The Delaware Gazette

Americans tune out Afghan war as fighting rages on

DEB RIECHMANN

Asso­ci­ated Press

KABUL, Afghanistan — It was once Pres­i­dent Barack Obama’s “war of neces­sity.” Now, it’s America’s for­got­ten war.

The Afghan con­flict gen­er­ates barely a whis­per on the U.S. pres­i­den­tial cam­paign trail. It’s not a hot topic at the office water cooler or in the halls of Con­gress — even though more than 80,000 Amer­i­can troops are still fight­ing here and dying at a rate of one a day.

Amer­i­cans show more inter­est in the econ­omy and taxes than the lat­est sui­cide bomb­ings in a dif­fer­ent, dis­tant land. They’re more tuned in to the polit­i­cal ad war play­ing out on tele­vi­sion than the deadly fight still rag­ing against the Tal­iban. Ear­lier this month, pro­test­ers at the Iowa State Fair chanted “Stop the war!” They were refer­ring to one pur­port­edly being waged against the mid­dle class.

By the time vot­ers go to the polls Nov. 6 to choose between Obama and pre­sump­tive Repub­li­can nom­i­nee Mitt Rom­ney, the war will be in its 12th year. For most Amer­i­cans, that’s long enough.

Pub­lic opin­ion remains largely neg­a­tive toward the war, with 66 per­cent opposed to it and just 27 per­cent in favor in a May AP-GfK poll. More recently, a Quin­nip­iac Uni­ver­sity poll found that 60 per­cent of reg­is­tered vot­ers felt the U.S. should no longer be involved in Afghanistan. Just 31 per­cent said the U.S. is doing the right thing by fight­ing there now.

Not since the Korean War of the early 1950s — a much shorter but more intense fight — has an armed con­flict involv­ing America’s sons and daugh­ters cap­tured so lit­tle pub­lic attention.

“We’re bored with it,” said Matthew Far­well, who served in the U.S. Army for five years includ­ing 16 months in east­ern Afghanistan, where he some­times received let­ters from grade school stu­dents addressed to the brave Marines in Iraq — the wrong war.

“We all laugh about how no one really cares,” he said. “All the ‘sup­port the troops’ stuff is bumper sticker deep.”

Far­well, 29, who is now study­ing at the Uni­ver­sity of Vir­ginia, said the war is rarely a topic of con­ver­sa­tion on cam­pus — and he isn’t sur­prised that it’s not dis­cussed much on the cam­paign trail.

“No one under­stands how to extri­cate our­selves from the mess we have made there,” he said. “So from a purely polit­i­cal point of view, I wouldn’t be talk­ing about it if I were Barack Obama or Mitt Rom­ney either.”

Ignor­ing the Afghan war, though, doesn’t make it go away.

More than 1,950 Amer­i­cans have died in Afghanistan and thou­sands more have been wounded since Pres­i­dent George W. Bush launched attacks on Oct. 7, 2001 to rout al-Qaida after it used Afghanistan to train recruits and plot the Sept. 11 attacks that killed nearly 3,000 Americans.

The war drags on even though al-Qaida has been largely dri­ven out of Afghanistan and its charis­matic leader Osama bin Laden is dead — slain in a U.S. raid on his Pak­istani hide­out last year.

Strangely, Afghanistan never seemed to grab the same degree of pub­lic and media atten­tion as the war in Iraq, which Obama opposed as a “war of choice.”

Unlike Iraq, vic­tory in Afghanistan seemed to come quickly. Kabul fell within weeks of the U.S. inva­sion in Octo­ber 2001. The hard­line Tal­iban regime was top­pled with few U.S. casualties.

But the Bush administration’s shift toward war with Iraq left the West­ern pow­ers with­out enough resources on the ground, so by 2006 the Tal­iban had regrouped into a seri­ous mil­i­tary threat.

Can­di­date Obama promised to refo­cus America’s resources on Afghanistan. But by the time Pres­i­dent Obama sent 33,000 more troops to Afghanistan in Decem­ber 2009, years of war in Iraq and Afghanistan had drained West­ern resources and sapped resolve to build a viable Afghan state.

And over time, his admin­is­tra­tion has grown weary of try­ing to tackle Afghanistan’s seem­ingly intractable prob­lems of poverty and cor­rup­tion. The Amer­i­can peo­ple have grown weary too.

While most Amer­i­cans are sym­pa­thetic to the plight of the Afghan peo­ple, they have become deeply skep­ti­cal of Pres­i­dent Hamid Karzai’s will­ing­ness to tackle cor­rup­tion and polit­i­cal patron­age and the coalition’s chances of “budg­ing a medieval soci­ety” into the mod­ern world, says Ann Mar­lowe, a vis­it­ing fel­low at the Hud­son Insti­tute, a pol­icy research orga­ni­za­tion in Washington.

“With mil­lions of vet­er­ans home and talk­ing with their fam­i­lies and friends … some knowl­edge of just how hard this is has per­co­lated down,” said Mar­lowe, who has trav­eled to Afghanistan many times.

It has also been hard to show progress on the battlefield.

World War II had its Nor­mandy, Viet­nam its Tet Offen­sive and Iraq its Bat­tle of Fal­lu­jah. Afghanistan is a grind­ing slough in vil­lages and remote val­leys where suc­cess if mea­sured in increments.

The Afghan war trans­formed into a series of small, often vicious and intense fights scat­tered across a coun­try almost as large as Texas.

In July, 40 U.S. ser­vice mem­bers died in Afghanistan in the dead­liest month for Amer­i­can troops so far this year. At least 31 have been killed this month — seven when a heli­copter crashed dur­ing a fire­fight with insur­gents in what was one of the dead­liest air dis­as­ters of the war. Ten oth­ers were gunned down in attacks from mem­bers of the Afghan secu­rity forces — either dis­grun­tled turn­coats or Tal­iban infiltrators.

Many argue that bin Laden’s death jus­ti­fies a quick U.S. exit from Afghanistan. Oth­ers say it’s impor­tant to stay longer to shore up the Afghan secu­rity forces and help build the gov­ern­ment so that it can stand on its own. An unsta­ble Afghanistan could again offer sanc­tu­ary to mil­i­tants like al-Qaida who want to harm Amer­i­can and its allies, they say.

“Those of us who have been at this for a long time con­tinue to think that it’s impor­tant, and that we have a chance now of a path for­ward with a long-term per­spec­tive that will pro­duce the results,” said James Cun­ning­ham, the new U.S. ambas­sador to Afghanistan.

The U.S.-led coalition’s com­bat mis­sion will wind down in the next few years, lead­ing up to the end of 2014 when most inter­na­tional troops will have left or moved into sup­port roles.

Mil­i­tary ana­lysts say the U.S. envi­sions a post-2014 force of per­haps 20,000 to hunt ter­ror­ists, train the Afghan forces and keep an eye on neigh­bor­ing Iran and other regional pow­er­house nations.

Amer­i­cans aren’t likely to know the num­ber until later this year. But will any­one other than fam­i­lies of ser­vice per­son­nel take note?

“I have heard oth­ers say that the dan­ger that their spouses or chil­dren are serv­ing in is just sim­ply not being cared about,” said Fred Well­man, a 22-year Army vet­eran who did three tours in Iraq. “I think a lot of vet­er­ans feel it is just forgotten.”

Polit­i­cal satirist Garry Trudeau cap­tured the apa­thy about the war in a comic strip this year show­ing a U.S. ser­vice­woman sta­tioned in Afghanistan call­ing her brother back home.

After he com­plains that his chil­dren have the flu and how he’s strug­gling to keep up with their hec­tic hockey sched­ule, he asks her where she’s call­ing from. She tells him she’s in Afghanistan.

“Oh, right, right …” her brother replies. “Wait, we’re still there?”

AP News Posted by on Aug 21 2012. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS Feed. Comments can be made below.

Leave a Reply

 

Search Archive

Search by Date
Search by Category
Search with Google

Open M - F 8am to 5pm | 740-363-1161 | 40 N. Sandusky Street, Suite 202, Delaware, OH 43015

We use third-party advertising companies to serve ads when you visit our Web site. For more information click here.
Click on the following for legal information: Privacy Policy | Terms & Conditions
Copyright © 2010 - 2012, Ohio Community Media