US Army Afghanistan
© AFP 2015/ Brendan SMIALOWSKI
The United States has failed to draw correct conclusions from its recent history if Obama decided to keep 5,500 troops in Afghanistan past 2016 amid a bitter internal conflict, which Washington with all its military might has been unable to end for over a decade.

The decision not to withdraw, however, was probably inevitable, Paul R. Pillar asserted.

"There is too much of an expectation that when internal violence prevails in a country in which the United States has had as much past involvement as it has had in Afghanistan, the United States should have its military forces on the scene to try to do something about it, no matter how dim are the prospects for accomplishing much there," he noted in an opinion piece for the National Interest.

This is a rather recent bad habit, which the US developed in the 21 century, and it is a costly one.

The consequences of stationing US troops in Middle Eastern countries torn by internal animosities include among other things casualties, ill will among locals and the rising terrorist threat fueled by the ill will. These implications, Pillar warned, could render Washington's military engagement counterproductive and in many cases they already have.

In addition, the Obama administration will have to answer several key questions, which Washington has not touched upon so far: how long this new phase will last and how many US boots on the ground in Afghanistan the mission (whatever it might be) will require? Many worry that this stage could become a protracted if not a permanent fixture fueling fears that Washington is engaged in an endless war.


Comment: It's already the second longest war in US history after Vietnam, and since it began the US has waged a war of genocide against the entire region:

Pillar warned against using one of "dangerous and misleading notions lingering from the Iraq War" to validate the White House decision to prolong its engagement in Afghanistan. It boils down to the following:
"The ending of US military expedition [in Iraq] in 2011 was somehow responsible for messes in Iraq that followed, ... the messes would have been prevented by extending the US military presence in Iraq, and ... Mr. Obama in effect acknowledged a mistake by later reinserting some US troops there."

Comment: This argument skillfully evades the fact that the US is responsible for the messes in the region, that the US deliberately creates them, and that the US has no intention of 'cleaning them up'.


In the absence of careful in-depth analysis of America's two military campaigns in the Middle East, Washington could - deliberately or unknowingly - cement its recently acquired bad habit.


"The United States has already been sliding into endless war, and this sort of thinking, including especially the myth of a missed victory opportunity in Iraq, has been greasing the slope," Pillar concluded.