Obama: Minor Withdrawal, Afghanistan War to Continue

Obama and troops in AfghanistanPresident Obama announced Wednesday night that he will withdraw 10,000 troops from Afghanistan this year and 20,000 in 2012. That will still leave 70,000 US troops, tens of thousands of NATO troops, and tens of thousands of foreign military contractors, in Afghanistan. It is a plan for continued war.

 

Massachusetts Peace Action and other peace groups have scheduled a demonstration Thursday, June 23, at 5pm, at Park Street Station in downton Boston, to protest the continuation of the Afghanistan war.

 

The action is co-sponsored by United for Justice with Peace, Boston UNAC, Massachusetts Peace Action, Veterans for Peace / Smedley Butler Brigade, Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom, Code Pink, Majority Agenda Project, Massachusetts Global Action, Stop the Wars Coalition, and Military Families Speak Out.

 

Response vigils will also be held in Newton, Framingham, New Bedford, Worcester, Northampton, and Hadley. See full details here.

 

There is common agreement from the likes of General Petraeus to Senator John Kerry that a political solution, not the military, is the answer to stability in Afghanistan. After ten years of war it is clear that U.S. military presence is not improving the everyday lives of Afghans and is impeding reconciliation. Coalition troops escalate conflict between Afghans as the population is expected to pick a side against the Taliban who are also Afghans. U.S. military operations have killed and maimed thousands of people including the latest killing of twelve children in late May. Afghanistan’s tradition of independence and the anger caused by U.S. killings of innocent family, friends and neighbors ensure the Taliban has no problem finding fresh recruits.

 

The cost in coalition deaths is equally unacceptable. Coalition forces have lost 2,156 of which 1,614 are U.S. troops. Thousands of families who will never see their loved ones alive again mourn these deaths. Thousands more struggle daily to understand and support returned soldiers who suffer the mental and physical scars of wars. In perhaps the greatest tragedy, these mental and physical scars push increasing numbers of service members and veterans to commit suicide.

 

The war is a financial drain. With an estimated 100 Al Qaeda in Afghanistan, in fiscal year 2011 the U.S. has allocated $122 billion for the war there. That is more than a billion dollars per Al Qaeda operative. It would be a terrible waste in a boom economy but is senseless when U.S. citizens are suffering deep budget cuts, layoffs, high unemployment and an anemic economy. This waste of resources is not lost on the elected officials most responsible for the economic wellbeing of cities. The U.S. Conference of Mayors representing cities over 30,000 residents this week passed a resolution calling for troops to be brought home and money spent on war diverted to cities and towns for jobs, healthcare and other critical human needs, and reducing the deficit. Confronting the harsh reality of the economic crisis and lack of resources mayors across the country are turning away from the waste of war.

 

The people of the US have recognized it is time for the U.S. to leave. A June 2-5 ABC News/Washington Post poll shows that 73% of participants believe the U.S. should withdraw a substantial number of combat forces and a May 5-8 Gallup poll shows that 59% of respondents feel the U.S. has accomplished it mission in Afghanistan and should bring its troops home. Only 36% believe forces should be maintained there.

 

It is time for the U.S. to leave Afghanistan and change its counter terrorism strategy from one reliant on military power to careful multi-lateral intelligence work, law enforcement, diplomacy, and economic development. It is time to change course. It is time to bring our troops and war dollars home. Join us!