A resistant culture of corruption
By Wes Pruden
PrudenPolitics.com
The 21st century is a hard sell to a culture that prefers the 8th. The Europeans, loosely defined, keep trying in Afghanistan. It’s 12 years and counting since the Americans replaced the Russians, and a lot longer than that since the British decided they had had enough, and beat it back to London.
We’ve
made a considerable investment in blood and money in
Afghanistan. The changes that all the sacrifice
bought are mostly cosmetic, and we’re learning that
cosmetic changes last about as long on an
8th-century culture as lipstick on a pig. Tribal
warfare is the national sport and the gross national
product, insofar as anyone can find it big enough to
measure, consists mostly of refugees and
asylum-seekers. Coffin-makers do a good business but
almost nobody else does.
This
is the land that hope and change forgot, and
President Obama is determined to bring most American
troops home, or at least to send them to another
semi-hopeless place. The alternative to doing
nothing may be even more dreadful, but the depth of
American frustration in Afghanistan is measured in
two U.S. audits that spell out why a world
policeman’s lot is not a happy one. Not in the
Middle East, anyway.
The
first internal audit, uncovered by the Washington
Guardian, an aggressive Web newspaper (washingtonguardian.com),
concludes that the Afghan military, despite years of
expensive American tutoring and training, is only
“marginally capable of repelling attacks from the
Islamist extremists who antagonize large parts of
the country.”
The
Afghan National Army still has weak command and
control capabilities, and only succeeds on the
battlefield with American and allied assistance.
“Assistance” usually means the Afghans step back and
let the Americans and the allies do the heavy
lifting - when they’re not doing the dying. The
Afghans can sometimes steer the car in a wobbly more
or less straight line, but only as long as daddy’s
there to accelerate, brake and supervise.
“In
its present state of development and given the
threat environment,” the Defense Department
inspector general concluded, “we found the [Afghan]
command, control and coordination system to be
marginally sufficient to respond effectively to
insurgent attacks . . . and to conduct effectively
other short-term offensive operations.” Translated
from government-speak, the inspector general
concludes that this is the army that can barely
shoot straight when it shoots at all.
It’s
not altogether the fault of the men in the ranks.
One high-ranking U.S. officer who has worked
directly with Afghan forces tells the Guardian that
even after meeting basic levels of competence, the
Afghan soldier’s efforts are undermined by
corruption in the government of President Hamid
Karzai. “If the Afghan soldier doesn’t get paid when
he’s supposed to, he will either leave or get
recruited by the enemy.” The pay from the enemy may
not be better or even more forthcoming, but looting
opportunities are more abundant. Men in the highest
ranks of the government do it, so why not the
dogface soldiers?
This
hasn’t been a happy spring in Afghanistan. In trying
to impose the 21st century on the reluctant country,
the Americans are building first-world hospitals
that probably won’t be sustainable in the third
world when Mr. Obama delivers on his promise to quit
the battlefield.
The Guardian reports that one of the two
hospitals the Americans are building in eastern
Afghanistan will be 12 times the size of the
hospital it replaces, and annual maintenance costs
will soar to $3.2 million. The other hospital now
spends $98,000 annually on maintenance and will have
to come up with $587,000 annually to maintain the
replacement.
President Hamid Karzai (USAF photo)
Nation-building is for suckers, as we learn to
considerable pain. It’s probably not possible to
avoid trying to resolve the problems of others, but
we should do it only when those problems, left
unresolved, make trouble for us. And we shouldn’t
expect to make good small-d democrats or small-r
republicans out of those who prefer to live in the
squalor of the 8th century. It’s important to keep
great expectations realistic.
Wesley Pruden is editor emeritus of The Washington Times.