On War Fighting
Of course everyone wants an end to the conflict in Afghanistan. Canadians and other allied nations with forces in Afghanistan have implemented rules of engagement that attempt to minimize the risk of civilian casualties in tactical confrontations, even at the expense of a longer strategic involvement.
Our motivation is of course noble and humane. Unfortunately, we have learned not to expect reciprocity from the other side, as Bing West points out:
IN AFGHANISTAN, population protection and nation building have been emphasized at the unintended expense of aggressive war fighting. The top commander there, General Stanley McChrystal, has issued severe restrictions on the use of artillery and air support. While there is an admirable moral aspect to this restraint, the strategic rationale is less clear. If NATO so alienates the population by accidentally killing civilians that many more join the Taliban, then why do the Taliban deliberately kill three times as many ordinary Afghans without causing three times the backlash, leading to their defeat?
Kilcullen recommends “putting the well-being of noncombatant civilians ahead of any other consideration, even—in fact, especially—ahead of killing the enemy.” That too is a wise and moral admonition. But don’t expect reciprocity. The Pashtun tribes do not betray the Taliban in their midst. Few are arrested, and even fewer are put behind bars, because the police and judges routinely accept bribes in return for releases. The result is that Afghanistan on a per capita basis holds fewer criminals (insurgents included) in jail than does Sweden.
H/T to Unambig








