海角大神

Afghanistan: What Americans really think

The pundits have spoken. Now, how does the rest of America feel about the war and more troops in Afghanistan? Conflicted but reluctantly supportive, it seems.

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Patrik Jonsson / 海角大神
Inaction by President Obama "means another Vietnam," says Air Force vet Bill Carpenter. His son, Matt Carpenter, is an Army mechanic set for deployment to Afghanistan.

滨迟鈥檚 Oktoberfest weekend in America, but behind all those Rockwellian bratwurst feasts and open-air concerts lurks a nagging and building concern among many Americans over a faraway place: Afghanistan.

Polls show that Americans are begrudgingly getting used to perpetual wars, and just over half of Americans support the eight-year mission in Afghanistan, which has cost more than 800 American lives so far.

President Obama now faces a critical decision over whether or not to send up to 40,000 more troops to that critical Middle East outpost. The decision, according to Americans like Barbara Jones, could impact not only Obama鈥檚 legacy, but national security, soldiers鈥 sacrifices, and future conflicts.

鈥淚鈥檓 so nervous for him and the world,鈥 says Ms. Jones, an Obama supporter, poking through a city-wide yard sale on Stone Mountain鈥檚 town square. 鈥淭his has become a costly war, but not just in terms of money, but emotional costs. This is a philosophical war. And people are war-weary.鈥

Lawmakers met with Obama this week before the White House conducted a marathon session Friday as it weighs national security and international politics against Gen. Stanley McChrystal鈥檚 warnings that failure to bulk up the troop presence could lead to defeat in Afghanistan.

Gen. McChrystal鈥檚 strategy, as explained by Monitor writers Ben Arnoldy and Dan Murphy here, aims to eke out victory as defined by using troops to protect civilians from a mounting counterinsurgency and staking out peaceful territories to let a democratic Afghanistan take hold.

Critics say the US is leaning too far toward a 鈥渢rendy鈥 counterinsurgency tactic that threatens to erode conventional capabilities and pave the way for open-ended conflicts.

Made only more difficult by the Nobel Peace Prize awarded to Obama on Friday, the time has come for the president to stop pontificating and take decisive action, says Bill Carpenter, an Air Force veteran, whose son, Army mechanic Matt Carpenter, just received deployment orders for Afghanistan.

鈥淭he bottom line is you go to war to win,鈥 says Mr. Carpenter, selling Halloween trinkets and books out of his old green Ford pick-up truck. 鈥淒o anything else and it鈥檚 a waste of time, money, and kids鈥 lives. My fear is that the President isn鈥檛 going to do anything and let it languish like Vietnam.鈥

The Baltimore Sun鈥檚 Ron Smith says Americans are ready for just that scenario. A new Clarus Research Poll shows 68 percent of Americans 鈥渁gree with the idea that we won鈥檛 either win or lose the war in Afghanistan 鈥 but will instead just remain there,鈥 Mr. Smith points out .

Obama is 鈥渙n the horns of a dilemma,鈥 Mr. Smith continues. 鈥淒oes he send troops [as McChrystal has requested] or does he change strategies, as advised by Vice President Joe Biden, and rely more on special ops and drones to harass the Taliban and Al-Qaeda?鈥

Retired car salesman Guy Brooks, a Republican, predicts that not sending troops will set a course for defeat -- a result with broad implications not just for US security, but the view of America in Pakistan, the broader Middle East, and the entire world.

鈥淚f we don鈥檛 try to win the war, we鈥檒l lose it, and eventually just get out,鈥 he says. 鈥淲e all know we鈥檒l be there at least another four to five years, and it鈥檚 worth a try to win it. Getting out means we鈥檒l hurt our chances鈥 in any potential future conflict.

Polls this week, showed that 52 percent of Americans believe Afghanistan is a just and necessary conflict, and also support a troop surge with a slim 48 to 45 margin according to a recent . Moreover, 55 percent trust Obama to make the right decision on Afghanistan.

鈥淭he President鈥檚 got a big decision to make,鈥 says Lester Davis, an engineer at Atlanta鈥檚 Four Seasons Hotel.

Democrat Ernie Franchell, a retired carpenter, agrees. 鈥淗e鈥檚 got to buck up and make up his mind,鈥 Mr. Franchell says. 鈥淓ither way, this will be his defining moment.鈥

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