http://www.themoscowtimes.com/news/article/obama-tests-soviets-afghan-endgame/390877.html

Obama Tests Soviet's Afghan Endgame 
04 December 2009
The Associated Press
The U.S.-led war in Afghanistan bears ominous similarities to the disastrous 
Soviet war there 20 years ago, when a modern army was humbled by small 
guerrilla bands and the invaders struggled to prop up an unpopular government 
in Kabul.

But comparisons like these, often cited by critics of President Barack Obama's 
planned surge, have emphasized similarities while ignoring key differences in 
the position of the Soviet Union then and the United States and NATO today. A 
close reading of history suggests that there is still a chance that the allies 
can succeed where the Soviet Union failed.

While more than 850 members of the U.S. military have died as a result of the 
U.S. invasion of Afghanistan in 2001, those losses still represent a fraction 
of 14,500 Soviet deaths in Moscow's Afghan adventure.

During the 10 years that the Soviet Union fought in Afghanistan, the country 
was a Cold War battleground, pitting a Kremlin-backed atheist government 
against Muslim fighters clandestinely supported by the United States, Pakistan, 
Iran, China and Saudi Arabia.

By the late 1980s, the United States and the others were supplying the rebels 
with everything from transport mules to advanced weaponry, including the 
Stinger anti-aircraft missiles that played a crucial role in neutralizing 
Soviet air power.

Today, the Western allies face an insurgency in Afghanistan that is largely 
homegrown and self-financed, in part through opium production. No government in 
the world publicly supports the Taliban.

Dark assessments of the West's chances in Afghanistan typically dwell on 
Moscow's setbacks while ignoring its successes, including the creation of a 
relatively stable Afghan government and a 300,000-member army.

Afghanistan's Communist regime defied all predictions and outlasted the Soviet 
Union, collapsing only after post-Soviet Russia halted massive economic aid.

In the current conflict, militants have turned parts of Pakistan into 
sanctuaries, as they did during the Soviet war. But unlike the Soviets, the 
United States has been able to extend its air power into these ungoverned 
regions.

The United States has alienated many Afghans through its bombing raids, which 
have caused numerous civilian casualties.

But U.S. and Western troops have trod far more lightly than Soviet military 
forces, some of whom robbed farmers, looted markets and used air power 
indiscriminately, sometimes wiping out villages.

Russian veterans of the Soviet Afghan war have long predicted that the U.S.-led 
battle against the Taliban was doomed, based on their own experience fighting 
among the arid peaks of the Hindu Kush. But these judgments perhaps are colored 
by bitterness over the Soviet defeat.

While mindful of Soviet failures, Western forces have been slow to learn from 
Moscow's successes.

Kabul's Kremlin-backed Communist regime was generally brutal, corrupt and 
represented a small minority of the population.

But the Afghan Communist leaders arguably had far more control of their country 
than the government of President Hamid Karzai.

After the mid-1980s, the Soviet Union implemented a strategy of securing cities 
and the roads between them, strengthening the central government's grip.

And to some extent this approach worked, creating islands of stability where 
the government could run schools and hospitals, organize police and train 
soldiers.

Older residents of Kabul recall that the city was safer during the era of the 
Soviet occupation.

Obama's plan for ending the U.S.-led war against the Taliban bears a striking 
resemblance to former Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev's scheme for ending his 
country's Afghan war 20 years ago.

After Gorbachev took power in 1985, he authorized a surge in military forces. 
But he gave his generals a year to win the war. After that, he warned, they 
would have to withdraw.

Obama on Tuesday proposed a similar strategy, calling for 30,000 additional 
American troops, bringing the U.S. total to nearly 100,000. But he also said 
troop withdrawals would begin in the summer of 2011.

Gorbachev's exit from what he called "our bleeding wound" took four years 
instead of one and cost the lives of an additional 7,000 Russian soldiers.

But the government that they left behind hung on for another 1 1/2 years, and 
might have survived far longer with international support.

So if the parallels between the U.S.-led Afghan war and the Soviet defeat there 
aren't as simple as they seem, why isn't the United States winning in 
Afghanistan?

Some blame the lack of a clear strategy or commitment on Washington.

"I think that we spent eight years under the Bush administration just wasting 
time and making things worse," said Gregory Feifer, author of "The Great 
Gamble: The Soviet War in Afghanistan."

Feifer said he is concerned that it could be too late to reverse eight years of 
failed U.S. military policies. But, he added, "I do believe we've taken a big 
step in the right direction."

Pavel Felgenhauer, an independent military analyst, said the West's military 
advantage over the guerrillas should not be underestimated.

"It's a much better situation for the U.S. than it was for the Russians," he 
said. "And that makes it at least theoretically winnable."




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