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Afghanistan Isn't Worth One More American Life
Joe Galloway
Ongoing war in Afghanistan
(c) M. Ryder
The debate over our creeping military mission in distant
Gen.
1. Is a vital national security interest threatened? 2. Do we have a clear, attainable objective? 3. Have the risks and costs been fully and frankly analyzed? 4. Have all non-violent policy means been exhausted? 5. Is there a plausible exit strategy to avoid endless entanglement? 6. Have all the consequences of our action been fully considered? 7. Is the action supported by the American people? 8. Do we have broad international support?
Those questions weren't asked and answered before we invaded
The Bush administration is gone, but both
It can fairly be argued that not a single affirmative answer can be given to Gen. Powell's eight questions with regard to the actions now planned or under way in
There was, in the beginning in
Even before that, we began to let
We no longer have a vital national security interest or a clearly attainable goal in
We've changed presidents, changed commanding generals and ambassadors, changed our tactics and changed the numbers of American boots on the ground in a buildup that's expected to reach a total of more than 70,000 U.S. troops by the end of this year.
The new U.S. military commander in
With the country in recession, the budget deficit spinning into the trillions of dollars, American casualty rates in
That's politics, folks, and it runs counter to an important corollary to the Powell Doctrine: If you're determined to fight a war, choose a commander whom you trust and a strategy that you back, and then give your military leaders all the resources they say they need to achieve your objective.
If you can't do that, if your objective isn't clear, if the American people and the international community aren't with you, then order a withdrawal and explain why.
For God's sake, don't ratchet up slowly, buying time with the bodies of dead and wounded American soldiers, while you try to sell the wrong war in the wrong place against the wrong enemy to the American people.
For eight years, we've heard presidents and other politicians talk about setting conditions for a democratic central government in a country -- really a bunch of tribes and clans -- that's never had such a thing in 2,000 years and seemingly doesn't want one now.
The national treasure we've invested in that effort has propped up an ineffective and corrupt
It's time to make a decision, Mr. President, and I hope that for our sake and yours, you make the right one.
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Afghanistan - Afghanistan Isn't Worth One More American Life
(c) 2009 Tribune Media Services, Inc.
