Good War, Bad War

By Patrick Appel
From Michael Crowley’s article on Afghanistan:

For the left in the Bush era, America’s two wars have long been divided into the good and the bad. Iraq was the moral and strategic catastrophe, while Afghanistan–home base for the September 11 attacks–was a righteous fight.

This dichotomy was especially appealing to liberals because it allowed them to pair their call for withdrawal from Iraq with a call for escalation in Afghanistan. Leaving Iraq wasn’t about retreating; it was about bolstering another front, one where our true strategic interests lie. The left could meet conservative charges of defeatism with the rhetoric of victory. Barack Obama is now getting ready to turn this idea into policy. He has already called for sending an additional two U.S. brigades, or roughly 10,000 troops, to the country and may wind up proposing a much larger escalation in what candidate Obama has called "the war we need to win." […]

The challenge of exiting Iraq was supposed to be the first great foreign policy test of Obama’s presidency. But it is Afghanistan that now looms as the potential quagmire. Winning the good war will, at a minimum, require the most sophisticated counterinsurgency techniques…which take enormous resources. But, even then, it’s not at all clear what victory looks like, or whether it’s even possible in a country known as the graveyard of empires. All of which raises the question of how much longer Afghanistan really can be considered the good war.