The Washington Times

Petraeus uses media to press patience on Afghanistan war

KABUL, Afghanistan | A weekend media blitz by the Army’s public relations master sent a clear message: It’s not time to hit the panic button in Afghanistan, but success in the nearly 9-year-old war won’t come quickly.

The appeal for patience by ArmyGen. David H. Petraeus, made in a series of media interviews Sunday, also suggests that he may propose that only a few troops begin leaving in July, as President Obama has promised.

That could force the White House to choose between the professional advice of a respected commander who is widely credited with turning around the Iraq war and pressure from some Democrats for significant withdrawals and an end to the unpopular Afghanistan conflict.

Congressional support for the Afghanistan war is wavering. Last month, House Democratic leaders had to rely on Republican support to pass a nearly $59 billion measure to fund Mr. Obama’s additional 30,000 troops in Afghanistan and other programs. Twelve Republicans and 102 Democrats opposed the measure.

House Appropriations Committee Chairman David R. Obey, Wisconsin Democrat, said he was torn between his obligation to bring the bill to the floor and his “profound skepticism” that the money would lead to a successful end to the war.

To bolster congressional confidence, the media-savvy Gen. Petraeus delivered his message through news organizations with significant audiences in Washington — NBC’s “Meet the Press,”the New York Times and The Washington Post.

“We are doing everything we can to achieve progress as rapidly as we can without rushing to failure,” Gen. Petraeus told The Post. “We’re keenly aware that this has been ongoing for approaching nine years. We fully appreciate the impatience in some quarters.”

During the interviews, Gen. Petraeus said his six weeks at the helm of the NATO and U.S. mission had convinced him that the counterinsurgency strategy he devised with his predecessor, ArmyGen. Stanley A. McChrystal, was fundamentally sound and just needed time to succeed.

He also spelled out a goal for the war — not to transform Afghanistan into a Western-style democracy but to keep al Qaeda and other extremist groups at bay while the Afghan government has a chance to take control and win the trust of the Afghan people.

“We’re here so that Afghanistan does not once again become a sanctuary for transnational extremists the way it was when al Qaeda planned the 9/11 attacks in the Kandahar area,” Gen. Petraeus told “Meet the Press” in an interview in Kabul.

Stephen Biddle, a defense policy analyst with the Council on Foreign Relations in Washington, said the American public’s chief worry is that the U.S. may be engaged in a fight in Afghanistan that it cannot win.

Part of the job of Gen. Petraeus and other administration officials is to “make the case the war is winnable and we’re in the process of winning it,” Mr. Biddle said.

To convince skeptics that he’s not coaching a losing team, Gen. Petraeus said he sees early signs of progress in routing the Taliban from some of their southern strongholds, reforming the Afghan government and training and equipping thousands of Afghan soldiers and police.

He also cited a new initiative to create Afghan community defense forces — similar to those he used with success in Iraq — and nascent steps to reintegrate low-level insurgents who want to stop fighting.

Gen. Petraeus acknowledged growing frustration with an increasingly violent war, in which the usual benchmarks of success — capturing territory or killing large numbers of the enemy — are difficult to measure.

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Copyright 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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