On the War’s Front Lines
On the War’s Front Lines – David Ignatius, Washington Post opinion.
Here’s what you would see if you traveled this week to Kandahar and Helmand provinces, the two big battlegrounds of the Afghanistan war: a conflict that is balanced tenuously between success and failure. The United States has deployed enough troops to disrupt the Taliban insurgency and draw increasing fire, but not enough to secure the major population centers. That’s not a viable position. I visited four US bases in the two provinces this week, traveling with the military. I was able to hear from local commanders and talk with a few Afghans. I’ll describe what I learned, positive and negative, so readers can weigh this evidence from the field. Then I’ll explain why my conclusion is that President Obama should add some troops.
We began in Kandahar city, at the headquarters of what’s known as Regional Command South, which oversees the battle in the two provinces. It’s a city on the edge of the desert, surrounded by jagged, slate-gray mountains. Just over the border to the east are the Taliban’s supply lines in Pakistan. America’s NATO allies have been running the war in Kandahar province, but they have been badly outgunned. So several months ago, the United States sent an Army brigade of about 4,000 troops with Stryker armored vehicles. That disrupted the Taliban insurgents, but they have responded with more roadside bombs along Highway 1, the main route that connects Kandahar to Afghanistan’s other major cities…
More at The Washington Post.