A decade of war will pass quietly at the White House this week.
President Barack Obama plans no public events Friday to mark a moment the nation never really expected: 10 years of war in Afghanistan.  Out of sight and off the minds of millions of Americans, the war is the  most prolonged conflict this country has been engaged in since Vietnam.  Obama has gone so far as to declare it "the longest war in American  history."
The lack of attention  to the 10-year milestone is driven in part by White House thinking that  Obama has already helped lead a national reflection on a decade of  costly sacrifice and battle. He did that on the recent anniversary of  Sept. 11, 2001, the day when many people feel the war unforgettably  began.
Yet Obama's handling of the new war milestone also  underscores his interest in sticking to an economic message without  distraction. Jobs, not war, matter most right now.What's  more, in military terms, analysts say a 10-year anniversary holds  little significance compared with other markers. The main one is the  end-of-2014 deadline Obama has set for withdrawal of most U.S. forces,  along with the question of whether the United States will be able to  leave Afghanistan stable enough politically to prevent a perilous  collapse.
It was on Oct. 7,  2001, that the United States and its allies invaded Afghanistan, seeking  to end the rule of radical Islamic Taliban and its ability to provide  haven to the al-Qaida terrorists who launched the unprecedented  terrorist assault on Sept. 11.
At the time, President George W. Bush said to the country, "In the months ahead, our patience will be one of our strengths."
The nation, under Bush and Obama, saw its patience tested much longer than that.
The American role in the war is now on pace to last at least 13 years.Put  together, more than 2 million troops have been sent to Afghanistan and  the war in Iraq, which began in 2003, including hundreds of thousands of  troops who have served more than one tour. Nearly 4,500 U.S. troops  have died in Iraq and about 1,700 in Afghanistan. Tens of thousands more  have been wounded.
Obama moved to end the war in Iraq but  initially expanded the one in Afghanistan, trying to regain control of  the conflict he saw as central to American security.His  focus was clear in June when he announced that, as promised, troops  would begin withdrawing in July and that 33,000 troops will be home by  next summer. It was time to focus on home, he said.
Still, almost  70,000 troops will remain in a volatile country after that as the United  States continues its withdrawal and its shift of security control to  Afghan forces through 2014."The  tone of the whole speech was, 'This war is effectively over and we're  gradually shutting it down,'" said Nora Bensahel, a senior fellow at the  Center for a New American Security. "Since that is what the White House  wants to signal to the country, it doesn't surprise me that the White  House isn't spending a lot of attention on the 10th anniversary."
Obama  is in an accelerating re-election fight in which Republicans have taken  aim at his Afghanistan policy, but foreign policy is vastly  overshadowed by economic concerns.
A  recent CBS News poll found that nearly 6 in 10 Americans say the United  States should not be involved in Afghanistan, a sharp turnaround from  as recently as two years ago, when a majority supported the U.S. mission  there. Almost 7 in 10 people say the war has gone on longer than they  expected.
In terms of the  military, 1 in 3 U.S. veterans of the post-9/11 military believes the  wars in Iraq and Afghanistan were not worth fighting, according to a Pew  Research Center poll released Wednesday.
Obama  has spoken on a series of occasions lately about the sacrifice and  success of the military in the 9/11 generation, the families who support  them and the goals ahead.
"As  our mission transitions from combat to support, Afghans will take  responsibility for their own security, and the longest war in American  history will come to a responsible end," Obama said at an American  Legion conference in August. "For our troops and military families  who've sacrificed so much, this means relief from an unrelenting decade  of operations."
Obama may seek  another occasion to thank troops in the coming days, and the White House  would not rule out a written statement from him Friday about the war  anniversary. The president spoke about American resilience on Sept. 11  after he visited memorials at all three sites where hijacked airliners  crashed, in New York City, at the Pentagon and near Shanksville,More...
 
 
 
 
 
 10/06/2011 12:52:00 AM
10/06/2011 12:52:00 AM
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