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Home arrow Politics arrow Regions arrow Winning Hearts and Minds in Afghanistan
Winning Hearts and Minds in Afghanistan
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Written by Michelle Price   
Friday, 30 July 2010
ImageThe grim truth of war remains: hearts and minds are lost in the campaign to get the enemy by the balls

Perhaps the most disturbing narrative to emerge from the 92,000 documents leaked earlier this week by the WikiLeaks website on the Afghan war, and the most damaging to the coalition, implicates coalition troops in that most unpalatable of acts: war crimes.

As the WikiLeaks founder, Julian Assange claimed at a news conference in London this week, the documents reveal evidence of hundreds of civilian deaths in previously unreported incidents that might technically qualify as war crimes.

It is this that threatens to truly obliterate what vestiges of home-grown popular support for the war remain, particularly in the UK where such support has never occurred naturally but has been generated through the efforts of media outlets such as the Murdoch-owned tabloids and charities such as Help For Heroes.

Among UK popular opinion, the war itself remains a matter of questionable legitimacy, but support for serving troops has traveled a steep trajectory during the past four years and as such helped to buffer the erstwhile Labour government against a potentially fatal surge in anti-war feeling. In the end it was the economy that did for Labour, not the war in Afghanistan. The story of civilian deaths, potential war crimes and the shadowy picture of unaccountable trigger-happy servicemen painted by Assange – which is strongly emphasised in The Guardian's selection of what it says are 300 of the most notable WikiLeak reports – threatens to remove this already waning buffer.

For Assange and the Guardian, the defining conclusion or singular "truth" to be drawn from this classified material is the "everyday squalor" of war. This should not be news to many, and it is certainly not news to the forces fighting in Afghanistan or indeed for those individuals awaiting their homecoming, in whatever form this may eventually take. British Jingoism died in the Flanders fields and few right-minded individuals relish the war or the damage it metes out to all involved, civilians, soldiers, friends and relatives alike. Speak to relatives of UK serving soldiers and it is clear that, particularly among the younger generation, the war is a matter not merely of discomfort but in some instances evident embarrassment.

According to those on the ground in Afghanistan, however, there is a more useful narrative to be drawn from the leak and it is one borne out not only in the content of the reports, but in their style and indeed existence: the coalition forces, most importantly the US and British armed forces, are simply not cut out for insurgency warfare – not merely in Afghanistan but anywhere at all.

Many soldiers emphasize the exceptionality of the unreported civilian deaths in what is otherwise, they stress, a series of mundane internal reports. For the most part, the reports in fact underline the exceedingly high level of accountability that prevails at the lowest levels of the US and British forces, they argue. Report after report consistently details what most onlookers would perceive to be tediously minor details – standard warning shots, dead chickens, slight injuries including grazes and numbness in one hand, car doors accidentally taken off. According to soldiers on the ground, it is the culture and expectation of the British and US forces that incidents of the most trivial nature are logged, and that all operations are approached in a "surgical" manner.

But it is precisely this strong military culture of accountability that makes fighting an unaccountable force such as the Taliban almost impossible, say soldiers, especially amid the broader backdrop of near absolute impunity enjoyed and perpetuated by corrupt local Afghan officials. The Taliban fear no reprisals for getting it wrong, but the coalition forces do. It is an insurmountable asymmetry.

As the newly appointed Gen. David H Petraeus implies in a 24-point manifesto published in Kabul on July 27, this asymmetry should be deployed to the coalition's advantage: it is precisely because Afghanistan suffers from a general accountability vacuum at nearly every level of authority that the coalition forces must act as a responsible example and confront impunity where it arises.

"The Taliban are not the only enemy of the people. The people are also threatened by inadequate governance, corruption and abuse of power – the Taliban's best recruiters," Patreaus writes in the manifesto. But this psychological policy – which forms part of the overarching 'winning hearts and minds' stratagem – has already proved to be a major military disadvantage, as amply demonstrated this summer by the fiasco of so-called 'courageous restraint'.

Masterminded by the now disgraced Gen. Stanley McChrystal, 'courageous restraint' goes beyond the rules of engagement in order to ensure soldiers go to great lengths to minimize civilian casualties, even if this means putting troops in greater danger. The US hopes courageous restraint will address widespread Afghan resentment towards the coalition forces caused by the types of coalition-led casualties highlighted by the WikiLeak.

According to reports from the front line, however, the policy has often made it impossible for coalition forces to engage the enemy, putting troops in extreme danger. It is no coincidence that a growing number of the multiple troop fatalities and injuries occurring this summer have been caused by small arms fire: under courageous restraint troops are not always able to take offensive or even defensive action – and the Taliban know it. Indeed, it remains to be seen if courageous restraint will save many civilian lives since the strategy automatically transforms civilians, already used by the Taliban for cover, into an ever more valuable defense tool – a strategy they need defend to no-one.

In his manifesto, Patreaus seems not to remove but to tweak the policy, which he reportedly believes has not been implemented properly. But this is war by degree and definition and, as such, it is highly unlikely to succeed, troops say. Conventional wars against insurgent forces have only proved successful – as Britain's 1948-1960 coercive campaign in present-day Malaysia demonstrate – at the cost of major civilian casualties, they point out.

But this is rightly unacceptable to the democratically-governed populations watching at home, who wish neither for civilians to be massacred nor, perhaps more to the point, for their sons and husbands to return home as war criminals. The WikiLeaks evidence serves, for the most part, to highlight the strong level of care and accountability that governs military engagement, but it is a care and accountability that will ultimately prove the coalition's downfall.

As such, the WikiLeak affair in its entirety – insomuch as it represents the triumph of transparency, truth and the freedom of information for all, some argue – merely underlines once again the self-limiting nature of democracies and their inability to replicate themselves without transgressing the principles that define them.

But this fundamental dilemma will not end with WikiLeaks or the rushed withdrawal from Afghanistan. According to the US-based Stratfor risk analysis concern, this week France has effectively declared a war of sorts on al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM), a long-established North African militant group which in April kidnapped and last week murdered a French aid worker. Meanwhile, Al Shabaab, the Islamist rebel group which is thought to have links with al Qaeda, this month carried out what is believed to be its first suicide attacks outside its native Somalia, where it is doing its level best to overthrow the decrepit Western-backed Somali government.

There is no shortage of potential future Afghanistans of one kind or another. Assange says the course of the current war needs to change, and he is not alone in this view. As the UK's Conservative-Liberal coalition government undertakes its long-awaited military spending review, some soldiers hope and expect that Afghanistan will in the long-term force a full-scale transformation of the British armed forces and its war-fighting strategy and tactics. But it remains to be seen if the outcome will be to Assange's liking.

Michelle Price is a journalist at global finance and policy magazine
The Banker, a Financial Times publication, where she is responsible for Asia coverage.

Comments (11)add
0
Why Yankees are hated
written by Wolfgang Einstein , August 07, 2010
Just ignore all the rhetorics and go back to basics. The Yankees come with their bombs and bullets. They destroy all your infrastructure, destroy your economy, displace millions of people, and kill and maim hundreds of thousands of your people, then occupy your land. After destroying the country, they put in a meagre effort to build a few schools, a few houses, but leave the rest of the country in ruin. And they wonder why the people of the occupied country hate them! For all the clever people the Americans have, I wonder why they cannot understand this very basic thing. Or maybe the big wigs in Washington do understand, but just pretending not to. The arms manufacturers need to sell more arms. The generals and the politicians want to spend more. And some people need to siphon off some of that money into their own pockets.
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Fox holes
written by Mamakthir , August 05, 2010
Bush has no use for winning any hearts or minds. Just smoke them out of the fox-holes and eliminate the pests.
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Dilemma
written by Mamakthir , August 03, 2010
Afghans have a Dilemma with Yanks. While they have the urge to kill as many Yanks as possible, they also need the Yanks to give all the monetary supports for the Medieval religious narco state to survive.
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Yankee Go Home
written by Hashish , August 03, 2010
The Americans should pack up and go home. Let the Afghans shoot it out among themselves until they come to their senses and learn to live in peace. As for Obama, well if the US put a billion dollars on his head, I think some Afghans or Pakistanis may find it worthwhile to deliver him to Osama on a platter
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Stupid Strategy designed by politicians
written by Yang Yang , August 01, 2010
The politicians send their troops to hostile territory, and ask their troops not to shoot at anything suspicious, but to check and double check and triple check first to see it that guy is really an enemy. Get real. This is not LAPD stuff. The poor soldier boy has no time to check and double check. In a combat zone, it is either you shoot first, or else you will be on your home in a body bag. That is the sad ugly truth of war. The right or wrong can be debated by politicians. But for the soldiers of the opposing sides, it is just a matter of trying to stay alive. The US should just get out of Iraq and Afghanistan. If the USA didn't like Saddam, they should just assassinate him rather than dragged millions of Iraqis into misery. It may be wrong but at least maybe only a few dozen people get hurt instead of millions. If they don't like that bearded Saudi guy in Afghanistan, please just spend their trillions to take him and his team out via their CIA. Don't drag all the Afghans into misery.
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Technology cannot win Hearts and Minds
written by Bam Bam , August 01, 2010
The USA spent trillions and gazillions on arms and other war technology. But yet it could not win over Afghanistan and Iraq. Why? Because the money was used to create weapons to destroy. But they are trying to win hearts and minds, and the weapons were not designed for that. Of course the US weapons can bomb you back to pre-Jurassic era. Therefore the American weapons are best utilized to coerce enemies into behaving for fear of being destroyed. The weapons are useless for occupying a country and at the same time trying to win the occupied people's hearts. Either the US bomb the Afghans off the map, or else get out. As occupiers, everything that goes wrong will be blamed on them.
How many lessons do the Americans need? Vietnam? Iraq? Afghanistan? What's next? Iran? North Korea?
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Winners
written by Nasdaq7 , August 01, 2010
The generals should be reporting to Obama how many schools they have built, roads, homes, hospitals, water supply, electricity supply, telephones, mobile phones, newspapers they have added for the month. Not how many IEDs were found. How far democracy and liberty has spread. Those are the factors that turn the "hearts and minds" in this type of war.
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Destruction and Death in Afghanistan
written by nawawi , July 31, 2010
No matter what, the US is fighting a losing war in Afghanistan. For whatever excuses the US may have given, this war in plain words is illegal. It is an unprovoked invasion by a warmonger of a sovereign poor nation. It is just incomprehensible why with all the military might and sophisticated advanced modern equipment, the US is still unable to win the war and with all the money spent could not bring development to Afghanistan.The whole affair is just a money making machine for a few.
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...
written by Michael Kalmanovitz , July 31, 2010
Failing to learn the lessons of Afghan history
Guardian, Letters
Thursday 29 July 2010

Like Geoff Simmons (Letters, 27 July), we applaud WikiLeaks for exposing the bloody war in Afghanistan, and the Guardian for publishing it (Afghanistan war logs: Massive leak of secret files exposes truth of occupation, 26 July). The UK affection for US warmongering goes hand in hand with Cameron's further development of a war economy (India to sign £500m deal to buy Hawk jets, 25 July). Is this why the government wants to end universal jurisdiction, which allows the arrest of suspected war criminals regardless of where their crimes were committed? To end wars and economies based on war, we need brave insiders – like Bradley Manning, the US intelligence officer who allegedly blew the whistle, and Joe Glenton, the first soldier in Europe just released from prison for refusing to serve in Afghanistan.

But our responsibility outside is to protect whistleblowers and refuseniks. To his credit WikiLeaks founder Assange has hired lawyers to defend Manning (WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange breaks cover but will avoid America, 21 June). There are many other ways to show support. Pick one.

Michael Kalmanovitz
www.refusingtokill.net

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Deterrent
written by MichaelP , July 30, 2010
Meanwhile the UK is to spend trillions on successors to Trident and NATO jet fighters/bombers that are completely useless in conflicts like Afghanistan.
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Deterrent
written by MichaelP , July 30, 2010
Meanwhile the UK is to spend trillions on successors to Trident and NATO jet fighters/bombers that are completely useless in conflicts like Afghanistan.
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