Is Afghanistan a lost cause?

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Many Americans are struggling right along with the Obama administration about what to do with Afghanistan. We’re weighing the pros and cons of expanding the war or winding it down, and most of us are finding no good answers.

Not everyone is conflicted; there are those who believe the only way to deal with our enemies is with maximum force. Neo-conservatives such as Bill Kristol, Richard Perle, Douglas Feith, John Bolton and Dick Cheney are big-time hawks, along with their allies in the Senate, Joe Lieberman, John McCain and others.

Neo-cons were the ones who talked the Bush administration into the war in Iraq. Today, their rhetoric toward Iran is belligerent, and they’re pushing hard to send more troops to Afghanistan. Although they like to talk tough, most of them have no military experience themselves.

Their real agenda is to protect Israel and maintain control of political and economic resources in the Middle East. They play for bigger stakes than most of us would even begin to understand.

As I’ve listened to Gen. Stanley McChrystal’s plan to add 40,000 more troops in Afghanistan, it sounds an awful lot like nation-building. I don’t see how you can instill nationalism, democracy, structure, etc., all those things a civilized nation values, in a country steeped in tribal warfare.

Nation-building was the quagmire we got into in Iraq; compared to Afghanistan, Iraq was a piece of cake.

Lately my confidence in McChrystal’s judgment has waned. Apparently he actually wanted 80,000 troops to begin with. I was also taken aback when I learned it was he who authorized the report that Pat Tillman was killed by enemy fire. He allowed that story to be released to the media and it was used to strengthen public support for war. When the truth finally came out, we learned the former NFL star was killed by friendly fire. Tillman’s family continues to have no use for the general.

My fears about Afghanistan were confirmed last week by the resignation from his post in Afghanistan by U.S. Foreign Service Officer and ex-Marine Capt. Matthew Hoh. He said the drawn-out occupation no longer makes any sense nor offers any reasonable hope for success.

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