The Toledo Blade Online
The Toledo Blade OnlineThe Toledo Blade Green Edition
Click here to subscribe or renew!
Temp: 52°
Humidity: 80%
Tuesday, 11/24/09
Home »   Columnists »   Johanek, Marilou » 


Click to Receive RSS Feeds!EmailPrint IndexHelp FacebookMySpaceDiggDel.icio.usFark

Article published October 30, 2009
Nation needs to know how long it will be in Afghanistan

WHEN you're preoccupied with jobs, families, and futures, it's easy not to think of the U.S. military stuck in two war zones. It's easy to lose interest in Iraq knowing our nightmare will end even if the Sunnis, Shiites, and Kurds self-destruct.

And it's been easy to overlook the unraveling military efforts in Afghanistan like our government did when it shifted attention and resources to Iraq. Certainly we're saddened by reports of soldiers dying far too young, but when U.S. military engagements drag on, a collective indifference can develop about war waged in our name.

We just have more pressing day-to-day problems to worry about at home, not to mention vexing domestic concerns from health reform to swine flu. They put the latest clashes from Kabul far down on the popular priority list.

Besides, no one seemed to have a clue about how to handle the spreading tumult in Afghanistan, and the U.S. casualties of that war, while tragic, didn't grab many headlines until now. So it was easy to delude ourselves into believing things weren't that bad for the 65,000 U.S. soldiers holed up in a region ruled by corruption, lawlessness, drug trade, tribal militias, and terrorists.

As a country, we were mostly content to drift along aimlessly in Afghanistan - on the road to repeating history a la Vietnam - until the warning signs flashing trouble for military operations there became impossible to ignore.

The death toll for U.S. soldiers in Afghanistan shot up to its highest ever in October, the deadliest month of that war for our troops since 2001. A day after 14 soldiers were killed in a pair of helicopter crashes, returning from a firefight with suspected Taliban drug traffickers in western Afghanistan, eight more troops died in multiple roadside bombings.

The situation is so dire the chief field commander in Kabul says without a fresh infusion of men and material the counterinsurgency could collapse. Former vice president Dick Cheney, always a measured voice of reason, pressed the White House to stop "dithering while America's armed forces are in danger," and other Republicans, including Sen. John McCain, rallied behind Gen. Stanley McChrystal's request for as many as 40,000 more troops.

The new urgency for a major troop surge in Afghanistan, after years of catastrophic neglect by the Bush administration, has suddenly pushed the forgotten war onto the front burner, demanding decisions that could pull America deeper into a protracted war. Fortunately, the rush to act, urged by those who rushed the country into the costly Iraq debacle, does not appear to have clouded the administration's strategic brainstorming on the Afghan war.

To his credit, President Obama has assured U.S. service members he would never make short work of "the solemn decision of sending you into harm's way." Thank God. The President has to weigh America's vital interests against the uncertainties of an open-ended commitment with debatable success.

Compounding any campaign to do that is a hopelessly corrupt government in Kabul that has virtually no ability to govern or maintain order outside the capital, and a thriving opium trade. Nevertheless, the pressure is on to boost American troop levels in Afghanistan to more than 100,000 for a dubious counterinsurgency campaign that could keep our soldiers mired there much longer than the brutal nine-year entanglement of the former Soviet Union.

But to what end? The American public needs to know. As preoccupied as we are with jobs, families, and futures, there are still enough of us who remember how another war, advanced with vague, shifting military missions, wound up costing the country more than 58,000 lives.

Caution borne of that hindsight and others had better precede any troop build-up in Afghanistan.

Marilou Johanek is a Blade commentary writer.

Contact her at: mjohanek@theblade.com


Permanent Link

 RECENT RELATED ARTICLES

The ambassador’s view | 11/19/2009
The quagmire beckons | 10/22/2009
Dithering toward defeat | 10/10/2009
Sack the general; stop the war in Afghanistan | 10/07/2009
Vietnam redux? | 09/25/2009
Afghan reality | 09/03/2009
Kirk - 'War on terror' | 09/03/2009
It’s past time to get out of Afghanistan | 08/12/2009
More war | 07/29/2009
2 U.S. troops die in attack on base in Afghanistan | 07/04/2009

Pollick, Steve
Updated: 5:08 am
New wetlands a legacy to late waterfowler >>
Hendel, Barbara
Updated: 8:32 am
On the Town: Raising a glass for nonprofits
PHOTO GALLERY >>
Hackenberg, Dave
Updated: 5:11 am
Who'd have thought it - an NFL classic >>
Walton, Tom
Updated: 4:59 am
If you're looking to go, and you just got to, then take and go >>
Pollick, Steve
Updated: 9:28 am
Deer culling opponents need to get over it >>
Shribman, David
Updated: 8:52 am
U.S. has much to relearn from China >>
More columnist stories



Top AP News Videos

ADVERTISING SECTIONS
MOST READ STORIES
1.  Friends, family greet Toledo man after 13 years behind bars
2.  Jackson talks homes, homework in Toledo
3.  Ottawa Hills takes a step toward deer kill in village
4.  Ed Schmidt must not lose Chevy brand, Maumee says
5.  Dense fog causes visibility problems, school closings, delays
6.  Ed Schmidt must not lose Chevy brand, Maumee says
7.  Ban on killing puppies approved by Lucas County commissioners
8.  No crime in owners' frugality
9.  Albrecht's back: Pain ebbs for UT sharpshooter
10.  CPSC chief: Agency moved too slowly on crib safety
MOST E-MAILED STORIES
1.  First Solar plant re-energized
2.  Buckeyes sport retro look of 1954
3.  Owens students get apology for lost accreditation
4.  Ex-OSU coach Bruce instills passion for rivalry
5.  Skeldon says he will step down Dec. 31, but Konop wants him dismissed immediately
6.  BGSU plans for 2 new dormitories
7.  Chrysler boosts Dundee plant; engine line to gain jobs, add output
8.  10 healthy puppies all put down 1 day after surrender to warden
9.  Owens faculty vote no confidence in provost
10.  Toledo fares poorly in survey


AP  News Headlines



AP  Business Headlines



AP  Sports Headlines


AP  Features Headlines
Copyright 2009 The Blade. By using this service, you accept the terms of our privacy statement and our visitor agreement. Please read them.
The Toledo Blade Company, 541 N. Superior St., Toledo, OH 43660, (419) 724-6000
To contact a specific
department or an individual person, click here.
The Toledo Times ®