DemocracyNow, 12/2/2009
Nir Rosen: “We Managed to Make the Taliban Look Good”
Nir
Rosen, independent journalist and fellow at the NYU Center on Law and
Security, responds to President Obama decision to escalate the war in
Afghanistan. Rosen has covered both Iraq and Afghanistan since 2003.
His latest articles cover the current state of the US occupations in
both Iraq and Afghanistan.[includes rush transcript]
Guests:
Nir Rosen, independent journalist and fellow at the NYU Center on Law and Security
AMY GOODMAN: We’re here in the new Printing Press
studios and joining us in New York, along with Andrew Bacevich in
Boston BU professor, here in New York is independent journalist and
fellow at the New York University Center on Law and Security, Nir
Rosen. He has covered Iraq and Afghanistan since 2003. His latest
articles cover the current state of the U.S. occupations in both
countries, Iraq and Afghanistan. They appear in the Boston Review. Nir
Rosen, welcome to Democracy Now! Your thoughts after the West Point
address of President Obama announcing the surge of 30,000 troops?
Though that is not it, because his General Stanley McChrystal wanted
40,000, he is pushing for NATO to supply the rest and they are saying
it will be in the range of 5000. Of course we do not know the military
contractors that will accompany all of these soldiers.
NIR ROSEN:
Well, it is really no surprise. Even if Obama hadn’t wanted to escalate
the troops, he is under so much political pressure that he would of had
to, but I would have at least liked to hear the words Kashmir and
Palestine. If we are talking about Al Qaeda and the whole reason for
why we are in Afghanistan allegedly is this threat from Al Qaeda which
has been severely exaggerated, then at least understand their motives.
Their chief motives are the Indian occupation of Kashmir, the Israeli
and American backed occupation of Palestine. These are the motives. If
your goal is to weaken Al Qaeda, understand their motives, address
their grievances. This is not some James Bond villain the wants to
attack the U.S. for no reason. These people who have grievances, the
same grievances that have been troubling people around the world for
decades. They were once explained using a secular Marxist nationalist
discourse, today it has become a more religious discourse; but the
grievances have remained the same. So why, if your goal is to weaken Al
Qaeda, are you attacking the Taliban? The Taliban being a local
movement with a very limited and unsophisticated ideology. Al Qaeda
exists to much larger extent in Pakistan yet there are no American
troops in Pakistan, so why do you need such a huge military footprint
in Afghanistan were there is no Al Qaeda really if they are coming in
from Pakistan? In Pakistan you do not have this American presence and
yet you have been relatively successful. There been no attacks on
America thanks to intelligence, interdiction, heightened security. Al
Qaeda isn’t really a threat. You have a couple of hundred relatively
unsophisticated guys. They used their A team on September 11 and it was
tragic, but it wasn’t that significant and didn’t really affect the
U.S. What affected the US was the American response internally and
abroad. Al Qaeda isn’t really a big deal, but even if you think it’s a
big deal, even if you think this is a huge threat that really deserves
so much of our resources, understand their grievances and address them.
If your remove Palestine and Kashmir, you’d have way less people in the
world who support Al Qaeda, who want to join it. Instead, what we are
doing is increasing the occupation of a Muslim country. Although Obama
mentioned the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan, he mentioned Al Qaeda
presence in Afghanistan, what about the American occupation of
Afghanistan? What about all the innocent people who being killed there
today thanks to American counter-insurgency, counter terrorism
operations only further increasing ethnic tensions? You are going to
have a civil war in Afghanistan between Tajiks and Pashtuns at some
point. It is going more and more in that direction.
AMY GOODMAN:What
about President Obama talking about building up the Afghan forces in
order for the U.S. troops to step down in, what, about a year and
one-half, June, July 2011?
NIR ROSEN: Nobody
familiar with the Afghan security forces really expects this to happen.
Having spent time with them—I don’t even know if it is a good thing. I
mean, the McChrystal report or assessment identified the Afghan police
as one of the main problems in the country, so your going to double
them? —So you’re going to double? Basically the Afghan police are the
recruiters for the Taliban. They oppress the population. They are
mostly on drugs. They are incompetent. Some of them are very brave and
they are being killed in large numbers, but your going to double this
corrupt and oppressive force? That is truly not going to win you any
support among the local population. The Afghan army, meanwhile, which
we have spent billions on, was a failure. We saw in the Helmand
operation in July, they just decided not to show up. I was in Helmand
and the Americans and Brits were surprised and complaining the Afghan
army didn’t feel like taking part. They perceive themselves more as a
force designed for external threats, not for internal purposes. So
that’s a complete waste. And they also just don’t have the ability.
They are also dominated by Tajiks and Uzbeks and they are fighting
Pashtuns. You are going to see this force break down along ethnic
lines. We see the increase or return of ethnic based militias
throughout the country. One other mistake, I think, in the American
approach is focusing on the south. A constant focus on the south as if
there are no problems anywhere else in the country. This focus on the
south allowed the center to fall apart. So you have Logar and Wardak,
two provinces which are adjacent to Kabul that fell in the last year to
Taliban control thanks to the American obsession with the south. You
have Kunduz and other parts of the north falling to the Taliban thanks
to this American obsession with the south, and now this new obsession
with population centers. This was also the Soviet mistake. The Taliban
aren’t present in population centers. It is a rural insurgency. They
are not in the cities so much. They are in the villages, thousands and
thousands of tiny little villages that are impossible to secure. This
is not Baghdad which is easy to control, build walls around
neighborhoods. You have thousands of remote villages, there is no way
to get to them. You can control the cities if you want. The Taliban
will spread like ink spots. This is a counter insurgency theory. The
Americans think that they will spread like ink spots. In fact, I think
the Taliban will spread like ink spots, like oil spots throughout the
rural areas as the Americans focus on the cities were you don’t really
have a Taliban presence and the Taliban don’t really care about the
cities as much anyway.
AMY GOODMAN: It’s interesting. You talk about the
Taliban growing presence and in the rest of the media it’s all about
the U.S. soldiers winning the hearts and minds and with more troops
they will be able to do that working on reconstruction, but this other
view of U.S. occupation causing more recruits to the Taliban or even Al
Qaeda. I wanted to go back though, to nearly three years ago, January
10, 2007. President Bush was announcing the surge in Iraq.
GEORGE W. BUSH:
America will change our strategy to help the Iraqis carry out their
campaign to put down sectarian violence and bring security to the
people of Baghdad. This will require increasing American force levels,
so I have committed more than 20,000 additional American troops to
Iraq. The vast majority of them, five brigades, will be deployed to
Baghdad. These trips will work alongside Iraqi units and be embedded in
their formations. Our troops will have a well-defined mission, to help
Iraqis clear and secure neighborhoods, to help them protect the local
population, and to help ensure that the Iraqi forces left behind are
capable of providing the security that Baghdad needs.
AMY GOODMAN:That was President Bush. Now let me play for you an excerpt of what President Obama had to say last night at West Point.
PRESIDENT OBAMA:
Today, after extraordinary costs, we are bringing Iraq war to a
responsible end. We will remove our combat brigades from Iraq by the
end of next summer and all of our troops of the end of 2011. We’re
doing so as a testament to the character of the men and women in
uniform. [APPLAUSE] Thanks to their courage, grit and perseverance, we
have given Iraqis a chance to shape their future and we are
successfully leaving Iraq to its people.
AMY GOODMAN:Yes, President Obama last night. Nir Rosen, your response, the surge in Iraq to the surge in Afghanistan?
NIR ROSEN:
The conflict in Iraq was entirely different the conflict in
Afghanistan. Iraq was a civil war. The increase in American troops
after the Shias have basically won the civil war and crushed the Sunnis
was important. The increase of American troops was a factor in the
reduction of violence, but let’s not exaggerate the reduction in
violence. You still have much more Iraqi civilians dying today than you
do Afghan civilians. Iraq is still a hell hole. The civil war indeed is
over, but you have an incredibly corrupt government, weak, oppressive
and this so-called success in Iraq which we’re using as a model for
Afghanistan, success that included the deaths of hundreds of thousands
of Iraqis, the displacement of millions of Iraqis, the devastation of a
country, the spread throughout the region of sectarianism and
instability – so Iraq should hardly be a model for anything and
certainly not for population security for peace and stability because
Iraq is still a much more dangerous place than Afghanistan is. But
again, the surge in Iraq followed the civil war in Iraq. It was not the
counterinsurgencies so much, it was almost a peace keeping mission. The
Americans which have been an occupying force were suddenly perceived by
many Iraqis to be the least of all evils because of the Sunni – Shia
fighting. And the Sunnis were basically crushed very brutally by a very
harsh Shia counter insurgency force that was government and the
militias. In Afghanistan what this would require would be that the much
larger—Sunnis in Iraq are 20 percent, the Taliban is a Pashtun based
insurgency, Pashtuns are about 40 percent, so you would need the Tajiks
to completely crush the Pashtun population and expel them in large
numbers and then perhaps the Americans could come in and look like the
heroes. But that is not going to happen. There are much more Pashtuns,
again it is a rural based insurgency so you are never going to get to
them. You will, I think, have a civil war. Things seem to be going in
that direction. But I think the similarities between Iraq and
Afghanistan are very few.
AMY GOODMAN: President Obama also praised the United States as a country that has not sought world domination or occupation.
PRESIDENT OBAMA:
More than any other nation, the United States of America has
underwritten global security for over six decades, a time that for all
its problems has seen walls come down and markets opened, and billions
lifted from poverty, unparalleled scientific progress in advancing
frontiers of human liberty. For unlike the great powers of old, we have
not sought world domination. Our union was founded in resistance to
oppression. We do not seek to occupy other nations. We will not claim
another nation’s resources or target other peoples because their faith
or ethnicity is different from ours. What we have fought for, what we
continue to fight for, is a better future for our children and
grandchildren and we believe that their lives will be better if other
people’s children and grandchildren can live in freedom and access
opportunity.
AMY GOODMAN: President Obama last night at West Point. Nir Rosen?
NIR ROSEN:
Every empire has claimed it’s not an empire, it doesn’t want to occupy,
it wants to help. Indeed, the American empire has done the same thing.
The British in Iraq were uttering the same things the Americans in Iraq
were uttering in their occupation. Why do we have military bases all
over the world if not an empire seeking to control much of the world?
These days imperialism works in a different way. Maybe you don’t need
direct physical control of every place, but you still have the physical
force and the threat of violence. Indeed, I think we are actually a
failure as an empire. We actually managed to make the Taliban look
good. We took the most detested regime in the world, the Taliban,
removed them in a matter of weeks and here seven or eight years later
they’re more popular than ever. They’re stronger than ever.
AMY GOODMAN:Among who?
NIR ROSEN:
Among the people in Pakistan and many Afghans, at least many Pashtuns.
When I’ve been in Afghanistan you often hear non-Pashtuns expressing
hostility to Americans. I have heard many Tajiks say, "Amreeka Dushman
Islam”, “America is the enemy of Islam.” Nobody really wants the
Americans there.
AMY GOODMAN: Finally, Professor
Bacevich, your book is called “The Limits of Power, The End of American
Exceptionalism”, responding to what Nir Rosen has said and President
Obama’s last point about why we are in Afghanistan.
ANDREW BACEVICH:
Yeah, I mean, I think the president’s sort of capsule description of
modern U.S. history and our role in the world is extraordinarily
important and the reason it is important is because that text could of
been lifted out of a speech by Harry Truman, by John Kennedy, by Lyndon
Johnson, by Richard Nixon, by Ronald Reagan, or by George W. Bush. This
is the preferred narrative of American history, the way we prefer to
see ourselves and, therefore, the narrative that we use to justify all
that we do in the world. It is really telling and extraordinary that
this president, whose background is quite different from all those
other presidents that I just named, and who came to office promising to
bring about change, it is extraordinary that he himself would embrace
that narrative so uncritically. I think that is indicative of the
extent to which whether there is going to be any change in Washington,
it is simply going to be changes on the margins and that the Washington
consensus, the status quo, is firmly in place.
AMY GOODMAN: Comment, Nir Rosen, on what you think, if you were standing at West Point last night, what you would have been saying?
NIR ROSEN:
I would have mentioned Palestine and Kashmir and the history of
American support for dictatorships in the Middle East and the Muslim
world as the cause for this Al Qaeda phenomenon, for this resentment of
the U.S. and I would have…
AMY GOODMAN:And the actions you announced?
NIR ROSEN:
This is impossibly naïve and would require a revolution in the way
America does business, but stop supporting dictatorships in Egypt,
Saudi Arabia, Morocco and elsewhere, stop supporting the Pakistani
dictatorships or quasi-dictatorship, stop supporting the Israeli
occupation of Palestine. Be perceived as a fair player in the Middle
East and the Muslim world. Stop killing Muslims and Muslims will not
want to kill you. It is really very easy.
AMY GOODMAN:Nir
Rosen, independent journalist, recently back from Afghanistan has been
covering Afghanistan and Iraq since 2003, a fellow at NYU Center on Law
and Security and thank you very much to Andrew Bacevich, Professor of
History and International Relations at BU, a retired colonel and
Vietnam war vet, the author of “Limits of Power.”