Politics

Analysis: Obama has 2 narratives on Afghanistan

ANNE GEARAN and ROBERT BURNS
Thursday, 03-May-2012

 

WASHINGTON: In President Barack Obama's twin narratives, the United States is both leaving Afghanistan and staying there.

The different messages are meant for different audiences, one at home and one away. As Obama's brief, symbolic visit to Afghanistan on Wednesday made clear, the more important audience is American voters fed up with a war that will be in its 12th year on Election Day in November.

The president flew in secret to sign a long-awaited security compact with Afghanistan. It was after midnight in Kabul when the signing took place, and 4 a.m. there when Obama addressed Americans in a specially arranged speech at 7:30 p.m. Washington time on network television. By the time most Afghans woke up, Obama was gone.

"My fellow Americans," Obama said from Bagram Air Field, "we have traveled through more than a decade under the dark cloud of war. Yet here, in the predawn darkness of Afghanistan, we can see the light of a new day on the horizon."

The backdrop of armored troop carriers matched Obama's message of praise for U.S. forces who fought and died in Afghanistan, but it was an odd fit for what followed — a direct appeal to American optimism and self-interest in an election year.

"As we emerge from a decade of conflict abroad and economic crisis at home, it is time to renew America," Obama said.

The agreement pledges ongoing U.S. support for Afghanistan after 88,000 U.S. combat forces leave. The pact envisions wide-ranging U.S. involvement in Afghan economic and security affairs for a decade, if only as an adviser or underwriter. It gives Afghans a promise of more roads and schools and support for the uneven Afghan fighting forces.

It gives the U.S. a security foothold in the country to bolster Afghan forces for their continued fight against Taliban-led militants or al-Qaida, and to keep an eye on neighboring Iran. Obama's emphasis on a long-term U.S. commitment to Afghanistan reflects a lingering worry about the threat of a Taliban resurgence after 2014, when U.S. and NATO combat forces are scheduled to leave.

The Taliban claimed responsibility for attacks that rocked Kabul a few hours later. Officials and witnesses said a suicide car bomber and Taliban militants disguised in burqas attacked a compound housing hundreds of foreigners in the Afghan capital, killing seven.

With the agreement signed Wednesday in Afghanistan, the U.S. also has in mind the strategic significance of preserving a military partnership on Iran's eastern frontier, even if it does not include permanent U.S. bases.

Even after the U.S. combat mission is concluded in 2014, it is likely that thousands of U.S. troops will remain for some years to conduct counterterrorism strikes and otherwise train and advise Afghan forces, and help the Afghans collect and exploit intelligence on insurgents and other military targets.

The agreement was long sought by the U.S.-backed government of Afghan President Hamid Karzai, the perpetually skittish leader who has publicly voiced fears of what would befall his country if the United States quickly packed up and left.

"I recognize that many Americans are tired of war," Obama said in the speech. "But we must finish the job we started in Afghanistan and end this war responsibly."

The larger rationale of the agreement was to reassure Afghan leaders that the United States would not repeat the mistake it made following the Soviet withdrawal from Afghanistan in 1989. Then, Washington withdrew support for anti-Soviet militia forces in Afghanistan and set the stage for Taliban rule. The Taliban then allowed al-Qaida to use the country to plan the terror attacks of Sept. 11, 2001.

In his speech, Obama turned the signing of the promise to stay in Afghanistan into a vehicle for his other promise — to go.

The signing was a quick and businesslike affair at Karzai's palace in Kabul. There were pleasantries, but no pageantry. There was also no opportunity for Karzai to make one of the off-message demands or denunciations of U.S. behavior that have exasperated U.S. officials in the past, even when they acknowledged Karzai had a point.

"The Afghan people will understand that the United States will stand by them," Obama said, with Karzai seated beside him at the signing table. "They will know that the United States can achieve our goals of destroying al-Qaida and denying it a safe haven, but at the same time we have the capacity to wind down this war and usher in a new era of peace here in Afghanistan."

With that, it was back to the sprawling U.S. air base outside the capital to underscore that last point, that he will close down the war and bring U.S. forces home.

By alighting in Afghanistan on the anniversary of the raid that killed Sept. 11 mastermind Osama bin Laden, Obama was also making an unsubtle show of the power of the presidency. Not only is he the commander in chief who can finally end what many Americans see as an unwinnable war — Obama was telling Americans that he is the commander in chief who bagged the biggest bad guy in America's recent history.

"This time of war began in Afghanistan, and this is where it will end," Obama said in the speech.

Republicans warily saluted Obama's war-zone trip but accused him of craven politics nonetheless.

"Clearly this trip is campaign-related," said Sen. Jim Inhofe, a senior member of the Senate Armed Services Committee. "This trip to Afghanistan is an attempt to shore up his national security credentials, because he has spent the past three years gutting our military," a reference to tightening defense budgets.

Obama's presumed Republican opponent, Mitt Romney, was in New York accusing the president of politicizing the fleeting unity that came with bin Laden's death.

Stephen Biddle, a defense analyst at the Council on Foreign Relations, said Obama will be hard pressed to convince Afghans or Pakistanis that the United States will remain an effective security partner once most U.S. troops have gone home.

"The trouble is, he is talking to audiences that have a very strong belief that the United States is going to abandon them," Biddle said in a phone interview.
___

Anne Gearan and Robert Burns cover national security issues for The Associated Press.

An AP News Analysis

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


 



    

Top Stories

Baghdad bombings claim 46 lives

BAGHDAD: Two bombings near a Sunni mosque north of Baghdad and at one at funeral in south killed at least 46 people and...

Pak should take serious notice of Altaf’s remarks: UK HC

LONDON: British High Commissioner (HC), Adam Thomson has said that UK police have received countless complaints against...

Gilchrist damages RCB's chances

BANGALORE: Adam Gilchrist’s unbeaten 85 off 54 balls, helped by Azhar Mahmood's 61 off 41, stunned Royal Challengers Ba...

Sindh: More than 154,000 polling staff to perform election duty

KARACHI: More than 154,000 staff will perform election duty at 14,980 polling stations across Sindh province, media repo...

Curfew in Hangu after attack on JUI-F rally kills ten

HANGU: A curfew was imposed in Hangu district after an explosion targeting a Jamiat Ulema-i-Islam-Fazl (JUI-F) candidate...

Bangladesh builds lead as it seeks to level series

Bangladesh take lead to 272 runs by stumps on Day 3HARARE: Bangladesh bowled Zimbabwe out for 282 and built a 272-run le...

Error-strewn Murray in shock Monaco exit

MONTE CARLO, Monaco, April 18, 2013 (AFP) - Roger Federer will return to second in the ATP standings next week after And...

Nawaz for level playing field for all in election

LAHORE: Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) chief Nawaz Sharif has said that all the political parties should be provid...

Boston police retract report of third explosion

BOSTON, Massachusetts: Boston police said Monday that what was initially thought to have been a third explosion in the c...

Govt orders to beef up security of ECP offices, political leaders

ISLAMABAD: The Interior Ministry has decided to tighten security of Election Commission offices and political leaders. A...

EC changes tribunal for hearing appeals against Sharif brothers

ISLAMABAD: The Election Commission of Pakistan (ECP) has changed the tribunal for hearing the appeals against Pakistan M...

Governor announces cash reward for CID police

KARACHI: Sindh Governor Dr. Ishratul Ebad Khan has announced Rs2 million cash reward for the CID personnel over successf...

Two bodies found at Kharan, Hub

HUB: Two persons’ bodies were found at Kharan on Saturday morning here, media reported. Awaran S.P. Muhammad Rafiq Lasi ...

Violation of contracts by Libyan firms

Embassy takes serious notice of Pakistanis complaints Islamabad: The Head of Mission of Embassy of Libya in Islamabad h...

Knight Riders vs Rajasthan Royals: IPL

JAIPUR: Kolkata Knight Riders won the toss and elected to field against Rajasthan Royals in their IPL clash at the Sawai...

'World's greatest' chef Adria seeks digital legacy

HONG KONG: From foie gras noodles and liquid olives to air baguettes and mimetic peanuts, much of what elBulli chef Ferr...

2 killed as police van ambushed in Gujranwala

GUJRANWALA: At least two persons were killed and four others sustained injuries as unknown armed people opened fire on p...

Dollar firms in Asia

TOKYO: The dollar firmed against the yen and euro in Asia Wednesday, boosted by solid US economic data and a bleak outlo...

N Korea hints at reform with new PM

SEOUL In the middle of an escalating military crisis on the Korean peninsula, North Korea's appointment this week of an ...

Weather turns pleasant as rain lash Islamabad, Rawalpindi

ISLAMABAD: Weather turned pleasant in Islamabad and Rawalpindi as twin cities received rain here on Monday. According to...


Feature / Analysis

  • Heat deaths in Manhattan to rise

    Killing season may push into spring and fall, says study. Residents...

    Read More »

  • Migratory “Flyways” Decimated by Human Expansion

    UNITED NATIONS: Migratory birds, which play an important role in the ...

    Read More »

  • بیڑیاں

    کراچی اپنی...

    Read More »

  • بجلی کا مسئلہ بڑی آسانی سے حل ہو سکتا ہے

    نہ صرف لوڈ &...

    Read More »


Opinion

  • How China chokes its neighbors

    Asia’s latest diplomatic flashpoint? Air pollution. FUKUOKA, Japan ...

    Read More »

  • China: High and dry

    Water shortages put a brake on economic growth Wang Fuguo, a 63...

    Read More »

  • اسرائیلی ریاست تاریخی نشان عبرت

    کوئی ہما...

    Read More »

  • میاں صاحب ذرا سنبھل کر!

    پاکستان ...

    Read More »