The Petraeus Testimony is a Propaganda War on Americans
WASHINGTON
(
Rep
Mike Honda
(D-Calif.)
March 17,
2011
―
Today, we
will spend
roughly $325
million
fighting in
Afghanistan.
Twenty
million
dollars was
spent just
during Gen.
David
Petraeus's
testimony to
Congress
this
morning.
This month,
we are on
track to
spend more
than $10
billion in
Afghanistan.
This year,
we expect to
spend $120
billion
fighting the
war there.
And for
what?
In the last
year, we had
the highest
number of
U.S.
casualties,
the biggest
single-year
spike in
insurgent
attacks, the
most
devastating
of Afghan
civilian
deaths (an
air strike
on nine kids
gathering
wood), an
Afghan
majority
that says
their basic
security and
basic
services
have
worsened
substantially
and majority
populations
in the
United
States and
Afghanistan
that want
the troops
to leave.
Ten years
into this
war, what do
we have to
show it?
Every two or
three years,
the Pentagon
comes up
with a new
strategy to
justify
another
round of
funding and
forces.
Their latest
strategy
arms local
villagers
with cash
and weapons.
We are
calling it
the "Afghan
Local
Police." But
it's nothing
more than a
U.S.
commander
handing out
guns and
cash at his
or her
discretion.
We're
rolling this
out
nationally
there, with
potentially
disastrous
consequences
― pitting
tribe
against
tribe and
filling the
coffers of
some former,
existing and
future
warlords
with more
ways to
fight each
other and
us.
It is a
recipe for
disaster,
not success.
Is it a
surprise,
then, to
learn
psychological
operations
were used on
U.S.
senators
during their
visits to
Afghanistan,
as revealed
by Rolling
Stone
magazine?
Was the
Pentagon's
war strategy
so
ineffectual
a propaganda
war was
required?
The Defense
Department
is likely to
counter by
saying we
are finally
finding the
right
strategy, we
finally have
the right
general in
charge and
we finally
have more
troops on
the ground.
Petraeus is
likely to
suggest now
is the
critical
moment where
we can tip
the balance
in our
favor; we
are winning
the locals
hearts and
minds, and
we need time
to give the
latest
strategy a
chance to
work.
Others in
Washington
chime in
with
commitments
to keep
troops in
Afghanistan
long after
2014. My
Republican
colleagues
on the
Senate side
are likely
to offer
plans for
permanent
bases.
Amid this
absolute
ambiguity of
goals and
objectives,
there is
remarkably
little
oversight
and
evaluation
of war
strategy and
war spending
that
justifies
any of this.
This is
particularly
appalling at
a time when
the
Republicans
are cutting
every
possibly
dollar of
domestic
spending and
killing
critical
education,
health care
and
workforce
programs
that cost
pennies
compared to
the billions
wasted in
Afghanistan.
This double
standard is
indefensible.
The way
forward, for
those who
are serious
about
tackling
U.S.
security
threats ― by
actors who
are
increasingly
agile,
mobile and
amorphous ―
must include
some
reflection
of best
practices
(what's
working,
what's not)
and some
recognition
of limited
financial
and human
resources.
In doing so,
we must come
to realize a
heavy
military,
air and navy
footprint is
ineffective
in dealing
with
guerrilla-like
warfare and
financially
unsustainable
if we want
to address
threats in
more than
two
countries ―
which is
likely,
given the
unrest in
North Africa
and the
Middle East.
We must come
to realize,
as the Rand
Corporation
has pointed
out
policing,
intelligence
and
negotiations
― all
critically
underfunded
and
underdeveloped
in
Afghanistan
― is what
works best
in
undermining
and
dismantling
threats of
this nature.
But this is
just the
sort of move
discouraged
by the
defense
industry ―
which
prefers
big-ticket
military
equipment,
like the
Joint Strike
Fighter.
We must
recognize to
protect
vulnerable
populations
from further
instability
we should
address
their basic
human needs.
The fact
Iraqis are
protesting
the lack of
basic
services,
corrupt
political
leadership
and
non-inclusive
government,
shows how
little
priority we
gave to this
in the last
eight years.
We leave
Iraq not
much better
than we
found it ―
after
spending
hundreds of
billions of
dollars on
an
ill-begotten
war and an
ill-guided
strategy.
We are
making the
same mistake
in
Afghanistan,
at a price
tag that
makes
Republican
CR cuts pale
in
comparison.
When will we
learn? After
we've
completely
broken the
bank, spent
trillions of
deficit-funded
dollars, and
drilled
deeper into
debt?
If
Republicans
care about
fiscal
sustainability
and economic
security of
our country,
then these
wars must
not be
protected
from their
pernicious
purview.
Because
these wars
are making
us less
secure, not
more.
Adm. Mike
Mullen,
chairmen of
the Joint
Chiefs of
Staff, was
right: The
biggest
threat to
our national
security is
our debt.
Now if the
Pentagon
would just
be willing
to do
something
about it, we
might
actually see
a different
defense
strategy
abroad and a
different
defense
budget here
at home.
Rep Mike
Honda (D-Calif.)
is the
co-chairman
of the
Congressional
Progressive
Caucus's
Taskforce on
Peace and
Security.