Winners Lose

War commands debate on its own terms

By ROBERT C. KOEHLER

September 3, 2009 "Tribune Media Services" -- The situation in Afghanistan is 
serious. We’re getting “out-governed” by an enemy so ruthless it’s bringing 
services to a desperate people ignored by the legitimate government we 
installed.

But our eight-year quagmire . . . excuse me, war . . . can still be won, says 
Gen. Stanley McChrystal, the top U.S. and NATO commander in that country, who 
recently completed a review of the situation: “Success,” he commented, “is 
achievable and demands a revised implementation strategy, commitment and 
resolve, and increased unity of effort.”

Before I salute crisply and shout “yes, sir!” I’d like to quote from an essay 
by Robert E. Draper called “Keys to Real Success — Going Beyond ‘Winning’ and 
‘Losing’ in Business With a Positive Attitude.” I’m stuck, see, on the concept 
of “winning” this war, because human intelligence has mostly moved beyond this 
concept in every area of life except international relations, which remains a 
multi-trillion-dollar global bastion of Bronze Age thinking.

“It is important,” writes Draper, “to first realize that success, as most 
businesspeople know it, is always trailed by the shadow of the fear of failure 
and, therefore, is not real success at all. That’s because real success cannot 
be found in a ‘winning’ that includes a potential for loss. . . .

“To succeed at work requires adopting the mindset . . . of good card players,” 
he goes on. “Like them, you play not for occasional fits of excitement, but to 
survive. This requires that you give long-range thinking priority in your mind, 
and that you never perceive a current gain that will be trailed by a long-term 
loss to be acceptable or even attractive.”

OK, let’s jump now to a refugee camp in Kabul, where journalist Norman Solomon 
introduces us to a 7-year-old girl named Guljumma Khan, who lost her arm in a 
U.S. bombing raid, and whose father has gotten nowhere trying to get redress or 
the least support from the United States, the United Nations or the Afghan 
government to obtain medical assistance for her or take care of his family.

Furthermore, Solomon writes, “Basics like food arrive at the camp only 
sporadically.” The girl’s father “pointed to a plastic bag containing a few 
pounds of rice. It was his responsibility to divide the rice for the 100 
families” in the refugee camp.

“Is the U.S. government willing to really help Guljumma, who now lives each day 
and night in the squalor of a refugee camp?” asks Solomon. “Is the government 
willing to spend the equivalent of the cost of a single warhead to assist her?”

Morally speaking, what to do is remarkably obvious, graspable by virtually 
every human being on the planet, even, I believe, U.S. Defense Secretary Robert 
Gates. When pressed by reporters following news of the McChrystal report’s 
completion, Gates said, according to Reuters, that “any recommendation for more 
forces would have to address his concerns that the foreign military presence in 
Afghanistan could become too large and be seen by Afghans as a hostile 
occupying force.”

There are 103,000 U.S./NATO troops in Afghanistan now; the country has been 
bombed (15,000 tons and counting) and occupied for eight years, with maybe 
8,000 civilians killed in the process (God knows how many wedding parties 
bombed and strafed), many more injured and displaced — and the U.S. secretary 
of defense feels we’re pushing the limits of Afghan tolerance. Up the troop 
ante and they’ll think we’re a hostile presence.

Well, Team Bush never equivocated in its Bronze Age ferocity. Maybe, I 
initially thought, Gates’ flicker of intelligent uncertainty — his feint in the 
direction of sanity — can be counted as progress, not by the desperate and 
starving Afghans, perhaps, but by the Obama voting base. So far, this is the 
extent of the “change” and “hope” we’ve gotten from his administration in the 
ongoing, disastrous wars of choice he inherited.

Because the Taliban, with a counter-agenda to advance, is incorporating a 
hearts-and-minds approach into its strategy for victory, the U.S. and NATO are 
grasping that they have to do likewise. So, on second thought, it’s probably 
not moral progress at all, just further evidence that anonymous geocorporate 
interests control international relations.

When our leaders, even those who promise peace, sit in the driver’s seat of 
war, they surrender their ordinary humanity — their consciences — and assume 
the mindset and agenda of those anonymous interests. In Afghanistan, this 
agenda includes regional dominance, the flow of oil (the pipeline) and, as with 
every war, the stoking of the military economy. This is what “winning” in 
Afghanistan really means — armless 7-year-olds be damned — and McChrystal is 
right. It’s still possible. Even probable.

War commands debate on its own terms. Read or listen to the mainstream 
coverage: It conveys the details of war in a context devoid of moral 
intelligence. Yet for ordinary humanity, wars can never be “won.” They can only 
be ended and, ultimately, transcended.

Robert Koehler is an award-winning, Chicago-based journalist and nationally 
syndicated writer. You can respond to this column at [email protected] .





Satrio Arismunandar 
Executive Producer
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Verba volant scripta manent...
(yang terucap akan lenyap, yang tertulis akan abadi...)



 


      

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