.for the record, i've been of the opinion from day one that going into afghanistan in any serious way was a mistake.
not the going-in-and-taking-out of the terrorist camps, understand--that we should have done and should reserve the right to do in the future whenever we goddam well feel it's necessary--but going in there and actually trying to fix that country? oh, hell no--i figured if trying to take afghanistan proved too much for the soviets with all their ruthless brute force, what the hell made us think we could do any better with the kinda pc warfare we're reduced to these days?
eight years, hundreds of american lives and hundreds of billions of dollars later, my opinion hasn't changed in the least.
but fuck all that now--we're in up to our eyeballs, and our glorious leader is about to have to make the first truly tough "the buck stops here" call of his life.
and it's so clear he doesn't wanna do it--he wants to vote "present" like he's always done when times got tough, only this time he can't.
last week, i watched as general stanley mcchrystal, the american commander of nato forces in afghanistan, laid out for
6o minutes a clear, cogent, unambiguous case for why the 40,000 additional troops he had requested from his commander-in-chief were essential if we wanted to have even the slightest hope of turning things around in that troubled region.
he then flew to london and in a speech to some think-tank
reiterated his point, saying, among other things, that
"Waiting does not prolong a favorable outcome. This effort will not remain winnable indefinitely, and nor will public support."
thus effectively and publicly reminding the president--to whom, tellingly, he'd only spoken once, and then only by videoconference--that it was time to either shit or get off the pot.
needless to say, this forthrightness did not go over well at the white house--i mean, how dare this upstart general come out and actually tell the world the truth, thus denying the president his god-given right as a politician to waffle and wiggle and obfuscate his way around the problem?
and yeah, mr. president, you're damned if you send those additional troops, and equally-and-oppositely damned if you don't.
now, what's it gonna be?