christiefan915
Catalyst
The problem with that statement is we ALREADY have young men and women in harms way. And because our force in place is not large enough to handle the mission, they are at greater risk of harm.
Try to take a lesson from recent history. Things were swinging out of control in Iraq. At odds with popular opinion, we sent a large contingent of reinforcements - a surge. Within a couple months U.S. casualties dropped from close to 100 a month to averaging under 20 a month, and has stayed that way.
Strategically and tactically, the PROPER response to the problem of military being overwhelmed is to reinforce the military so they are no longer overwhelmed. This stabilizes the situation so that other means (diplomacy, etc.) can be brought to bear without uncontrolled violent insurgency upsetting the apple cart every time we get it on its wheels.
Obama is obviously more concerned with the political ramification - for himself and the democratic party - than he is with the actual situation in Afghanistan. His military advisers, those on the ground and those at home, are ALL calling for more troops. His ambassador is calling for more troops. And, in response, he "does not like any of their options" - because all of them are politically unpopular with democrats.
As far as recent history goes, the bush administration was told back in 2003 by the generals that there were not enough troops on the ground, yet he not only didn't listen to them, he demoted or retired them. Do you remember rumsfeld stating "the idea that it would take several hundred thousand U.S. forces I think is far off the mark."
bush began the Iraq surge in 2007. By then over 3,000 troops had already been killed. Some of the bloodiest months of the war occurred after the surge. That Obama is taking all this into consideration before sending more troops to Afghanistan is a credit to him.
My personal opinion is that we shouldn't be there at all anymore. I mostly disagreed with sending troops over in 2001 because I thought it was a hasty, ill-thought-out decision that didn't consider all the variables. We had no understanding of the history and culture of the region, and how the people would band together against an invader, even if catching bin Laden was in their interests. The geography of the country was another big factor; our methods didn't cover what amounted to chasing bands of nomadic outlaws from cave to cave, or expecting the locals to give them up.
I also question your statement that Obama doesn't like the options because they are "politically unpopular with Democrats." According to news reports and polls, sending more troops is unpopular with the majority of Americans, not just Democrats. I credit Obama for hesitating in sending off another large contingent, knowing that some will be killed, without taking enough time to consider all the ramifications. God knows this wasn't done the first time around.
I have a dog in this fight, a young friend who is in Afghanistan right now, and my stomach goes into knots every time news reports list more Americans killed. I don't support sending over more young men and women. I want him to withdraw all of them and let the chips fall where they may.