US and Afghanistan: War Lost, Empire Prevailing?
Sottotitolo:
Unless the U.S. can accept a more modest role in a multipolar world, more Afghanistan-type misadventures are inevitable.
Yes, America’s pull-out from Afghanistan was ignominious and clumsy. So it is not a surprise that it has generated a sandstorm of domestic recrimination and handwringing over why the war was “lost.” Plenty of blame to go around Identifying the particular cause of the Afghanistan debacles is obviously useful. But the frenzied search for scapegoats is driven by US elites’ political need. They must now explain why, after 20 years of fighting – and equipping, training and subsidizing its Afghan allies — the world’s most powerful, and expensive military was defeated by an outnumbered collection of religious fundamentalists who don’t even have an air force. The answer can be found in a wider number of realities: Reality #1: Empires do not have to win peripheral wars To see why, one must start with the basic fact that the United States of America is a global empire. The U.S. military budget is larger than that of the next 11 highest spending nations combined. It has at least 800 foreign military installations around the world. In 2016 it had “special forces” operating in almost 140 countries. In many foreign capitals, the most important political figure is the U.S. ambassador. Like all empires in history, the U.S. does not have to “win” every war on its periphery. Its military’s primary geopolitical purpose is to demonstrate the empire’s capacity and willingness to inflict murderous punishment on those at its edges that who challenge it. Reality #2: The price of empire The war cost the U.S. $2.3 trillion over 20 years. But that was less than 1% of its cumulative GDP. In contrast, the fighting has left Afghanistan an economic basket case. The lesson will not be lost on the “victorious” Taliban, now faced with the enormous task of rebuilding their devastated country. Neither Russia nor China will bail them out. As the Communist Vietnamese understood before them, they cannot get the capital they need from an American-dominated global financial system and remain hostile to the United States. Reality #3: We win some, we lose some Under these circumstances, the U.S. is always choosing sides in local disputes, and being drawn into civil conflicts. Our military has intervened in other countries some 190 separate times since the end of World War II, with the bulk of interventions coming after the disappearance of America’s only imperial rival – the Soviet Union. We win some — as in Panama, the Dominican Republic and Granada. And we lose some — as in Vietnam, Somalia, Lebanon, and Iraq. Reality #4: Empire? What Empire? There is always a next time. So far, our delusional political discourse saves both the politicians and the public from facing reality. Thus, inconvenient history – such as the U.S. support that brought the Taliban to power in the 1980s – is edited out of the current debate. Reality #5: Complicit U.S. media “The great thing about the American empire,” wrote Niall Ferguson, an outspoken supporter of U.S. imperialism, “is that so many Americans disbelieve in its existence.” Reality #6: Imperialism’s mounting domestic costs It undercuts America’s own internal re-building needs, as well as the need for international cooperation with the empire’s adversaries, like Russia and China, in order to address global warming, pandemics and mass migration. Moreover, America’s ability to impose crippling sanctions on recalcitrant states is waning as its economic importance in the world shrinks. At home, voters have become skeptical about the value of playing policeman, judge and executioner to the world. By 62% to 35%, a majority say the war in Afghanistan was not worth it. Conclusion Biden has said that there will be time after the withdrawal is complete to debate the lessons of the Afghan experience. Fair enough, but so far, there is little indication that Washington is ready to question its commitment to global hegemony. Unless it can accept a more modest role in a multipolar world, more Afghanistan -type misadventures are inevitable. Meanwhile, America’s economic future and the future of its own democracy are increasingly at risk Jeff Faux
Jeff Faux, Member of the Editorial Board of Insight, is the founder and former president of the Economic Policy Institute and the author of the new book "The Servant Economy: Where America's Elite is Sending the Middle Class". Insight - Free thinking for global social progress
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