June 20, 2014

Obama repeats his Iraq mistake in Afghanistan

By Vance Serchuk

As the Obama administration grapples with how to respond to the terrorist takeover of northern Iraq, one consequence of the crisis should be clear: There is an urgent need to reassess the White House’s recently announced plans for Afghanistan — specifically, its pledge that all U.S. troops will be withdrawn by the end of 2016, other than a small contingent attached to our embassy in Kabul.

Of course, Afghanistan is not Iraq; there are key differences between the two countries. But there are also parallels and lessons from America’s experience in both wars that we ignore at our peril.

As with Iraq three years ago, the White House has justified the proposed Afghan pullout as “ending” one of the wars it inherited. But as in Iraq, the planned exit will do no such thing; rather, if carried forward, the complete departure of U.S. forces threatens to set the stage for the unraveling of everything our military has fought and sacrificed to achieve in Afghanistan, just as we now confront in Iraq

In particular, the Obama administration’s plan for Afghanistan significantly raises the risk that al-Qaeda and its affiliates will be able to regenerate in the region where the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, were plotted, with dangerous implications for the security of the United States and its allies.

Read the full piece at The Washington Post

    • Commentary
    • The National Interest
    • September 17, 2017
    Here's How Private Contractors Can Help Win the Afghan War

    The president has declared a “path forward” for Afghanistan. Given that the United States is at a nexus for strategic change, might there be an increased role for private cont...

    By CDR Daniel G. Straub, USN

    • Commentary
    • Fortune
    • August 23, 2017
    The Only Way Trump’s Afghanistan Plan Would Make Sense

    Monday night, President Donald Trump unveiled his long-awaited plan for Afghanistan. Trump admitted his instinct was to withdraw from the war-torn country, where U.S. forces h...

    By Stephen Tankel

    • Commentary
    • Slate
    • August 23, 2017
    What Works in Afghanistan

    There is a cliché about Afghanistan that custom dictates must be included in every TV appearance, column, and book about that land: It is the “graveyard of empires.” From Alex...

    By Phillip Carter

    • Commentary
    • The Wall Street Journal
    • August 22, 2017
    Trump Learns From America’s Failures in Afghanistan

    Since the end of the Cold War, one of the unfortunate patterns in American foreign policy has been the tendency of new presidents to denounce their predecessors’ approach to t...

    By Vance Serchuk

View All Reports View All Articles & Multimedia