Afghanistan shows ‘limitations’ of US military, experts say
The swift
collapse of the Afghan government demonstrates the US military’s inability to
engage in nation-building, experts say.
Hundreds of
people run alongside a US Air Force C-17 transport plane as it moves down a
runway of the international airport in Kabul, August 16 [Verified UGC via AP]
By Ali Harb
21 Aug 2021
Washington,
DC – The United States’ longest war is coming to an unceremonious end.
US troops
are leaving Kabul with the Taliban once again in charge of the capital of Afghanistan,
which American soldiers captured nearly 20 years ago.
The rapid
collapse of the Afghan government after 20 years of US support shows the limits
of Washington’s military power, several experts have said, boosting arguments
against US foreign interventions and “endless wars”.
President
Joe Biden’s critics, however, say the scenes of desperate Afghans attempting to
flee Kabul are a sign of US weakness and proof of the necessity for global
American military engagement.
As much of
the world’s focus rightly remains on efforts to get Afghans to safety outside
the country, the Taliban’s victory is spurring a heated debate in Washington
about the US’s role in the world.
“A
military-led project of state-building and nation-building is always going to
be doomed to failure,” said Annelle Sheline, a research fellow at the Quincy
Institute for Responsible Statecraft, a think-tank that advocates against
interventionist policies.
‘Hammer and
nail approach’
Anxiety
over abuses under Taliban rule, including the rights of women as well as the
safety of Afghans who worked with the US, was on display in the chaos at Hamid Karzai International
Airport.
Footage of
people flooding the tarmac and hanging on to departing aeroplanes showed a
glimpse of Afghans’ fear of life under the Taliban.
Meanwhile,
the Taliban’s assurances that it would not seek revenge against its foes have
not mitigated the growing concerns over Afghan suffering amid reports of
rampant abuses already being carried out.
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Biden has
acknowledged the threat to human rights in Afghanistan while arguing that there
is nothing Washington could do to fight off the Taliban except sending
thousands of more troops to fight and possibly die in the country.
“Does
anybody truly believe that I would not have had to put in significantly more
American forces – send your sons, your daughters … to maybe die,” he said on
Friday. “And for what?”
Jawied
Nawabi, an Afghan American assistant professor in sociology and economics at
the City University of New York – Bronx Community College, said he hopes that
the US draws a lesson from Afghanistan to become less reliant on military
power.
“There is a
saying that if your only tool is a hammer, everything looks like a nail, and
they just keep doing the same thing,” Nawabi told Al Jazeera of the US military
interventions.
“I just
hope … people start resisting the military approach, the hammer and the nail
approach.”
Despite
what has been widely characterised as a military defeat for the US in
Afghanistan, many hawkish voices in Washington are arguing that the issue was a
lack of persistent force behind the hammer of military power.
“This
Trump-Biden withdrawal is a big mistake,” former US official John Bolton, who
served under George W Bush and Donald Trump, wrote on Twitter on Thursday.
“Beijing
and Moscow they are laughing. Tehran and Pyongyang have seen that the
Administration is credulous when it comes to claims by devoted adversaries of
the United States. It makes us look like we’re suckers.”
For his part,
former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, who helped negotiate the withdrawal deal
with the Taliban last year, said the current administration should have used
force as a deterrent against Taliban fighters, including the threat of coming
after their “friends and family”.
“The
Taliban are aggressive, and they are fearless because we have an administration
that has refused to adopt a deterrence model, the one that President Trump and
I had,” Pompeo told Fox News last week.
Reliance on
force
Nawabi said
the blunt force approach was the main problem with Washington’s relations with
Afghanistan, arguing that the US needs more “soft power” in its foreign policy
via aid and development programmes.
The US
spent more than $2 trillion on the war, but Nawabi raised
questions over how much of that money went to aid Afghans versus the money
spent on the Pentagon and military contractors, noting the staggering rates of
poverty and drug abuse in Afghan society.
Asked if he
was surprised by the swift Taliban takeover, Nawabi told Al Jazeera it did not
matter how long it took the Afghan government to crumble if the collapse was
inevitable.
Sheline, of
the Quincy Institute, echoed Nawabi’s remarks on resources dedicated to
Afghanistan being spent on the Pentagon and military contractors, invoking
former President Dwight Eisenhower 1961 warnings about the “unwarranted
influence” of the military-industrial complex.
She said
weapon manufacturers and war profiteers are the ones who want “the forever wars
to continue”.
“The
nation-building project in Afghanistan was always going to fail because you
cannot impose democracy or impose a system of government on another people and
expect it to have legitimacy,” Sheline told Al Jazeera.
The view
that the US should not police the world or engage in nation-building is a
popular one among voters, Sheline added.
Their
actual policies aside, the last three US presidents were elected on platforms
of less, not more, military interventions. Barack Obama pledged to end the Iraq
War in his 2008 campaign. Biden and Trump used the term “forever wars”,
promising to end them.
Calls for
oversight
Sahar Khan,
a research fellow at the Cato Institute, said while the US army remains the
largest and most powerful in the world, Washington is “too reliant” on military
force.
“The main
lesson, which I hope resonates, is a deeper understanding of the limitations of
the US military,” Khan told Al Jazeera.
She said
past experiences – in Vietnam, Iraq and now Afghanistan – have shown that the
military cannot adequately accomplish “civilian-centred missions”.
Critics of
the withdrawal have warned that it may compromise Washington’s credibility in
the world as well as its commitment to its allies.
But Khan
said the US earns its global credibility from its domestic realities, not its
foreign policy.
“The power
of the United States really is the fact that it is still very much a land of
opportunity,” she said. “And I think that narrative eventually does end up
coming to the top.”
The
argument resonates with many legislators in both parties, who are calling for
investing resources spent on the “forever wars” at home.
Scott
Cooper, a nonresident senior fellow at the Atlantic Council and a US military
veteran who served in Iraq and Afghanistan, said he does not like the term
“forever wars” because of its isolationist connotations, stressing that
Washington should remain engaged in the world.
Still, he
voiced support for efforts to curb executive power to engage in war, including
the push to repeal authorisations for the use of force (AUMFs) granted by
lawmakers to then-President George W Bush after the 9/11 attacks.
“I don’t
think that this is an America-first or isolationist idea,” Cooper told Al
Jazeera. “What we need to have, and what is important and responsible, is that
the first branch of government in the United States, the legislative branch,
needs to do its job.”
The US
Constitution gives Congress solely the right to declare war, but World War II
was the last time legislators did so formally.
A Taliban
fighter in the city of Ghazni, south of Kabul, August 14 [File: Stringer/Reuters]
Cooper said the rapid Taliban takeover of Afghanistan was always a real possibility, if not entirely predictable.
“I’m brokenhearted,” he said. “We worked so hard there, especially those of us that were in the military.”
As for the
lessons to be learned from the war, Cooper said there are unintended
consequences to interventions.
“The
military option is oftentimes the most fraught and difficult and probably not
the right option if there are not other things that are involved such as a
diplomatic option,” he said.
Cooper
added that while the US could supply and train the Afghan military, it could
not ensure or fully measure two vital factors – morale and loyalty.
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