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Afghanistan: Once Again, We're Marching Into an Unwinnable War
Joe Galloway
Afghanistan Troop Surge
(c) Paul Tong
Wet snow blankets the
They're in line along the back fence, these young men of the Classes
of 1963, 1964, 1965, 1966, 1967 and on and on and on. They were
lieutenants and captains and even a few majors. They did their duty.
They followed the orders of
They fought and died for duty, honor and country, as have so many others of the long gray line who rest here or in Arlington or in other national cemeteries across this land.
The sheer numbers of their marble markers along that back fence, the length of that line to be trooped and reviewed, never fails to bring me to tears -- hot, bitter tears at the sacrifice they made so willingly for a war so wrong, so futile.
President Obama came to
Then he jetted off to collect the Nobel Peace Prize. Lord help us. I
would blush for him and for us, if it weren't for the precedent. A Peace
Prize for a leader who escalated a war? Ah well, remember? They gave the
same prize to
The new president promised that after 18 months we would begin
withdrawing those additional troops. Maybe. Or, if you listen to the
words of his civilian and military advisers, maybe not. More likely not.
Meantime, the president of
So the war that should have ended in 2003 will only grow larger, deadlier and more costly as 2010 dawns.
Once again we find ourselves wading into the quicksand of a war in the wrong place, against the wrong enemy, with the wrong locals as our putative allies, and no hope in hell of even defining what victory would be in that place, much less winning such a victory.
This is what happens when a politician sets out to reach a compromise instead of a right decision. He can chew it over for three months and listen to every possible argument pro and con, but in the end he is going to cut the baby in half and call it a compromise.
So now the eight-year war will drag on without end and the number of
fresh marble markers in the
The new president was right to choose
Just as
Obama arrived with so many hopes for repair and reform riding on his shoulders. But it would have required a huge dose of moral courage to deliver on those hopes and all those promises, and that one thing -- moral courage -- seems strangely lacking in this president.
On the way into the
There are a few military commanders today more adept at boxing in a greenhorn president and playing politics to prolong an unwinnable war than they are at getting on with their job. They might do well to reflect on the lessons taught by Col. Custer.
- Has War Really Changed
- Obama Talking Peace While Making War
- 'The Great Global Security Underwriter' Will Pay a High Price
- Afghanistan: Questioning Obama's July 2011 Deadline in Afghanistan
- Afghanistan: GOP Questions Obama's Afghanistan Troop Withdrawal Deadline
- Obama's Surge in Afghanistan Hardly a Surprise
- Afghanistan: Obama Dance With the Partner You Came With
- Afghanistan: Obama Caring and Killing
- Afghanistan: Mishmash of a Strategy
- Afghanistan: Mixed Administration War Signals
- Afghanistan: Going for the Quick Fix
- Afghanistan: Obama's War Gamble
- Afghanistan: Once Again, We're Marching Into an Unwinnable War
- Afghanistan: Now It's Obama's Afghan War
- Afghanistan: Forward on Afghanistan
- Afghanistan: Sartre Meets Afghanistan: Obama's 'No Exit' Strategy
Obama Playing Nice With China
Joshua Kucera
When President Obama visited China, he had a good case to make to his hosts that he was trying to see things their way. He'd recently declined a meeting with the Dalai Lama in Washington and said that he wanted a strategic partnership with China. What did he get for his troubles?
On Foreign Policy Front Consider Obama Lucky So Far
Ian Bremmer
Barack Obama has had an exceptionally lucky first year. All newly elected U.S. presidents arrive in office hoping to avoid the unforeseen foreign-policy crises that upend their domestic agendas. President Obama has avoided the foreign-policy blowups that push an administration off balance. His luck isn't likely to last. Here's why ...
Afghanistan: Once Again, We're Marching Into an Unwinnable War | Joe Galloway
(c) 2009 Joe Galloway
