Obama’s War of 1,000 Cuts
Yes, Afghanistan is now Obama’s War. It was his since inauguration but make no mistake, from last night’s speech, it is clearly his and we can no longer blame Bush for the mess. Obama has now created the recipe for his own disaster:
- First, the military asked for as much as 60,000 troops, Obama gives them half, and
- Second, while Obama says and repeats that his goal is “defined as disrupting, dismantling, and defeating al Qaeda and its extremist allies”, he spends more time Vietnamizing the war with talk of how he’s going to shift the effort (and responsibility of achieving his goal) to the Karzai’s hapless and corrupt government. As he clearly states “these additionalAmerican and international troops will allow us to accelerate handing over responsibility to Afghan forces, and allow us to begin the transfer of our forces out of Afghanistan in July of 2011.”
What does this mean?
Well, Obama spelled that out:
These are the three core elements of our strategy: a military effort to create the conditions for a transition; a civilian surge that reinforces positive action; and an effective partnership with Pakistan.
Unfortunately, Obama never said our goal is to win the war we are now in against the Taliban and Al-Qaeda. He seems only interested in countering them. Does he expect them to wither away as he pulls US troops out? Especially as he’s made clear elsewhere through his spokesman Gibbs that he wants all the troops out by January 2013.
This is a war of 1,000 cuts. Karzai barely controls Kabul, the Taliban have the run of the rest of the rest of the country, and in the middle are US troops with a half-hearted mission. Yes, there are small representative contingents British, German, and other troops but they have even less role that Karzai. It is a war of 1,000 cuts because what is presented is a win by attrition for the Taliban as nothing in Obama’s plans spell out a strategy for the US to win the war – no one is going to surrender, except us in our winless departure. At the end of the war the Afghani government may still control Kabul but the Taliban will very likely still have the run of the rest of the country. Us, we’ll have brought home tens of thousands of US troops on stretchers or in body bags.
McCain reportedly directly challenged Obama on his strategy in a White House meeting before his speech. Sarah Palin, the defacto voice of the Republican Party, writes to note that Obama has come a long ways in responding to her and other’s calls to provide the necessary resources to achieve our goals in Afghanistan. She clearly sees Obama’s move as a starting point and, while appreciating it, states the obvious in her blog:
…fewer troops mean assuming more risk. Talk of an exit date also risks sending the wrong message. We should be in Afghanistan to win, not to set a timetable for withdrawal that signals a lack of resolve to our friends, and lets our enemies believe they can wait us out.
Palin doesn’t reconcile her interpretation of win with Obama’s strategy to instead withdraw but she nevertheless concludes:
As long as we’re in to win, and as long as troop level decisions are based on conditions on the ground and the advice of our military commanders, I support President Obama’s decision.
I am not a politician and not as gracious. Obama cannot sit on the fence in matters of war. If his goals are to win a war – in this case to rout the Taliban and Al-Qaeda – he should so state and commit the troops and resources necessary to do so. If, as it instead appears, he wants to simply contain them to allow a future US withdraw, then he should explain why this serves America’s interests and why any further loss of American blood is not in vain.


Obama has his own Vietnam. I cannot believe we are going to let Obama take us down this path. Fighting a war without the goal of victory and without the necessary resources is criminal. Oh, that’s right, it is just politics and our Senators and Congressmen will tag along.
I like War of a 1,000 Cuts. This is so fitting.
Of course Obama does not plan to win, he’s already set the date for withdraw. He is a defeatist at heart. He shames America and will have the blood of American’s on his hands. If he did not want to win the war, withdraw now, otherwise, send enough troops in to acheive a decisive victory.
Obama’s plan is lame. This is another failure in the making for Obama. Unfortunately, it will come at the cost of American lives.
I hate war and do not like to the US make war but I also am mad about the attacks on the WTC and Pentagon. We cannot let anyone involved get away with these. Iraq was the wrong war, Afghanistan the right war. Bush screwed it up and now Obama seems to be happy making a further mess by getting more American’s killed and then withdrawing. What happened to victory against those who attacked us? Does this have to have a deadline? Fight to win or get out. Obama does us all a disservice with his dithering and now rediculous plan. You got it right, it is now Obama’s war and he’s losing it intentionally.
This is a real gem. You should get this published somewhere beyond your blog where more people can read it.
Obama is destroying America worse than even Bush did. What kind of strategy is throwing thousands of American troops into harm’s way, then pulling them out in 18 months? Beyond dead Americans, what is being accomplished? I worry that Obama real strategy is to destroy America by setting our military and foreign policy up for defeat. What is his vision for America? A world power, a nation in control of and shaping its own destiny, or just a broken nation among a bunch of other loser has beens? Does he hate America so much as to sell us out?
It’s great to see people freely expressing their opinion.Thanks for your insights.