When dealing in matters of war and peace, shouldn’t a president sort of know what he or she is doing? But that’s not Donald Trump’s way.
On February 29, he grandly announced that he had cut a peace deal to end America’s deadly, costly war against Afghanistan’s repressive Taliban. But—oops!—only days later, the war suddenly restarted.
What happened is that poor Donald is simply in over his head in dealing with the complex and perplexing collection of regional warlords who make up the Taliban’s fierce and treacherous fighting force.
Indeed, just hours before his peace accord literally blew up in his face, Trump bragged that he had talked personally with “the leader of the Taliban” and been assured that they wanted peace.
But it turns out that the leader of the Taliban delegation was a career politician who had long ago had a falling out with the warlords. As the CIA’s former chief of counterterrorism could have told Trump, if asked, the contingent of dealmakers he was talking to “are largely disconnected from and disrespected by the Taliban’s senior leadership.”
But, as we’ve learned, it’s not this president’s style to listen to people smarter and more knowledgeable than he is. So that’s why his peace deal lasted three days.
The larger lesson, though, is that brute military force by an outside power—whether in Afghanistan, Vietnam, or wherever next—is not a path to victory, much less peace. For years, even as Bush, Obama, Trump, and their political enablers were bragging that they were bringing democracy to Afghanistan, they were jiving and outright lying.
As one strategic Army planner has now admitted: “We didn’t know what we were doing.”
Tell that to the thousands who’ve died from the ignorance and lies of our so-called leaders.
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OtherWords columnist Jim Hightower is a radio commentator, writer, and public speaker. He’s also the editor of the populist newsletter, The Hightower Lowdown. Distributed by OtherWords.org.
“Why is there still fighting? Because our leaders don’t understand Afghanistan—and keep using military force when it won’t do any good.”
Do you take us for fools, Jim? These “leaders”, especially top military brass routinely take lucrative jobs or lobby for the biggest defense contractors, which means, in case you had not figured it out yet, that as Medal of Honor winner Smedley Butler wrote (free on line at Gutenberg.org) “War is a Racket.”