It took “a long time for this elementary truth to be spoken,” my colleague Jeffrey Simpson wrote this week under a headline, “Yes, the Afghan mission is ‘failing' and, yes, the rituals continue.”
He was quoting, with approval and that weary wisdom common to those who live in Central Canada, Prime Minister Stephen Harper's recent remarks on CNN to the effect that military victory isn't possible in Afghanistan.
“Now pouring out of Stephen Harper,” wrote James Travers of the Toronto Star on the same subject, “is the smoke that the Taliban can't be beaten.” His colleague, Haroon Siddiqui, said, “the Prime Minister says NATO cannot win, period. So what are we doing there?” The previous week, Mr. Travers's and Mr. Siddiqui's colleague, Thomas Walkom, said of the PM's acknowledgment, “I find this admission breathtaking … if the Taliban can't be beaten, what are Canadian troops doing in Afghanistan? If the Taliban can't be beaten, why are our soldiers still dying?”
Collectively, the pundits were surprised, if modestly pleased, that the Canadian PM had finally smartened up and was now seeing the war as they do, to quote Mr. Simpson, as “an ill-defined mission that defied all the rules of counterinsurgency,” led by “an enthusiastic general [this would be the former Canadian Forces' boss, Rick Hillier]” who bamboozled both press and politicians.
Wow: I don't know where these boys, including the PM, have been since 2006, when Canadian troops arrived in Kandahar; well I do know, and the answer is Ottawa and Toronto.
But that the Afghan mission, certainly once it moved to the south, was always going to be bloody difficult, fraught with peril, complicated, lethal and perhaps even doomed is not news. It isn't news to Canadian soldiers or to those who have covered them in Afghanistan, and it ought not to come as a shock to Canadians, either.