Baghdad Redux?
By Jayne Lyn Stahl
Nearly 70% of Americans agree with the new administration’s decision to add another 17,000 troops in Afghanistan, according to today’s Washington Post, bringing the additional number of U.S. forces in that country to 47,000 on Obama’s watch.
While an almost equal number of Americans, 60%, said that we lost more than we gained by the occupation, and plunder, of Iraq, an astonishing 44% still think that Iraq is an integral part of the so-called war on terrorism. And, many also expect greater success to follow a “surge” in Afghanistan as they think it has in Iraq.
One wonders if Kabul will be the next Baghdad with Karachi following close behind. Will the role of the U.S., in this millenium, be that of an empire that profiteers off promoting global instability? Or, will the empire strike back?
It’s hard not to think back to Korea and Vietnam, only substitute Iraq for Korea and Afghanistan for Vietnam. One also can’t help but think of LBJ who followed in the footsteps of a president, JFK, who had designs, and a plan, to end the war, and how LBJ multiplied American presence, and casualties, exponentially, in the name of ending the Communist (read “terrorist”) reign in Southeast Asia.
Any country that is led by its defense department can expect to accomplish little more than giving last rites to its domestic policy.
We’d like to think President Obama will sidestep the roadside bomb, and military quagmire, of Afghanistan, but war being the racket that it is, one can’t help but wonder if that is possible.
This lust for power, in the final analysis, may be all that remains of the human race.


