http://rickrozoff.wordpress.com/2009/12/18/afghanistan-worlds-lengthiest-war-has-just-begun


Stop NATO
December 18, 2009


Afghanistan: World's Lengthiest War Has Just Begun
Rick Rozoff


----------
The higher number of Defense Department contractors, 160,000, added to over 
100,000 troops - with the likely prospect of both numbers climbing yet more - 
will result in over a quarter of a million U.S. personnel serving under the 
Pentagon and NATO. The latter has 42,000 non-U.S. troops fighting under its 
command currently and pledges of 8,000 more to date, with thousands in addition 
to be conscripted after the London conference on Afghanistan next month. 
Approximately 35,000 U.S. soldiers are also assigned to NATO's ISAF and if the 
33,000 new American troops are similarly deployed the North Atlantic bloc will 
have over 120,000 forces fighting a land war in Asia. Along with a Pakistani 
army of 700,000 active duty troops fighting on the other side of the border and 
an Afghan army of 100,000 soldiers, there will soon be well over a million 
military personnel engaged in a war with a few hundred al-Qaeda and a few 
thousand Taliban forces. 
----------


Despite U.S. President Barack Obama's pledge in his December 1 address at the 
West Point Military Academy that deploying 30,000 more of his nation's troops 
to Afghanistan would be coupled with "a goal of starting to withdraw forces 
from the country in July 2011," everything else he has said and all the facts 
on the ground suggest that the war will continue into the indefinite future.

At a press conference a week before the West Point troop surge announcement he 
said "it is my intention to finish the job," and in his Nobel Peace Prize 
acceptance speech on December 10 he affirmed: "We must begin by acknowledging 
the hard truth: We will not eradicate violent conflict in our lifetimes."

History establishes that it is easier to deploy to than to withdraw from an 
active war zone.

The White House has already increased U.S. troop strength in Afghanistan from 
32,000 at the beginning of the year to over twice that amount - 68,000 - 
currently, with the first contingent of even more reinforcements arriving this 
week. The 30,000 additional troops headed to the war front and the 3,000 more 
support forces pledged by Secretary of Defense Robert Gates will push American 
military personnel in Afghanistan to over 100,000.

That number, likely to be increased yet further and accompanied by a veritable 
invasion of private military contractors and State Department operatives, will 
be augmented by over 10,000 more non-U.S. troops serving under the North 
Atlantic Treaty Organization-led International Security Assistance Force 
(ISAF), bringing combined American and NATO regular military forces to well 
over 150,000 and total Western personnel to over 300,000 with an estimated 
surge of as many as 56,000 new U.S. contractors. With the addition of assorted 
security, intelligence, private contracting and other military camp followers 
from NATO nations, the figure could top a third of a million.

An occupation and warfighting force of those dimensions is not designed for a 
limited mission or a short stay.

In fact on December 6 U.S. National Security Adviser James Jones (former top 
military commander for NATO in Europe) gave the lie to the 2011 withdrawal 
anodyne in an interview with CNN when he brashly asserted "We have strategic 
interests in South Asia that should not be measured in terms of finite times. 
We’re going to be in the region for a long time.”

Jones also emphasized the extension of the war in space as well as time by 
stating American reinforcements and redeployments would concentrate on eastern 
and southern Afghanistan to "eliminate the safe havens" inside Pakistan, a 
nation with a population of 175 million and nuclear weapons.
  
His claims, more authoritative than those of the president he serves, were 
echoed by Pentagon chief Robert Gates. Earlier this week it was reported that 
"In a visit to the war zone last week, U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates told 
Afghanistan's senior military officials that while the U.S. looks forward to 
the day when the Afghans can take control of their country, the United States 
would have a large number of forces in Afghanistan for some time beyond July 
2011."

Gates in his own words: "This is a relationship forged in blood. We will see it 
[through] to the end." [1] 

To demonstrate the scale of the U.S. and NATO intensification of the war in 
Afghanistan - so urgent, evidently, that it is being qualitatively escalated 
during the Christmas season - in addition to Gates's visit to the Afghan war 
front, Chairman of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff Admiral Michael Mullen, 
British Prime Minister Gordon Brown, new German Defense Minister Karl-Theodor 
Zu Guttenberg and other top Western military and political leaders have 
recently traveled to Afghanistan to inspect their respective nations' military 
forces stationed there.

On December 16 the first of the latest 30,000 U.S. troops committed to the war 
and the 16,000 that have received deployment orders since Obama's December 1 
speech, 1,500 Marines, arrived in the nation, prompting Pentagon Press 
Secretary Geoff Morrell to crow "The surge has begun in earnest." [2]

The Washington Post ran a feature on December 16 based on a report by the 
Congressional Research Service (CRS) - "which provides background information 
to members of Congress on a bipartisan basis" - in which the CRS stated "it 
expects an additional 26,000 to 56,000 contractors to be sent to Afghanistan. 
That would bring the number of contractors in the country to anywhere from 
130,000 to 160,000."

In addition, that already astronomical figure "could increase further if the 
new [administration] strategy includes a more robust construction and nation 
building effort." The report also remarked that as of a year ago contractors 
accounted for 69 percent of Defense Department personnel in Afghanistan and as 
such "represented the highest recorded percentage of contractors used by the 
Defense Department in any conflict in the history of the United States." [3]

The higher number of Defense Department contractors, 160,000, added to over 
100,000 troops - with the likely prospect of both numbers climbing yet more - 
will result in over a quarter of a million U.S. personnel serving under the 
Pentagon and NATO. The latter has 42,000 non-U.S. troops fighting under its 
command currently and pledges of 8,000 more to date, with thousands in addition 
to be conscripted after the London conference on Afghanistan next month. 
Approximately 35,000 U.S. soldiers are also assigned to NATO's ISAF and if the 
33,000 new American troops are similarly deployed the North Atlantic bloc will 
have over 120,000 forces fighting a land war in Asia. Along with a Pakistani 
army of 700,000 active duty troops fighting on the other side of the border and 
an Afghan army of 100,000 soldiers, there will soon be well over a million 
military personnel engaged in a war with a few hundred al-Qaeda and a few 
thousand Taliban forces. 

Washington's Afghan surge is not limited to uniformed personnel. The Wall 
Street Journal reported that "The White House hopes to have 1,000 State 
Department, Treasury and Department of Agriculture personnel in Afghanistan by 
next month, up from 300 a year ago."

The newspaper revealed that a former psychiatric hospital in the state of 
Indiana is currently "the staging ground for one of the biggest deployments of 
U.S. civilians since the Vietnam War." Non-Pentagon government officials en 
route to Afghanistan "are often paired with members of the Indiana National 
Guard, who are preparing for their own deployment in Afghanistan.

"Trainees spend a week on a make-believe forward operating base in the forest, 
where they go through military operations with the National Guard as if they 
were already deployed in Afghanistan. The civilian recruits learn to perform 
their own security functions." [4]

The dramatic escalation of the war is also not limited to increases in 
personnel. The U.S. Defense Department recently announced that it was expanding 
the deployment of Stealth warplanes and high-altitude, long-endurance Reaper 
"hunter-killer" drones which are equipped with fifteen times more deadly 
missiles than its Predator predecessor. "[T]he Air Force is looking toward 
developing unmanned, long-range surveillance aircraft that also can carry 
warheads so they can be used during combat." [5]

The U.S. Air Force's latest stealth reconnaissance drone, dubbed "the Beast of 
Kandahar," resembles "the much larger, swept-wing B-2 Stealth bomber, and 
officials confirmed this month that the military has begun using the 
classified, unarmed drone in Afghanistan." [6]

The skies over Afghanistan are crisscrossed by U.S. and NATO surveillance 
aircraft, bombers and helicopter gunships to such a degree that for Afghans to 
even leave their homes means to risk their lives. Three Afghans were killed and 
one wounded on December 17 in Kandahar province when NATO attack helicopters 
obliterated their minibus.

Matters are no less deadly on the Pakistani side of the border. The day before 
the Afghan attack, the U.S. launched ten missiles from five drones in the 
second of two assaults, "an unusually intense bombardment," [7] into North 
Waziristan, killing at least twenty people, identified as always as Taliban and 
al-Qaeda targets.

A Los Angeles Times feature on December 13 revealed that "Senior US officials 
are pushing to expand CIA drone strikes beyond Pakistan's tribal region. 

"After confirmation that the CIA has been operating drone strikes in Pakistani 
territory, a new report says the US is seeking to expand the attacks into the 
country's cities."

The report added that "CIA spokesman George Little quoted spy agency Director 
Leon Panetta as saying that US has been launching the attacks from secret 
airfields in Pakistan and Afghanistan." [8] 
 
The U.S. is not alone in ratcheting up the longest and largest war in the 
world. 

On December 13 U.S. Central Command chief General David Petraeus said "The 
number of European NATO troops in Afghanistan should swell beyond the 8,000 
troops already promised...." [9]

The Pentagon is dispatching 4,000 101st Airborne paratroopers to Kandahar in 
southern Afghanistan in addition to a parachute battalion from the 82nd 
Airborne to join an American Stryker brigade and NATO ally Canada's forces 
there. The deployments are part of a plan to "flood areas close to 
Afghanistan's second largest city with Canadian and U.S. troops" and to "assist 
Canadian Forces to create a security noose around Kandahar City."  [10]

Reuters recently reported that "Germany plans to send up to 2,000 more soldiers 
to Afghanistan in response to requests from the United States and other NATO 
partners," citing the Westdeutsche Allgemeine Zeitung which wrote "the United 
States and NATO members had already received signals to this effect." [11] 
Germany currently has 4,500 troops stationed in Afghanistan, the third largest 
contingent after the U.S. and Britain. The 4,500 figure is the maximum number 
permitted by the nation's parliament, but will soon be exceeded in another 
reversal of the nation's post-World War II limits on waging wars abroad.

Agence France-Presse reported that "NATO hopes to send two tactical groups, up 
to 3,000 troops, to north Afghanistan under German command," according to 
German General Karl-Heinz Lather, the chief of staff of NATO's Supreme 
Headquarters Allied Powers Europe, who said "From a military point of view, the 
allied headquarters in Europe thinks it necessary to send two tactical groups 
into this zone." [12]

Herve Morin, the defense minister of France, which has 3,300 troops under NATO 
command in Afghanistan, announced that he may deploy "medium-sized 
supplementary troops" after the January 28 conference on Afghanistan in London. 
[13] 800 French Legionnaires are at the moment engaged in a fierce combat 
operation along with American counterparts east of the Afghan capital.

The top NATO military commander in Europe, Admiral James Stavridis, was in 
Poland earlier this week to "to discuss the Alliance's ISAF mission in 
Afghanistan" [14] and to recruit more Polish troops for the war. Warsaw has 
already pledged to raise its force level to nearly 3,000 troops as it recently 
signed a status of forces agreement to base U.S. missiles and troops, the first 
foreign soldiers on its soil since the collapse of the Warsaw Pact eighteen 
years ago.

The Czech Republic "is for the first time in history sending its own helicopter 
unit to Afghanistan."

"Czech soldiers and three upgraded Mi-171S transport helicopters will be...sent 
to the Sarana base in the southeast of the country to serve the needs of the 
NATO forces in the ISAF mission....The unit underwent comprehensive training 
for one and half a years, for instance in the Alps mountains and in desert 
areas in Israel and Texas....Czech soldiers will be first trained by their U.S. 
colleagues." [15]
 
Spain has announced its will send more than 500 additional soldiers to 
Afghanistan, joining NATO and NATO partner states like Italy (1,000), Georgia 
(1,000), Britain, Hungary, Slovakia, Colombia, South Korea, Mongolia, 
Montenegro, Bosnia and Armenia in committing new forces. Troops from five 
continents with Australia included.

Not only full NATO member states but Partnership for Peace nations are being 
strong-armed to provide more troops. Finland and Sweden, both of which have 
increased their troop strength in northern Afghanistan in recent months, have 
been involved in their first combat operations since World War II in the first 
case and in almost 200 years in the second. Troops from both nations were 
engaged in the latest of a series of firefights on December 13.

The Bundeswehr will soon train the first contingent of troops from former 
Soviet republic and current Collective Security Treaty Organization member 
Armenia in Germany for action in Afghanistan.

The defense minister of nominally neutral Austria, Norbert Darabos, said that 
the U.S. and Britain were bullying his nation to send more troops to 
Afghanistan, bemoaning the fact that "America's pressure on Austria is 
relatively intense, sometimes it is a little bit improper" and asserting that 
"Austria is a sovereign country [which] will not give in to the pressure." [16]

What Darabos may be concerned about in part is the rising rate of NATO 
casualties in Afghanistan. During the past few days two Dutch troops were 
injured, one critically, in a roadside bomb attack in Uruzgan province. 

An Estonian soldier was killed in a similar incident in Helmand province, 
bringing the country's casualties to four killed and 23 wounded this year.

Two more British soldiers were killed this week, raising United Kingdom deaths 
to 239, 102 this year.

Nearly 500 Western soldiers have been killed so far this year, 305 of them 
American, compared to 155 U.S. military personnel lost during all of last year.
 
Undaunted, on December 16 the U.S. House of Representatives - by a vote of 395 
to 34 - "passed a massive military spending bill to defray annual expenses, 
fund operations in Afghanistan, and pay for the troop withdrawal from Iraq."

The $636.3 billion package, "which does not include monies for President Barack 
Obama's recently announced decision to send 30,000 more US troops to 
Afghanistan," allots "80 million to acquire more unmanned Predator drones, a 
key tool in the US air war in Afghanistan and Pakistan....With little public 
debate in the United States, the pace of the drone bombing raids has steadily 
increased, starting last year during ex-president George W. Bush's final months 
in office and now under Obama's tenure." [17]

In approving the Pentagon's request, the American Congress endorsed "$130 
billion to cover the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq" excluding an "estimated $30 
billion that will be needed to fund President Barack Obama's recent decision to 
send 30,000 more troops to Afghanistan."

The bill also authorized the funding of "new Air Force global strike programs - 
including work on new manned and unmanned systems - Army brigade combat team 
modernization, a Navy attack submarine, and the Navy's new Carrier Long-Range 
Strike system....Analysts called the decision a victory for Defense Secretary 
Robert Gates, who has lobbied the White House for more funding.

"The Obama administration will add $100 billion to the Pentagon's 2011-15 base 
budget plan to cover the rising cost of personnel and pressing modernization 
needs...." [18]

Militarism is a psychopathology and war can be an addiction.

Analyst Andrei Grozin of the Central Asia Department of the Institute of the 
CIS [Commonwealth of Independent States] Countries in Russia averred an opinion 
of his own on why the United States and its allies invaded Afghanistan and 
acquired military bases in Central Asia and why they will be loath to leave.

"[I]t's important for Americans to coordinate the efforts of various 
structures, which are interested in, on the one hand, reducing traditional 
Russian influence on the authorities and society and preventing China from 
strengthening its influence, on the other hand...."

The same source's comments were paraphrased: "One of the apparent geopolitical 
interests of the US in the region is to establish control over energy resources 
and pipelines that transport oil and gas to Central and Western Europe through 
Russia and also to China and Iran." [19]

The prolongation and unprecedented expansion of the world's lengthiest war, now 
in its ninth and on January 1 to enter its tenth calendar year, are by no means 
limited to alleged concerns over al-Qaeda, evil and opium poppies.
....

Previous articles on Afghanistan:

U.S., NATO War In Afghanistan: Antecedents And Precedents
http://rickrozoff.wordpress.com/2009/12/05/u-s-nato-war-in-afghanistan-antecedents-and-precedents

Christmas 2009: U.S., NATO To Expand New Millennium’s Longest War
http://rickrozoff.wordpress.com/2009/11/25/christmas-2009-u-s-nato-to-expand-new-millenniums-longest-war

ABC Of West’s Global Military Network: Afghanistan, Baltics, Caucasus
http://rickrozoff.wordpress.com/2009/10/28/abc-of-wests-global-military-network-afghanistan-baltics-caucasus

Afghanistan: West’s 21st Century War Risks Regional Conflagration
http://rickrozoff.wordpress.com/2009/10/12/afghanistan-wests-21st-century-war-risks-regional-conflagration

U.S., NATO Poised For Most Massive War In Afghanistan’s History
http://rickrozoff.wordpress.com/2009/09/24/u-s-nato-poised-for-most-massive-war-in-afghanistans-history

Broader Strategy: West’s Afghan War Targets Russia, China, Iran
http://rickrozoff.wordpress.com/2009/09/08/broader-strategy-wests-afghan-war-targets-russia-china-iran

Following Afghan Election, NATO Intensifies Deployments, Carnage
http://rickrozoff.wordpress.com/2009/09/06/following-afghan-election-nato-intensifies-deployments-carnage

U.S. Marines In The Caucasus As West Widens Afghan War
http://rickrozoff.wordpress.com/2009/09/04/u-s-marines-in-the-caucasus-as-west-widens-afghan-war

Afghan War: NATO Builds History’s First Global Army
http://rickrozoff.wordpress.com/2009/09/01/afghan-war-nato-builds-historys-first-global-army

Afghan War: NATO Trains Finland, Sweden For Conflict With Russia
http://rickrozoff.wordpress.com/2009/09/01/afghan-war-nato-trains-finland-sweden-for-conflict-with-russia

West’s Afghan War And Drive Into Caspian Sea Basin
http://rickrozoff.wordpress.com/2009/08/31/wests-afghan-war-and-drive-into-caspian-sea-basin

Afghanistan: U.S., NATO Wage World’s Largest, Longest War
http://rickrozoff.wordpress.com/2009/08/27/afghanistan-u-s-nato-wage-worlds-largest-longest-war


Notes:

1) Associated Press, December 14, 2009
2) Associated Press, December 16, 2009
3) Washington Post, December 16, 2009
4) Wall Street Journal, December 18, 2009
5) Associated Press, December 16, 2009
6) Ibid
7) Trend News Agency, December 18, 2009
8) Press TV, December 14, 2009
9) Trend News Agency, December 13, 2009
10) Canwest News Service, December 17, 2009
11) Reuters, December 16, 2009
12) Agence France-Presse, December 15, 2009
13) Xinhua News Agency, December 17, 2009
14) Polish Radio, December 14, 2009
15) Czech News Agency, December 14, 2009
16) Trend News Agency, December 18, 2009
17) Agence France-Presse, December 17, 2009
18) Defense News, December 11, 2009
19) Voice of Russia, December 16, 2009
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