The death of Osama bin Laden presents
an important opportunity to reassess
U.S. strategy in Afghanistan. Current U.S.
thinking centers on two interests. The first
is preventing al Qaeda and its Taliban allies
from reestablishing a safe haven. The
second is preventing the violence in Afghanistan
from destabilizing Pakistan,
thus putting its nuclear forces at risk and
increasing the likelihood of nuclear terrorism.
Coalition strategy is based on the
assumptions that the only way to deny al
Qaeda safe haven is by building a strong
central Afghan state and that Pakistan’s
nuclear complex will become increasingly
vulnerable to militant attacks if the Taliban
succeeds in Afghanistan.
Both assumptions are wrong. The United
States does not need to build a state in
Afghanistan because the conditions that
allowed al Qaeda safe haven in the 1990s
have permanently changed. Moreover, the
steps needed to help Pakistan secure its nuclear
arsenal have nothing to do with the
war in Afghanistan. Policymakers should
scale back their ambitions in Afghanistan.
If they do so, they could cut troop levels by
80–90 percent while defending core U.S. interests
and dramatically reducing the costs
to America in both blood and treasure. SOURCE: Cato Institute
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