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September 23, 2009

Afghan Strategy: Hell If I Know

McChrystal bombing.jpg

It’s one of those images — this one released almost three weeks ago — that picks up more relevance by the day.

In the photo, we see U.S. commander in Afghanistan, Stanley McChrystal, alongside Rear Admiral Gregory J. Smith, NATO’s director of communications, trying to understand (while dramatizing that process to the media) how a U.S. airstrike managed to kill up to 70 civilians outside Kunduz earlier this month.

While Stanley and Greg are focused on why an attack on a few Taliban-hijacked fuel tankers went so wrong, however, the more enduring feature here involves the soldier on the left. In the larger sense — especially now that Stanley has formally and quite publicly called for a troop surge, and the Commander-in-Chief has just as publicly aired his second thoughts — the map (as well as McChrystal’s expression) comes to symbolize how dislocated the mission is overall.

(image: Anja Niedringhaus/A.P. outside Kunduz, Afghanistan, Saturday, Sept. 5, 2009)

  • http://dickdurata.blogspot.com Dick Durata

    When do they get out of their PJs?

  • jtfromBC

    What does Ann Jones know that Stanley McChrystal is unable or unwilling to acknowledge. http://original.antiwar.com/engelhardt/2009/09/20/us-or-them-in-afghanistan/
    Invisible Men
    … Although in Washington they may talk about the 90,000 soldiers in the Afghan National Army, no one has reported actually seeing such an army anywhere in Afghanistan. When 4,000 U.S. Marines were sent into Helmand province in July to take on the Taliban in what is considered one of its strongholds, accompanying them were only about 600 Afghan security forces, some of whom were police. Why, you might ask, didn’t the ANA, 90,000 strong after eight years of training and mentoring, handle Helmand on its own? No explanation has been offered. American and NATO officers often complain that Afghan army units are simply not ready to “operate independently,” but no one ever speaks to the simple question: Where are they?

  • charlie

    It seems that whenever a military is out of ideas the answer is “more troops!”. have we learned nothing?