Breaking from Newsmax.com
US Military Deaths in Afghanistan Hit 2,000
KABUL, Afghanistan — The killing of an American
serviceman in an exchange of fire with allied Afghan soldiers pushed
U.S. military deaths in the war to 2,000, a cold reminder of the perils
that remain after an 11-year conflict that now garners little public
interest at home.
The toll has climbed steadily in recent months with a spate of
attacks by Afghan army and police — supposed allies — against American
and NATO troops. That has raised troubling questions about whether
countries in the U.S.-led coalition in Afghanistan will achieve their
aim of helping the government in Kabul and its forces stand on their own
after most foreign troops depart in little more than two years.
Taliban resurgence in Afghanistan: History repeating itself?
English: Second Anglo-Afghan War Polski: Druga wojna anglo-afgańska. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
As America prepares to withdraw from Afghanistan, the Taliban seems to
be reasserting itself. Witness yesterday's attack on the base, where
our commanding general was visiting, damaging his plane.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/asia_pacific/top-us-generals-plane-damaged-in-afghanistan-attack/2012/08/21/94d3cd7c-eb74-11e1-9ddc-340d5efb1e9c_story.html
Afghanistan: History Repeats Itself
James Ottavio Castagnera
Sep. 30, 2009
The generals are demanding more troops and the president appears
prepared to oblige. For a sixty-something American male, this sounds
ominously like Vietnam, Westmoreland, and LBJ. For historians versed in
Afghanistan’s bloody modern history, the echoes sound louder and
deeper.
Britain fought three Afghan wars in the 19th and early 20th centuries,
all aimed primarily at halting hostile expansions southward toward
Imperial India.
The first Anglo-Afghan War (1839-1842) was highlighted by the massacre of a British army. Occupying Kabul,
but surrounded and hopelessly outnumbered, 4500 military personnel and
some 12,000 camp followers departed the city under a supposed promise
of safe passage on January 1, 1842. Struggling through a frozen
landscape and constantly harassed by hostile tribesmen, the entire
contingent was either wiped out or enslaved with the sole exception of Dr. William Brydon, an assistant surgeon of the British East India Company.
The Brits rallied its forces, replaced incompetent commanders and
returned to Afghanistan, cutting a swath of destruction all the way
back to Kabul. They then, wisely returned home to India. In the
succeeding years the Russian creep toward the gem in Victoria’s crown
continued largely unabated by Britain’s Afghan efforts.
The Second Anglo-Afghan War
(1878-80) was precipitated by the arrival of Russian envoys in Kabul.
When a British demand for similar diplomatic recognition went
unanswered, the Brits again sent occupying forces into Afghanistan. With
the empire’s troops occupying most key locations in the country, the
Afghan ruler was forced to sign a treaty. However, on September 3, 1879,
the British diplomatic resident in Kabul was assassinated. Back
trudged the troops over the high passes, occupying Kabul yet again and
forcing the abdication of the Afghan ruler. Although this had the
appearance of a victory, arguably wiping away the humiliations of 1842,
the Brits realized that holding the city did nothing to control the
hostile tribes outside its walls.
In 1880, the British government changed and the incumbent Liberals
abandoned the so-called Forward Policy. Britain once again left Afghans
to their own devices. Meanwhile, an estimated 2500 British and
colonial troops and some 1500 Afghan fighters had died in this second
confrontation.
The Third Anglo-Afghan War lasted a mere three months, commencing in
May 1919 and ending in an armistice on August 8th. The brief clash was
precipitated by an Afghan incursion into British territory. This was
repulsed but the two forces fought to a standstill. Some Afghan cities,
including Kabul, were bombed. The Afghan army
pulled back and the armistice was signed. No clear winner emerged from
the brief struggle, but British territory was cleared of Afghan
troops. Thus, for all practical purposes, ended British military
adventures in Afghanistan. Three armed conflicts across 80 years
resulted in nothing more than the maintenance of a fragile status quo on
the empire’s northwestern frontier.
Fast forward to 1979. Deployment of the late-great Soviet Union’s
40th Army into Afghanistan on Christmas Eve began the nine-year agony
that finally ended with a Russian withdrawal commencing on May 15,
1988. Anyone who has read George Crile’s splendid book, Charlie Wilson’s War (2003), knows that the CIA
played an important role in enabling the Afghan freedom fighters to
bring down Soviet helicopters as a rate that emasculated the Russians
of battlefield mobility and left their armor and other superior
ordinance to the tender mercies of the mujahideen. Chopper losses
totaled 333, along with another 118 aircraft of various types downed.
Tank casualties totaled 147. The Soviet Union admitted to the loss of
13,836 troops. Other observers place the figure closer to 14,500. More
than 600,000 Russian troops served in Afghanistan (though no more than
100,000 at any given time), during this doomed adventure.
Concludes Crile, “The story of (Congressman) Charlie Wilson and the CIA’s secret war in Afghanistan is an important, missing chapter of our recent past…. [T]he terrible truth is that the group of sleeping lions that the United States aroused may well have inspired an entire generation of militant young Muslims to believe that the moment is theirs.”
And, now, here we are, entering our ninth year in Afghanistan, having
launched Operation Enduring Freedom on October 7, 2001. And our
commanders are singing the same old song sung by William Westmoreland in
the sixties: just give me more troops and I’ll bring home a victory.
We all know George Santayana’s famous statement: “Those who cannot
learn from history are doomed to repeat it.” Sad to say, while we all
give that pearl of wisdom frequent lip service, we cannot seem to
follow it, once the boots are on the ground.
(Jim Castagnera is a university attorney and author of Al Qaeda Goes to College [Praeger 2009].)
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