From David P. in S.C.
Obama wants to bug out before the election
Sunday, January 08, 2012
The war in Afghanistan may end this year in thinly disguised surrender.
"The Taliban per se is not our enemy," Vice President Joe Biden said in an interview with Newsweek magazine Dec. 15.
We went to war in Afghanistan to oust the Taliban regime because it had sheltered al-Qaida. Perhaps Mr. Biden forgot.
A story in an Indian newspaper Dec. 29 suggests the reason for the vice president's memory lapse. The Obama administration apparently is conducting secret negotiations with the Taliban and has recruited Yusuf al-Qaradawi, the Muslim Brotherhood's leading jurist, to mediate them.
"Earlier this month, Mr. al-Qaradawi helped draw a road map for a deal between the Taliban and the United States aimed at giving the superpower a face-saving political settlement ahead of its planned withdrawal from Afghanistan, which is due to begin in 2014," wrote reporter Praveen Swami, citing "Indian diplomatic sources."
Picking Mr. al-Qaradawi, 84, to broker a peace deal is like choosing Benito Mussolini to mediate secret peace talks with the Nazis.
Mr. al-Qaradawi seeks the establishment of a worldwide caliphate ruled by Islamic law. And like other radical Islamists, Mr. al-Qaradawi advocates the destruction of Israel. But not even that is enough to satisfy his blood lust.
"Throughout history, Allah has imposed upon the [Jews] people who would punish them for their corruption," Mr. al-Qaradawi said in a speech broadcast on al-Jazeera in 2009. "The last punishment was carried out by Hitler. By means of all the things he did to them ... he managed to put them in their place. This was divine punishment for them. Allah willing, the next time will be at the hands of the believers. ... Oh Allah, count their numbers and kill them, down to the very last one."
In 2003, Mr. al-Qaradawi issued a fatwa justifying the killing of U.S. troops in Iraq. When the imam of the Grand Mosque in Mecca opposed the killing of civilians, Mr. al-Qaradawi criticized him. Yet the Obama administration apparently considers Mr. al-Qaradawi to be a "moderate."
Perhaps he is, compared to Mohammed Fazl, a senior Taliban official who's been held at Guantanamo Bay since early 2002. Mr. Fazl is alleged to have overseen the murder of thousands of Afghanistan's minority Shiite Muslims.
The Obama administration is contemplating turning Mr. Fazl and four other Taliban terrorists over to the Afghan government as part of an exchange of "confidence-building measures," Reuters reported Dec. 29.
The proposed handover of Mr. Fazl and the others is not popular with those who are more concerned with U.S. security than with President Obama's re-election.
"I can tell you that the hair on the back of my neck went up when they walked in with this a month ago," Reuters quoted a "U.S. intelligence official" as saying.
The Taliban announced Tuesday that it will open a liaison office in Doha, Qatar, where Mr. al-Qaradawi is based. Afghan President Hamid Karzai gave the office his blessing and earlier praised Vice President Biden's statement that "the Taliban per se is not our enemy." So presumably he'd be open to a power-sharing arrangement -- provided there are sufficient guarantees for his personal safety and for augmentation of the considerable fortune he's accumulated since we installed him in office.
If Mr. al-Qaradawi is chosen as mediator it would suggest the Obama administration is far more interested in making a deal before the U.S. election this year than in what's in the deal. The administration might be satisfied, it appears, with a public renunciation of al-Qaida by the Taliban (they don't have to mean it), and private assurances that the Taliban won't take over until after the election.
The losers would be those Afghans who don't want to live under the thumb of a brutal reactionary theocracy, especially those who trusted us and sent their daughters to school. But they don't vote in our elections.
Mr. Obama supported the war in Afghanistan during the 2008 campaign, but I suspect he did so only because he so vociferously opposed the war in Iraq and didn't want people to think he was soft on national defense. His heart was never in it.
So I wish he'd decided to bug out sooner. About two-thirds of the 1,864 American servicemen and women who have been killed in Afghanistan have been killed since Barack Obama became president. They appear to have died in vain.
Jack Kelly is a columnist for the Post-Gazette and The Blade of Toledo, Ohio (jkelly@post-gazette.com, 412 263-1476). More articles by this author
First published on January 8, 2012 at 12:00 am
Stay safe.
a deal between the Taliban and the United States aimed at giving the superpower a face-saving political settlement ahead of its planned withdrawal
ReplyDeleteSeems like I remember something similar before, but must be mistaken.......
"Seems like I remember something similar before, but must be mistaken......."
ReplyDelete~~~
That's apparently how we roll these days.
I'm starting to believe that the only war we should ever be involved in is the one defending ourselves here at home. (from foreign invaders, of course)
Agreed.
ReplyDelete