Afghanistan could be the most important decision of Barack Obama's presidency. Maybe that's why he is, in effect, making it twice. What's odd about the administration's review of Afghanistan policy is that it is revisiting issues that were analyzed in great detail - and seemingly resolved - in the president's March 27 announcement of a new strategy for Afghanistan and Pakistan. The recent recommendations from Gen. Stanley A. McChrystal were intended to implement that "Af-Pak" strategy - not send the debate back to first principles.
The March document stated that the basic goal was "to prevent Afghanistan from becoming the al-Qaeda safe haven that it was before 9/11." But to accomplish this limited mission, the president endorsed a much broader effort to "reverse the Taliban's gains, and promote a more capable and accountable Afghan government." That gap between end and means has bedeviled the policy ever since. So now the president is doing it again, slowly and carefully - as in last Friday's three-hour White House meeting, where, I'm told, he went around the table and quizzed his national security aides one by one...
More at The Washington Post.
Comments
"Obama's challenge on Afghanistan is to identify a mission there that is achievable, and then to provide the necessary resources."
This discussion is a continuing debate on the Afghanistan strategy and the quote above describes the problem at a very simplistic level. We have to define success in Afghanistan. Once we have defined success we can determine the best strategy to apply and how to properly resource this mission.
This is imperative in order to define the left and right limits for our troops. We can focus our military and political efforts in concentrated effort to achieve the desired end-state.
It seems there is a collective perception that we are getting closer to a critical decisive point in this campaign. The sooner we can make the decision and go forward with a cohesive stategy we can start to reverse enemy momentum and begin to gain momentum of our own.