By Jake Towne View all 13 articles by Jake Towne Published 11/19/09
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"All Warfare is Deception... There has never been a protracted war from which a country has benefited." - Sun Tzu, circa 250 BC While Republican Bush II once famously claimed he was "the decider," the 'Change We Can Believe In' promised by his replacement, the Democrat Obama, is hardly any different in regards to the Afghanistan and Pakistan wars. The media and American people breathlessly await the President's decision on how many troops to send into the war zone. With spines made of jelly, Congress is as toothless as a bunch of newborns as they delegate their responsibilities to represent the American people to a single man. What could they 'Change' instead?Congress could refuse to approve spending to extend this unconstitutional war of aggression against Afghanistan and Pakistan. Congress should instead pass a resolution for a rapid, immediate, and orderly withdrawal from Afghanistan and redeployment to protect America's sieve-like borders. Congress could increase the reward for the capture of Osama Bin Laden forty times from $27 million to over $1 billion. Congress should also issue constitutional letters of marque to bring indicted terrorists to justice in a court of law. To support this stance, I offer the following four key points: First, elected officials must begin behaving like the United States is a nation of laws, not a collection of rogues who delegate their gravest responsibility and immaturely fail to follow the supreme law of the land and declare war. Second, America's historical foreign policy actions in Afghanistan and Pakistan must be understood, which contain the true reasons why terrorists attacked the United States in 2001. Third, a sober look at the eco-politics of the area, such as opiates and oil pipelines, must be taken. Lastly, we should contain the problem by securing our borders, and with all of the economic unrest, now is no time to be nation-building and quartering troops in foreign lands. The Problem of Osama Bin Laden "The Congress shall have Power... to declare War [and] grant Letters of Marque and Reprisal." - The Constitution of the United States, 1787-present. Article I, Section 8, Clause 11.
After having read the July 2004 9/11 Commission Report, there should be enough evidence to bring Bin Laden to trial for the 9/11 attacks. (1) Even though I believe Bin Laden was behind the attacks, a dispassionate observer would question why the following facts are not generally known by the American public:
However, hurling armies of tens of thousands after Bin Laden is not cost effective, nor is it constitutional — nor has it succeeded after the past 8 years. Therefore I would support the raising the reward for the capture of Bin Laden from $27 million to over $1 billion, and the issuing of a constitutional letter of marque to bring him — and other responsible Al-Qaeda - to justice. Letters of marque and reprisal are warrants issued by Congress to specified parties giving them permission to commit what would otherwise be illegal acts as they capture "marked" enemies or seek retribution, as was done against the Barbary pirates in 1812. (7) The higher reward would incentivize groups to pursue Bin Laden, and could conceivably include US special forces. Afghanistan and Pakistan are Unjust Wars "Preventive war was an invention of Hitler. Frankly, I would not even listen to anyone seriously that came and talked about such a thing." - former President and Supreme Allied Commander in WWII Dwight D. Eisenhower
Neither the Taliban nor Pakistan attacked the United States, and America was not in dire danger of an attack from either the Taliban or Pakistani military. While the Taliban did shelter Bin Laden, the American
government did not exhaust diplomacy — as a matter of fact, the
government blindly ignored any efforts by the Taliban. On October 4,
2001, a Taliban plan to extradite Bin Laden to Pakistan for trial
failed. (9)
On October 7, as the bombing began, the Taliban stated they would place
Bin Laden on trial in Afghanistan. (10)
On October 14, the Taliban stated they would extradite Bin Laden to a
third country for trial if America presented evidence of his
involvement. (11) Proportional? In 2001, 2,976 died during the 9/11 tragedy with 4 planes destroyed, 3 collapsed buildings in New York City, and a damaged Pentagon. In return, we have annihilated many tens of thousands of innocent civilians, many insurgents, and laid waste to countless cities and villages in a country that had no air force. If one includes the 19-year long Iraq War, several million civilian dead is a reasonable total. If this were somehow not enough, 5,278 American soldiers have died abroad. (12) Afghanistan, the Graveyard of Empires: History on Brutal Rerun "Intelligence is quickness in seeing things as they are." - George Santayana
Brzezinski's attitude was typical as America wiped its hands clean and left Afghanistan to tribal warfare which resulted in the Taliban consolidating power in the late 1990s. After fleeing Sudan, Osama Bin Laden found shelter with old contacts in the Northern Alliance and also the Taliban. As is related in the 9/11 Commission Report in chapters titled "The Attack Looms" and "The System Was Blinking Red," America took very few actions to capture or kill Bin Laden until after 9/11 occurred. (14) However, even after 9/11 America was very hesitant to spend our soldiers' lives. Consider: On October 7, 2001 American and British air forces began the bombardment of Afghanistan, which had no air force. Air strikes directed by small British and American special forces units working alongside the Northern Alliance were the key reason the Taliban was defeated very quickly. On November 13, Kabul was captured by Northern Alliance ground forces. On November 26, Kunduz was captured by Northern Alliance ground forces. In December the last major city of Kandahar was
captured, also by Northern Alliance ground forces. (15)
So President Bush, despite any rhetoric to the
contrary, did NOT allow American land forces to pursue him on land. In
other words, we launched 150,000 troops over the Iraqi border in 2003
to capture Saddam Hussein, who was completely uninvolved with 9/11, but
had only aerial bombardment and a few scant special op/CIA forces in
Afghanistan to capture Bin Laden. Bush was content to let the Northern
Alliance, a group of tribal warlords, fight a proxy war on our behalf.
(17) It
wasn’t until March 2002 that a major ground campaign was launched by
the US to attack Al-Qaeda, and this can be seen by just looking at the
casualty list's details — most of those who died up to March were
non-hostile airplane crashes or special ops related deaths. The first
US combat death was a CIA operative on November 25. (18) Will America join the dead phalanxes of Alexander and the rusted tanks of the Soviets in the graveyard of empires? I do not think we should stay long enough to find out. We are spending $400 to deliver each gallon of gasoline to patrol foreign borders, and currently maintaining an expensive army of 68,000 troops in the field. (19) The current National Security Advisor James Jones claimed in October 2009 that there are "less than 100 [al Qaeda] operating in the country, no bases, no ability to launch attacks on either us or our allies." (20) A Tale of Opiates and Oil "The first casualty when war comes is the truth." - Senator Hiram Johnson, 1917 These are two fairly taboo subjects when the Afghanistan War is covered by the mainstream press. How much each factor truly played in foreign policy decision-making is left to the reader to decide.
The second topic is the geopolitics of oil. While Afghanistan itself does not have fossil fuels, the vast and fairly-untapped reservoirs of oil and natural gas lie in the former Soviet satellite nations on the Afghan northern border. The Caspian Sea region is landlocked and there are plans to pipe the resources out via a Turkish or an Afghani-Pakistani pipeline, but political instability makes this difficult. A modern "Great Game" of geopolitical power struggles with the Russian, Chinese, Indian and Iranian governments is well underway. (22) Border Security and the Economy For those who do not heed the Constitutional limits on government, the brutal lessons taught by history, the immorality of unjust war, here are another two attempts to reason — border security and the economic turmoil. As a chemical engineer, in industry when attacking
customer problems, the first step is always containment of the problem,
followed by root cause analysis, then preventative actions. In the case
of 9/11, the Bush II administration made a foolhardy leap directly to
preventative action, and has still not contained the threat of
terrorism. In fact, even the "root cause analysis" from the 9/11
Commission did not begin until 14 months AFTER 9/11
instead of on 9/12/2001. (23) Despite
all the wasted bureaucracy in creating the monstrous $44-billion-a-year
Department of Homeland Security, the American border is still a sieve
with more holes than a piece of Swiss cheese as evidenced by rampant
illegal immigration. (24)
Returning the overseas Defense Department troops back to actually
defending our borders with civilian border patrol staffing access
points is extremely crucial for two reasons — our border security and
our budget.
What kind of "policeman" patrols city streets with tanks, assault rifles, automated Predator drones and calls in aerial bombing and strafing runs to "peacekeep" the neighborhood? Washington DC is full of warmongers, armchair generals and chicken hawks who have no idea what the horrors of war entail. If our country were truly in danger of being invaded, I would be among the first to protect my family and friends. (Photo courtesy Leon Kuhn. Used with permission.) The enemies I have chosen to peacefully rise up against instead walk the halls of government. Errant foreign policies are to blame for 9/11 and any future acts of terrorism on our soil. In return for military and CIA meddling during the past century, America was hit on 9/11 by "blowback," a CIA term coined to describe what goes around comes around. (26) Without our troops stationed on Saudi, Bahraini, Qatari, Kuwaiti, et cetera soil, continuous supply of arms to both Israeli and Arab factions, and continuous bombing of Iraq, and harsh sanctions on Iraq and Iran, we would not have been attacked on 9/11. We must be far more wary of the reckless spenders who support the Warfare-Welfare state, the FED and corporatist bailouts than of desperate bands starving in caves on the opposite side of the world. The American republic was conceived in liberty and is dead in its grave until We the People decide to fight for our freedoms. While I draw breath I intend to see that liberty shall not perish under the heavy fist of this unconstitutional and illegal collection of rogues in government. For freedom, justice, peace and prosperity, Jake Towne November 14, 2009 [Note: If you would like to find out what General McChrystal, commander of our forces suggests we do instead, here is his leaked and declassified report. While I had been hoping to find a logical, detailed alternative, unfortunately it reads like a poor high school book report that was turned in 8 years too late. The key takeaway is that "many indicators suggest the overall situation is deteriorating." (page 5/66) Also recommended reading is the resignation letter of Iraq War veteran Matthew Hoh, who resigned rather then continue serving in Afghanistan, and Imperial Hubris, a book written by the CIA's Bin Laden unit's former head, Michael Scheuer.] Source List (1) The 9/11 Commission Report. 2004. http://govinfo.library.unt.edu/911/report/index.htm (2) FBIS Report. 2004. "Compilation of Usama Bin Laden Statements 1994 - January 2004." http://www.fas.org/irp/world/para/ubl-fbis.pdf (3) FBI's Most Wanted Fugitive: Usama Bin Laden. http://www.fbi.gov/wanted/topten/fugitives/laden.htm (4A) The 9/11 Commission Report. 2004. Embassy attacks p. 132-8/585. USS Cole p. 207-14/585. http://govinfo.library.unt.edu/911/report/911Report.pdf (4B) "1998 United States Embassy Bombings." Wikipedia. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1998_United_States_embassy_bombings (5) "USS Cole Bombing." Wikipedia. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/USS_Cole_bombing (6) "1993 World Trade Center Bombing." Wikipedia. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1993_World_Trade_Center_bombing (7) Liberty Bell Center of Constitutional Studies. "What Are Letters of Marque and Reprisal?" http://www.lbccs.org/2009/11/what-are-letters-of-marque-and-reprisal.html (8) "Just War." Wikipedia. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Just_War (9) UK Telegraph. 4 October 2001. "Pakistan Blocks Bin Laden Trial." http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/asia/afghanistan/1358464/Pakistan-blocks-bin-Laden-trial.html (10) CNN. 7 October 2001. "U.S. Rejects Taliban Offer to Try Bin Laden." http://archives.cnn.com/2001/US/10/07/ret.us.taliban/ (11) UK Guardian. 14 October 2001. "Bush Rejects Taliban Offer to Hand Bin Laden Over." http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2001/oct/14/afghanistan.terrorism5 (12) Antiwar.com. U.S. Military Casualty Count. http://antiwar.com/casualties/ (13) Le Nouvel Observateur. 1998. "Interview with Zbigniew Brzezinski." http://www.globalresearch.ca/articles/BRZ110A.html (14) The 9/11 Commission Report. 2004. p. 232-94/585. http://govinfo.library.unt.edu/911/report/911Report.pdf (15) "Operation Enduring Freedom." Wikipedia. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Enduring_Freedom (16) "Battle of Tora Bora." Wikipedia. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Tora_Bora (17) Bugliosi, Vincent. 2008. "The Prosecution of George W. Bush for Murder." p. 214-219. (18) iCasualties.org. "Operation Enduring Freedom Fatalities." http://icasualties.org/OEF/Fatalities.aspx (19) The Hill. October 2009. "$400 per Gallon Gas to Drive Debate over Cost of War in Afghanistan." http://thehill.com/homenews/administration/63407-400gallon-gas-another-cost-of-war-in-afghanistan- (20) Washington Times. October 2009. "Obama Aide Downplays Extra Troops in Afghanistan." http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2009/oct/05/afghan-attacks-add-to-call-for-more-troops//print/ (21) United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime. 2009. "Afghanistan Opium Survey 2009 - Summary Findings." p. 26/42. http://www.unodc.org/documents/crop-monitoring/Afghanistan/Afghanistan_opium_survey_2009_summary.pdf (22) Johnson, Chalmers. 2004. "The Sorrows of Empire." (23) "9/11 Commission." Wikipedia. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/9/11_Commission (24) White House. FY 2009 Budget. p. 83/342. http://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/budget/fy2009/pdf/hist.pdf (25) Towne, Jake. 2009. "America's Military Empire." http://towneforcongress.com/economy/americas-military-empire (26) Johnson, Chalmers. 2001. "Blowback." Copyright © 2009 Jake Towne. Reprinted with permission. |
Also by Jake Towne:
Common Sense Fixes the Job Market 02/04/10
Aid for the Haiti Disaster 01/15/10
Guns or Health Care? 01/07/10
Is the Dollar a Ponzi Scheme? 01/02/10
Health Care is NOT a Right 12/23/09
View all 13 articles by Jake Towne
Discuss this article (7 comments)


When America began bombing
Afghanistan in November 2001 and expanded the "War of Terror" by
commencing daily bombing of Pakistani villages in September 2008, both
assaults were committed against sovereign states without a declaration
of war, which is a constitutional requirement. The key justification
related to the public for both wars was the tragic 9/11 attacks. The
key goal related to the public for both wars was simply to capture
Osama Bin Laden.
However, the question of 9/11 responsibility
is somewhat moot in the case of Bin Laden. Although he was a CIA
"asset" in the proxy war fought against the Soviets in the 1980s, Bin
Laden has been America's enemy since 1998 when, on the anniversary of
American troops to Bin Laden's native Saudi Arabia, simultaneous
bombings at US embassies in Kenya and Tanzania killed 12 American
citizens. (
Besides
a formal declaration of war, the "just war" doctrine specifies that
wars cannot be preemptive; that there must be a just cause and innocent
life must be in immediate jeopardy; that war must be a last resort
after all diplomatic initiatives have failed; and it must be
proportional in regards to the damage caused by the aggressor. (
During December 12-17 the
infamous Battle of Tora Bora was fought in the mountains on the
Afghanistan border. It is widely believed that this is when Bin Laden
escaped to Pakistan. (
Per the most recent, highly detailed United
Nations report, the opium crop is over twice the pre-invasion levels.
In fact, up until the invasion in November 2001, the Taliban's mission
to eradicate the crop was well underway due to their religious beliefs
as seen by the dramatic drop in this chart. (
We must
extricate our country from the overseas military empire of well over
700 bases in 150 of the planet's 194 countries costing well over $1
trillion before it is too late. (