but also wouldn’t mind negotiating with Talibs if it benefits them.

Yet another problem, which tremendously aggravated with the American presence, is the increase of the drug-production. Their influx goes from Afghanistan — as the world main opiate plantation — through the Middle-Asian countries and then straight to Russia and Europe. U. S. population doesn’t suffer much from that, while the military contingent uses this issue to guarantee the loyal attitude of the locals who make their living working the poppy fields.

So when Obama speaks of withdrawing the troops that is allegedly to take place in about a year, he simultaneously signs the decree, increasing the American military presence in Afghanistan with his other hand. Both Petraeus and McChrystal became known during the rule of George Bush — these two men have personified the U. S. foreign policy during the two previous presidential terms. Nobody’s disputing the fact that the General who went to extremes was to resign. But the sum didn’t change with the replacement of compounds. Tabloid rebellion of Stanley McChrystal just revealed the fact that Obama administration hasn’t developed discrete foreign policy yet. For now it is dashing from the urge to "reset" some relationships, humanization for everyone and other good intentions from one hand and the beaten track of the world gendarme — which was, frankly speaking, chosen even before George W. Bush — on the other one. So the "occupation" — is a double-edged term and applying it to Russia is fraught with the risks of hearing the same accusations in reply. Note that U. S. administration may hear them not from the Kremlin itself, but rather from the citizens of the very countries that America is trying to "bring to the democracy and progress". "Person of the Commander-in-Chief — whether it’s McChrystal or Petraeus — doesn’t matter" — said the "Taliban" representatives. Our position is crystal clear: we’re going to fight occupants until they’re out of our country.

By Maxim Nemov

Main | Geopolitical School | WAR IN AFGHANISTAN: Will the sum change if we switch the summands’ places?
Message
Author: Anonymous   (Registration)

Title


Message


Input the word you see below