How we got to Zero: General Eikenberry's Hail Mary


Michael Collins


U.S. Afghan Envoy Urges Caution on Troop Increase

"WASHINGTON -- The United States ambassador to Afghanistan, who once served as the top American military commander there, has expressed in writing his reservations about deploying additional troops to the country, three senior American officials said Wednesday.

"The position of the ambassador, Karl W. Eikenberry, puts him in stark opposition to the current American and NATO commander in Afghanistan, Gen. Stanley A. McChrystal, who has asked for 40,000 more troops. New York Times, Nov. 11

This isn't just any envoy. General Karl Eikenberry has served two tours of duty in Afghanistan, the second as head of the Combined Forces Command. After the second Afghan tour, Eikenberry was Chairman of the NATO Joint Military Committee. He's a West Point graduate with advanced degrees from Harvard and Stanford and is fluent in Mandarin Chinese.

General McChrystal has asked for 50,000 troops in early October. By October 28, the president was said to favor a "McChrystal light" number as low as 15,000. On Nov. 7, just four days before Eikenberry's statement, McClatchy Newspapers put Obama's preferred number at 30,000. At this moment, the president is reported have rejected all of the troop increases on the table, according to Associated Press at 12:02 am EDT, today, November 12.

How did we get from McChrystal's request for 50,000 troops in early October to Eikenberry's "written reservations about deploying additional troops" just days before President Obama's planned decision?

The only thing we know for sure is that Eikenberry's statement was no accident. Clearly, there is dissent in the Pentagon and White House as evidenced by this publicly reported assessment by a serving ambassador and distinguished officer. Of interest, on troop levels, the Eikenberry statement agrees with the much criticized assessment of Vice President Joe Biden on made after a trip to Afghanistan

Two Paths - Obama's Hedge

When General Stanley McChrystal was appointed to command combined forces in Afghanistan, he put together his own team for the long haul:

"General McChrystal is assembling a corps of 400 officers and soldiers who will rotate between the United States and Afghanistan for a minimum of three years. That kind of commitment to one theater of combat is unknown in the military today outside Special Operations, but reflects an approach being imported by General McChrystal, who spent five years in charge of secret commando teams in Iraq and Afghanistan." New York Times, June 10

Little was know of the five year of secret commando work in the two nations until a Seymour Hersh gave a speech at the University of Minnesota on U.S. Intelligence policies. Hersh said:

"Right now, today, there was a story in the New York Times that if you read it carefully mentioned something known as the Joint Special Operations Command -- JSOC it’s called. It is a special wing of our special operations community that is set up independently. They do not report to anybody, except in the Bush-Cheney days, they reported directly to the Cheney office. … Congress has no oversight of it. It’s an executive assassination ring essentially, and it’s been going on and on and on." MinnesotaPost.Com March 11

According to Time Magazine, from 2003 through 2008, McChrystal "led the Pentagon's Joint Special Operations Command (JSOC)."

The March 11 description of Joint Special Operations Command, and its leader, General McCrystal, was seemingly contradicted by Hersh on May 19 (See analysis) but the cat was out of the bag on the general's tactics. Unless Hersh was referring to some other Joint Special Operations Command that McChrystal ran, we have a special type of general in charge of the war in Afghanistan.

A report in March validated the problems with the JSOC mission of commando actions eliminating enemies of the state: "The commander of a secretive branch of America’s Special Operations forces last month ordered a halt to most commando missions in Afghanistan, reflecting a growing concern that civilian deaths caused by American firepower are jeopardizing broader goals there" New York Times, March 9. In the same article, Iraq commander General David Petraeus was said to have "supported the decision to suspend the Special Operations missions."

Despite his record or, perhaps, because of it, General McChrystal was appointed to the Afghanistan command after these statements and controversies over JSOC.

Just two weeks later, President Obama appointed General Eikenberry as U.S. Ambassador to Afghanistan. In addition to his career achievements, Eikenberry's good relationships with the Karzai government and NATO were mentioned prominently.

Eikenberry was a logical choice as ambassador to Afghanistan given the ongoing military missions and his emphasis on improvements in living conditions for citizens. He'd held high level and top level command in the country for a total of thirty six months. During that time, he had concentrated on a multi level approach with an emphasis on building a strong civil base of for a government and military run by the people.

In testimony before Congress in February, 2007, Eikenberry outlined progress in the military effort and civic governance and the largest threat to success:

"The long-term threat to campaign success, though, is the potential irretrievable loss of legitimacy of the Government of Afghanistan. If the Afghan Government is unable to counter popular frustration with the lack of progress in reform and national development, the Afghan people may lose confidence in the nature of their political system." Congress, Feb. 17, 2007

Eikenberry listed progress in public education, infrastructure, and training efforts for Afghan police and military but stressed the need for more support for civilians in the forgotten war. He stressed the stakes for NATO in the largest ever non European military effort. While not "make or break," the stakes were high. He also made this highly significant point: "Pakistan’s military and security forces have taken significant casualties against the same enemy that we in Afghanistan face" Feb. 17, 2007

Eleven months into the new administration, we have radically different choices for policy in Afghanistan advanced by diametrically opposed military professionals appointed by the same president.

Why the Radical Split in Advice and Why Now

It seems that General McChrystal is on a special mission based a specific philosophy of warfare and that General Eikenberry is performing his duty according to his current assignment with an ongoing evaluation of the various players and facts at hand. McCrystal job has been killing what Seymour Hersh called "enemies of the state" in Afghanistan and Iraq. He's not finished. They're still out there. He made commitments to the 400 officers and soldiers that he hand picked. He doesn't want to let them down.

Given his history and assignments before his command role, everything he's done suggests that he would want to finish the job. Why wouldn't he push for as many more troops as he can get?

But the real questions are: does finishing that job make any sense and will more troops help finish the job?

Eikenberry's position has evolved over time. He once got along with Karzai but, as ambassador, during the recent presidential campaign, he appeared with the opposition candidates who accused Karzai of election fraud in the first election and pushed Karzai to overturn the initial disputed results that would have ruled out a runoff election.

Can you recall any U.S. ambassador ever showing up at a press conference with opposition candidates challenging the legitimacy of an election?

Eikenberry was interviewed on NPR just two days after he testified before Congress in 2007. He said, "The Taliban military forces remain a much weaker enemy. Whenever the Taliban masses on the battlefield, those Taliban forces are defeated, always in very short order." He went on to offer this: "… the challenge has been building the state of Afghanistan, extending the writ of governance. That has been a very steady growth of progress that we've had with the government of Afghanistan over the last six years" NPR Feb. 13, 2007.

Two and a half years later, General Eikenberry has "expressed in writing his reservations about deploying additional troops to the country" just at the point when President Obama was said to be announcing some level of troop increases. The key to success, as outlined by the general previously, was real progress in responsive and trustworthy civil governance that delivers for the people.

In his congressional testimony, Eikenberry quoted a poll in which, "almost 90% of the Afghan people consider reconstruction and economic development the most important requirement to improve their quality of life."

It is fair to assume that the illegitimate election played a major role in Eikenberry's questions about the future of the Afghanistan military mission. His recommendations represent a huge step given the stakes for the NATO military effort and the larger concerns about the nation. Other factors may have included the McChrystal emphasis killing "bad guys" and the inevitable deaths of innocents paired with lackluster U.S. financial support for Afghan rebuilding and development.

General Eikenberry is both a soldier and scholar of history and political science. He knows the history of occupations that fail to deliver for the populace and he's telling us right now that the U.S. can't succeed with more military forces in a nation run by an illegitimate president who has been exposed for election fraud. More troops are not the solution. In his view, success requires stronger governance and real democracy which means transparent elections free of fraud.

Had the attempt to capture Osama Bin Laden been just that, he'd have been captured or found dead and the United States would not be in this dilemma. But that begs the question. Of the choices this administration will make, which do not include immediate withdrawal, General Eikenberry's is the most clearly reasoned position and has the strongest immediate and historical basis by far, in my opinion.

But what kind of ongoing evaluation can we expect from an administration that split the policy difference in the first place by appointing General McChrystal as military commander and General Eikenberry as Ambassador? That's too much of a difference to split.

The White House's rapid downward trend in troop commitment from, 40,000 to zero for the moment indicates that an alarm bell is ringing. If they just face the truth, they'll announce that we've "hit bottom" and, as a result, we can't afford any more of this because we're flat broke. If they just listen to the people through public polling, they'll come up with something palliative that will allow the president to stay above 50% approval, at least until the next banking crisis. That something was to rely on the advice of General Eikenberry, at least for now.

This is almost the same process President Obama put the military through just after his inauguration when General Petraeus tried his push for more troops in Iraq (see analysis).. Obama's a very good poker player. Let's hope that we move beyond gaming to a foreign policy based on recognizing our limitations and inserting fundamental respect for the lives and well being of all citizens wherever they might be.

It would be helpful to review this 2007 testimony and apply the democratic principles at home as well as abroad:

"In closing, allow me to emphasize that we are now at a critical point where a strategic investment in capabilities is needed to accelerate the progress toward the desired goal of helping establish a moderate, stable, and representative Government of Afghanistan." General Karl M. Eikenberry, Congress, Feb 11, 2007.

That's what the general did. He tried to "help establish" a "representative government" by insisting on fair elections. When he discovered they weren't fair, he stood with the opposition in protest and used his influence to get another vote. When the "winner" of that runoff won because the process was so crooked, Eikenberry then advised there was no point in providing more troops since more troops were not the answer. The first step in the answer requires an honest election. He's right. The citizens of Afghanistan have the same needs and rights and deserve the same respect we deserve, the same that all people deserve. What a refreshing philosophy. It's almost cause for "hope."

END

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Michael Collins November 12, 2009 - 9:11am
( categories: Afghanistan )


General Eikenberry with Opposition
Candidate Abdullah

Ikramuddin Bahram , Peshawar: Jun 29, 2009

In a move that could be the biggest joke of the century for at least in Afghanistan, the US-installed Afghan President Hamid Karzai in a News conference turned angry over recent visits of the US ambassador in Kabul with the Presidential candidates Dr. Abdulllah Abdullah, who talked of a political system change in Afghanistan earlier this weekend, Ashraf Ghani Ahmadzai and Mirwais Yasini, calling it a direct interference in the upcoming Presidential elections to be held on August 20 this year.

The US ambassador to Afghanistan Karl Eikenberry had met with the Afghan Presidential Candidates and Karzai’s top opponents in the upcomingPresidential Elections Dr. Abdullah Abdullah, Ashraf Ghani Ahmadzai and Mirwais Yasini. In the meeting they had reportedly discussed the security concerns and the overall outcome of the upcomingPresidential elections and the preparations involved. However, this active US diplomacy came under harsh criticism of the Afghan government headed by President Karzai. Immediately after these meetings, in reaction to these meetings the presidential spokesman termed it “an obvious interference” in the elections.

US officials including its ambassador have time and again reiterated their support for the democratic elections reaffirming their stance of not favoring any single candidate nor opposing anyone. In the meanwhile, General James L. Jones, US National Security Advisor, had earlier defended Ambassador Karl Eikenberry’s meeting calling it part of the “US Policy” in Afghanistan.

It’s apparent from the statements of the lingering president that he, who has lost popularity though expected to sweep the elections, hasn’t been soothed with the position of US on the upcoming elections.

Karzai, who is also running for re-elections, maintained that he doesn’t oppose the meetings of presidential candidates with the ambassadors calling it their “total freedom” but he does worry about their sharing of their sharing election programs with such ambassadors.

He further worried about joint press conferences by the ambassadors and the presidential candidates.

Karzai who was brought to power in 2002 after the US invasion of Afghanistan has potentially lost popularity like his ex-boss former US president yet he is one of the strongest candidates and is expected to win but he fears his opponents are stronger this time.

Michael Collins November 13, 2009 - 10:01am

Eikenberry has stood up twice now, first to contradict McChrystal, and second to declare his opposition to Hamid Karzai's fraudulent election campaign. Usually ambassadors stay in the background, but Eikenberry is doing what Arianna Huffington advised Joe Biden to do - take a public stand (actually she advised him to quit rather that appear to support the administration's approach in Afghanistan).

Karzai has responded by trotting out some of his most corrupt narco warlords for the press to see, just to thumb his nose at the US. McChrystal has kept quiet but we don't know what is being said in strategy meetings with the White House.

This is the first time in almost ten years that someone in the State Department has stood up publicly in opposition to the Department of Defense. Nor is McChrystal an easy guy to contradict. He's not a firebrand looking to expand the writ of the DOD at any opportunity. Nor is he a follower of the Colin Powell doctrine of applying massive force at all times. He's spent his time in the shadows pursuing covert operations, which implies the use of elite, limited forces, high-tech surveillance, and other tools. To the extent his request for 40,000 additional troops is out of character, it is more in keeping with the Petraeus school of counter-insurgency, aimed at winning the support of the local population. In fact, he has specifically held open the possibility of reconciliation with the Taliban, and a willingness to ignore their past sins, which unfortunately must include their fundamentalist social doctrines of sharia law, repression of women, etc. But this too is in keeping with the Petraeus doctrine, since he was so willing to forgive and forget the Sunni insurgency's campaign against the US from 2003-2006.

Despite all this new-age thinking by McChrystal, Eikenberry is still willing to go against him publicly, and declare that extra troops are not needed. He seems to be asking the question Frank Rich raised today in his column: why should any American die for the Karzai narco regime? It's almost as if Eikenberry is saying "let the Taliban overrun Kabul once again and kick the drug lords out." He's calculating that the Taliban are cleaner allies than the current corrupt government, and that they have learned their lesson in dealing with bin Laden and al-Qaeda. Even McChrystal has said there are less than 100 committed al-Qaeda forces in all of Afghanistan.

I probably shouldn't make too big a deal of Eikenberry being an ambassador - he is an ex-general and may well represent the take-over of the embassy in Kabul by the DOD. Still, that would be one part of the DOD contradicting another part very publicly, which I suppose is what you get when Defense, sprawling as it is already into the diplomatic, foreign aid, and intelligence business, has a brief that now includes the entirety of the foreign policy apparatus.

Numerian November 15, 2009 - 8:20am

I used to have this theory that there was civil war going on within "Management" (the power structure and its representatives in government). My theory assumed that there were actually sane people who, when they spotted madness, e.g., the Iraq invasion, would oppose it through leaks or other subversion of the madness or openly by speaking out, e.g., Paul O'Neill. I gave that one up and filed it under "wish fulfillment."

Maybe I was too quick to pass since Eikenberry is a good example of someone going against the grain. It did look like DoD taking over the embassy but the ambassador was the key. This individual simply couldn't tolerate what he saw and tried his best, within the parameters he had before him, to chart the right course for the United States.

Isn't it nice to see someone do that. These people are around and they deserve a great deal of respect. I suspect, but don't know, that Eikenberry would be in favor of finishing what he sees as the U.S. project. I think it's time to say goodbye but after reading his positions over time, I find him the type of person I could disagree with and still respect.

Ultimately, Gore Vidal will be the prophet ignored in his own land. He predicted that we'd soon find out that we simply can't afford any of this anymore. He's right but those spinning yarns of empire have yet to get the message.

Michael Collins November 15, 2009 - 11:58pm

...strategic approaches founded on counter-terrorism (CT) are dependent on the opposition having a certain degree of cohesiveness. CT is fundamentally about destroying and disrupting the function of enemy networks to reduce their effectiveness. As a strategic concept this was effective in Iraq because of the strategy the enemy was executing, the cultural terrain, and the distribution of the population (effective social networks that could actually enforce political compromise and a highly agglomerated population). Conversely, this strategic concept is likely to have much more limited utility in Afghanistan (the enemy strategy is somewhat different; social networks are weak, highly fragmented and notoriously prone to outbidding and renegotiation; and three of four Afghans live in rural settings). Add to these differences the formidable physical geography and it's very clear that other strategic concepts are required, though CT approaches have their place.

I tend to think that what we may be seeing on the special operations front and likely to see intensify is the use of Tier 1 Special Mission Units (particularly those few Tier 1 units that exist in other ISAF nations [SAS, SASR, JTF2]) in support of regional / contributing nation efforts. I tend to think that there will be less emphasis on executing any strategic special operations campaign that "stands apart" from the conventional campaign like it did to some extent in Iraq. Things will be more tightly integrated - enemy "networks" are much more ephemeral and quite prone to opportunistic change in configuration, alliance, etc. Key to effective analysis will continue to be discriminating between the various flavours of special operations forces (i.e., JSOC vs. SOCOM). This just isn't something that's as simple as McChrystal's a JSOC guy. McChrystal's first and foremost a general who has a very detailed understanding of what a strategic special operations CT campaign can - and more importantly cannot do.

“The absence of any US-Iran bilateral channel...may have the perverse effect of reinforcing Iranian interest in progressing in the nuclear realm so that the US will be forced to take it seriously and engage it directly." ~ Richard Haass

JustPlainDave November 15, 2009 - 10:22am

If the social networks are so loose and spill across the border into Pakistan, doesn't this strategy require application to Taliban operations in Pakistan? For that matter, is it really just the Taliban we are targeting, or a conglomeration of ethnic and tribal groups that control southwest Afghanistan and Waziristan in Pakistan?

I gather the Obama administration has already stepped up drone attacks in Pakistan, so maybe this question is already answered if use of drones is the fundamental tool at work here.

Also, if I were Obama, I would have shifted the administration's Pakistan focus from day one to getting Osama bin Laden, and pressuring the Pakistani military to organize an offensive from the east on Waziristan. But I emphasize the first objective as the real purpose of the United States activity in Pakistan. I think the administration wants this guy "dead or alive" and sooner rather than later. The question from day one must have been "Who is hiding him", followed by, "How do we infiltrate his support system."

This to me also explains McChrystal's statements about forgive and forget when it comes to the Taliban. If they can be of any service in capturing or killing bin Laden, the US will ease up on the counter insurgency campaign.

If the US did manage to capture bin Laden and spirit him out of Pakistan, I wonder if he would be put on trial in NY? That would be an interesting statement.

Numerian November 15, 2009 - 11:38am

I don't see McChrystal as one dimensional with regard to JSOC. But I do see that former role as a key element in any analysis of what the administration is really up to. When Hersh made the statement about the JSOC special commando units reporting to Cheney, it was a bombshell of sorts. While Hersh tried to back off, his backpedaling was purely for show. He said what he said and didn't really take it back. McChrystal was in charge of that unit. The question that I have is why on earth are we appointing a general for military command in a country where it's know that the very same general lead a secret killing unit, shut down due to civilian deaths. It implies such total indifference and disrespect for the people of Afghanistan.

Along this theme, the appointment of a former Monsanto executive to a be the "food czar" at FDA is similar to McChrystal's appointment in Afghanistan.

The International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) point is a good one. I'd be curious to know if Eikenberry was sticking his neck way out or if he had the backing of those nations.

This administration is fundamentally weak in its approach to just about everything. We get a half-assed health reform proposal that will amount to very little in terms of better health for more people. We get half in - half out policies in Iraq and Afghanistan. It takes them forever to close GITMO. FISA and every other affront to the Constitution still stands. There has been NO effort to reconcile that. The only achievement to date is that the presentation is not that of Bush-Cheney. That's not going to cut it.

Michael Collins November 16, 2009 - 12:38am

Thank you Tina

Troop Levels to Remain Flat in Afghanistan July 1

(Washington Post) This story was written by Bob Woodward.

National security adviser James L. Jones told U.S. military commanders here last week that the Obama administration wants to hold troop levels here flat for now, and focus instead on carrying out the previously approved strategy of increased economic development, improved governance and participation by the Afghan military and civilians in the conflict.

The message seems designed to cap expectations that more troops might be coming, though the administration has not ruled out additional deployments in the future. Jones was carrying out directions from President Obama, who said recently, "My strong view is that we are not going to succeed simply by piling on more and more troops."

"This will not be won by the military alone," Jones said in an interview during his trip. "We tried that for six years." He also said: "The piece of the strategy that has to work in the next year is economic development. If that is not done right, there are not enough troops in the world to succeed."

Jones delivered his message after a 30-minute briefing by Marine Brig. Gen. Lawrence D. Nicholson, who commands 9,000 Marines here, nearly half the new deployments Obama has sent to Afghanistan.

The day before in Kabul, Jones delivered the same message to Gen. Stanley A. McChrystal, the new overall commander in Afghanistan. McChrystal has undertaken a 60-day review designed to address all the issues in the war. In addition, Jones has told Secretary of Defense Robert M. Gates and Adm. Michael Mullen, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, that they should focus on implementing the current strategy, completing the review and getting more Afghan forces involved in the fight before requesting additional U.S. troops for Afghanistan.

Michael Collins November 15, 2009 - 11:41pm

USAID hasn't the staff or the consultants to do significant work in Afghanistan. That leaves DOD. Under Rumsfeld Defense certainly expanded into the development field, treading completely over State Department's turf. But this was work focused on Iraq. Besides hiring staff and consultants, Defense turned the marines and soldiers into engineers, contractors, builders, teachers - whatever seemed to be necessary. When it came to building schools, bridges, offices, etc., Defense has created a terrible reputation for shoddy work.

This is not the model, therefore, for achieving success in Afghanistan, especially after so many wasted years. Maybe the only option is to turn to the UN and World Bank and EC for help.

Numerian November 16, 2009 - 12:17am

Maybe you hit on the "sane" factions exit strategy - the one that Karzai's stolen election nixed. Put in a decent government with some support and have NATO supplement the US presence with real economic assistance.

I can't help but think that the success of Pakistan's current effort against the Taliban has some role in thinking we can get out without leaving a total mess. Unlike some recent incomprehensible recent news stories, Eikenberry said this before Congress:

"Pakistan faces similar internal challenges, including militant extremism that grows in ungoverned space. Pakistan is working hard to address the growing threat of Talibanization within its own borders, as well as contributing extensively to the global war on terror. Pakistan’s military and security forces have taken significant casualties against the same enemy that we in Afghanistan face." General Karl Eikenberry, Congress, Feb 2007

Michael Collins November 16, 2009 - 1:02am

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