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Posted by robertgreenwald on January 20th, 2011

Obama’s War, One Year Later: 195 Million Say No to War

Next month will mark the one-year anniversary of the launch of President Obama’s escalated military campaign in Afghanistan. One year later, violence is still getting worse and costs are skyrocketing. After more than nine years, it’s time to end this war.

Take a strong public stand against the war by posting your picture and comment on Rethink Afghanistan’s new “Because It’s Time” feature.

Rethink Afghanistan Because It's Time

On February 13, 2010, NATO troops launched Operation Moshtarak in the Marjah district of Helmand Province. It was the first major military action enabled by President Obama’s 30,000-troop escalation, and was supposed to be proof-of-concept for Generals McChrystal’s and Petraeus’ counterinsurgency doctrine. The military hype said Afghan forces would be in the lead as coalition forces invaded Taliban-controlled areas. They’d deliver “government in a box, ready to roll.” Over and over, military officials repeated their mantra that the new troops would enable them to “protect the population.”

What followed was a fiasco that still hasn’t ended.

In Marjah, “government in a box” turned out to be “government with a rap sheet,” as it turned out the U.S.-backed district governor was a convicted felon. (He did, however, fit in just fine in the corrupt Karzai regime.) A misfired munition from a High Mobility Artillery Rocket System (HIMARS) killed a house full of civilians in the first few days of the offensive. Afghan troops trained by the Americans proved often unreliable and inept. All throughout 2010, Marjah remained a danger zone for U.S. troops as the Taliban forces who seemed to flee revealed themselves to be competent guerrillas, melting away before superior firepower only to slowly filter back in to plant roadside bombs and take potshots at troops. Eventually, military officials had to admit that they’d over-promised and under-delivered.

The pattern of hype and embarrassment repeated itself across Afghanistan all throughout 2010, as U.S. military officials repeatedly asserted that an influx of troops would bring security and protect the population, only to see those areas remain violent hot-spots where civilians were rarely safe. NATO similarly invaded Kandahar in force later in the year, and that area remains hotly contested and violent. In fact, violence in Kandahar and Helmand account for more than half of insurgent-initiated attacks for all of Afghanistan. Worse, areas that were previously relatively secure suddenly saw a spike in the number of insurgent attacks at the Taliban continued their relentless expansion across the country.

So. President Obama has had a full year now to prove that his new strategy is worth the costs. What are the results?

While we were wasting $100 billion on this war per year, Americans fought to stay above water in a horrible economy. Unemployment has now topped 9 percent for 20 months straight. Groups like the Salvation Army are reporting an alarming shortfall in resources to help the hungry. And state budgets all across the country are considering huge draconian cuts to their public structures and social safety nets that millions of people rely upon. Not only do most Americans oppose the war, but they rightly worry that it’s making it harder for us to fix these problems here at home.

After a year of escalated fighting across the country–after more than nine years of this war!–it’s absolutely clear that military solutions won’t work in Afghanistan, and they’re certainly not worth the cost. More than 195 million Americans want this war to end, yet their faces don’t seem to be reflected among elected officials to timid to take the morally courageous action of forcing this war to a close. So we’re giving people a chance to put their face and their opposition to the war in full public view.

Today, we’re launching “Because It’s Time” on Rethink Afghanistan to help Americans who oppose this war to make their voices heard. On this page, you can post your photo and a reason why it’s time to bring troops home.

Starting next Wednesday, you’ll have the chance to vote on your favorite comments. Those who get the most votes will get to star in an upcoming Rethink Afghanistan video.

As the one-year anniversary of “Obama’s War” approaches, please take a moment to call for our troops to come home–because it’s time.

To keep up with all the latest on Rethink Afghanistan, follow Robert Greenwald on Twitter. Click here!

3 Responses to “Obama’s War, One Year Later: 195 Million Say No to War”

  1. LastHonestPerson says:

    Mr. Greenwald–In conjunction w/ your “Rethink Afghanistan” work, do you think you could produce a TV spot that starts by mimicking the ads for childrens's aid societies, i.e. “Little Neela doesn't know there are people like you, but she did know that last night once more she had to go to sleep without eating,” while zooming into the face of a raggedy little girl with enormous, slightly glassy and feverish-looking brown eyes? And switches abruptly to a shot of Pakistani village homes in rubble after a drone attack w/ the voiceover, “Today she is dead–the unintended victim of a CIA drone attack on her Pakistani village, along w/ her sister, two little brothers and her aunt. Her mother, who was getting water when the missile struck, is wandering the ruined streets in shock”? Then cuts to a black screen w/ large white letters saying something like, “Tell Congress and the President that you don't want this done by our country.”?

    I believe there would be no shortage of donations to run such a spot.

  2. Yeah, they need to quit wasting money on these wars!

  3. caconservative says:

    It's good to see people questioning the killing of innocent live. I wonder why those same people aren't questioning the killing of innocent American children at the hands of illegal aliens? Fact: More American citizens have been killed since 9/11 at the hands of illegal alien parasites than all the American troops in Iraq and Afghanistan combined! Yet, not a whimper by any news media, let alone this blog. This blogs all about Afghanistan, all the time. Where the hell are our priorities?!

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