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    South Asia
     Oct 29, 2009
Britain's Afghan role in question
By Kaveh L Afrasiabi

If only the United States would stop "wavering" and match Britain's resolve in Afghanistan, progress would follow. This is the message being pushed by London - reflected in a recent interview of British Foreign Secretary David Miliband with the New York Times. [1] However, evidence suggests that British forces could become a liability for US objectives in Afghanistan.

With 85 soldiers killed so far this year, the growing British casualty list alone is an indication of the insurgency's sharp focus on British forces. It seems the imperial legacy of Great Britain in Afghanistan - aptly narrated in the Patrick Macrory classic Retreat from Kabul: The Catastrophic British Defeat in Afghanistan, 1842 - makes British troops more of a target than their US counterparts.

Fearful that history may be repeating itself, various British military

  

officials, pundits, and politicians are now warning of the country's imminent "strategic defeat" in Afghanistan. Some blame the lack of a clear-cut British strategy separate from that of the US, while others point a finger at US President Barack Obama and his "wobbling," "wavering" and "lack of will". [2]

Intent on winning the current debate in Washington on "counter-insurgency" versus "counter-terrorism" in favor of the former, the British government and British media outlets have spared no effort in their attempts to influence US decision-makers. The UK government even seems willing to resort to the type of disinformation that was used to support the 2003 invasion of Iraq, which included discredited intelligence reports of Saddam Hussein's weapons of mass destruction.

Suspicions have been aroused by a report on the BBC's Newsnight program last week claiming Washington had confirmed to Downing Street that the "substantial increase" in US troops requested by top US commander in Afghanistan, General Stanley McChrystal, would be approved. White House spokesman Robert Gibbs quickly dismissed the report, saying "it's not true either generally or specifically ... the president has not made a decision, and when he does, I think that you can assume that the BBC will not be the first outlet for such a decision."

Nonetheless, an apparent British focus on influencing policy at the Oval Office remains undeterred, even though its new occupant is not as amenable to such influence as his predecessor.

Obama and British Prime Minister Gordon Brown are unlikely ever to replicate former premier Tony Blair's cozy ties with former president George W Bush. The relationship is undermined by the Labour government's prominent support for the Iraq invasion, as well as Britain's questionable performance in maintaining stability in Basra, southern Iraq. A retired US army colonel, Peter Mansoor, accused the British in September of "abdicating responsibility" in Basra before their withdrawal in late 2007. [3]

The confidential British report partially leaked to the press in September claiming the British faced a similar debacle in Afghanistan is in marked contrast to comments made in the summer by the top British commander in Afghanistan, Brigadier Mark Carleton-Smith. He triumphantly told the world's media that the insurgents in Afghanistan "are on the brink of defeat".

Leading the British charge for more US troops in Afghanistan, Brown has even crossed the lines in terms of diplomatic protocol by publicly backing McChrystal during a recent tour of Kabul. McChrystal has requested some 40,000 additional troops for the mission in Afghanistan and has warned of dire consequences if this does not materialize.

Given that officials including Vice President Joseph Biden have stated reservations over McChrystal's request and that Obama has distanced himself from the general, perhaps Brown should take steps to avoid the impression that he is a Washington lobbyist.

Prime Minister Brown earlier this month gave the go-ahead "in principle" for the deployment of an additional 500 British troops to Afghanistan, taking the total UK force in the country to 9,500. However, he said the reinforcements were dependent on a series of conditions being met - including that they be fully equipped. Nor did he indicate when the deployment would take place.

It is not entirely clear that the US strategy in Afghanistan would necessarily benefit from more British troops - on the contrary, there are reasons to believe the opposite. Firstly, while the US can capitalize on the collective Afghan memory of US support against the Soviet Union during the 1980s, negative perceptions of Britain's colonial legacy in Afghanistan only serve the insurgents' interests.

Many people in the region also blame the British forces for the failure of the anti-narcotics campaign after the 2001 invasion and occupation of Afghanistan, as they ran the program. Since 2001, Afghanistan's narco-economy has grown into a monstrous tumor that feeds the insurgency as well as an international network of criminals. As of yet there has been no objective assessment of the British-run anti-narcotics campaign in 2001-2007, during which poppy seed production rose exponentially.

Another factor undermining the British presence in Afghanistan is the UK's tense relations with Iran. Tehran has accused London of meddling in Iran's post-election unrest [4] and of aiding an insurgent group, Jundallah, which recently launched attacks on Iran's Revolutionary Guards Corps. Tehran's animosity toward British forces in Afghanistan could easily translate into operational support for Afghan insurgents willing to concentrate on attacking British forces.

"The British government blames Iran for its debacle in southern Iraq, and knows well that Iran is quite capable of considerable 'mischief' in Afghanistan, partly because of its strong connection with warlords who stayed in Iran during the era of Soviet occupation of Afghanistan," a Tehran University political scientist told the author.

"If Iran concludes that its interests dictate taking a sharp turn against the British in Afghanistan, that could change the regional calculations," he said.

Britain feels slighted by its perceived exclusion from talks on Iran's nuclear program, while France and Russia have come to the fore. London is also unhappy that no nation has matched its unilateral increase in sanctions on Iran - a ban on trade with Iran's Bank Melli and the Islamic Republic of Iran Shipping Lines.

Principally because of Britain's stance on Iran, Tehran is unwilling to budge on the idea of a North Atlantic Treaty Organization supply corridor to Afghanistan via Iran. Nor is it willing to resume cooperation with the US on Afghanistan that was in place during 2001-2003. There is a link between Iran's nuclear crisis and the regional crises, and should current talks fail - and the British, Americans and others opt for more heat on Tehran - then Iran will likely hit back in Afghanistan.

There are glimmers of hope regarding the Iran nuclear issue and US-Iran cooperation in Afghanistan, but stumbling blocks remain and a British imperialism apparently intent on resurrecting its lost glories would be a major one.

Notes
1. See Britain Resolves, U.S. Wavers
New York Times, October 26, 2009.
2. Peter Spiegel and Alistair MacDonald, U.K. Presses Anti-Insurgent Strategy: Brown Finds Common Ground With Gen. McChrystal on Afghanistan as U.S. Debate Continues. The Wall Street Journal, October 15, 2009.
3. MoD blocked warning that Britain faces Afghan defeat The Sunday Times September 6, 2009.
4. In his recent New York visit, Iran's foreign minister complained that his British counterpart, Miliband, had told Arab leaders that the Iranian regime "is finished" due to the post-election disturbances.

Kaveh L Afrasiabi, PhD, is the author of After Khomeini: New Directions in Iran's Foreign Policy (Westview Press) . For his Wikipedia entry, click here. His latest book, Reading In Iran Foreign Policy After September 11 (BookSurge Publishing , October 23, 2008) is now available.

(Copyright 2009 Asia Times Online (Holdings) Ltd. All rights reserved. Please contact us about sales, syndication and republishing.)


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