Lucas Kunce in Sangin, Afghanistan, with local security forces in 2014.
Courtesy of the Lucas Kunce campaign
What
we are seeing in Afghanistan right now shouldn’t shock you. It only
seems that way because our institutions are steeped in systematic
dishonesty. It doesn’t require a dissertation to explain what you’re
seeing. Just two sentences.
One: For 20 years, politicians, elites and D.C. military leaders lied to us about Afghanistan.
Two: What happened last week was inevitable, and anyone saying differently is still lying to you.
I
know because I was there. Twice. On special operations task forces. I
learned Pashto as a U.S. Marine captain and spoke to everyone I could
there: everyday people, elites, allies and yes, even the Taliban.
The
truth is that the Afghan National Security Forces was a jobs program
for Afghans, propped up by U.S. taxpayer dollars — a military jobs
program populated by nonmilitary people or “paper” forces (that didn’t
really exist) and a bevy of elites grabbing what they could when they
could.
You probably didn’t know that. That’s the point.
And it wasn’t just in Afghanistan. They also lied about Iraq.
I
led a team of Marines training Iraqi security forces to defend their
country. When I arrived I received a “stoplight” chart on their supposed
capabilities in dozens of missions and responsibilities. Green meant
they were good. Yellow was needed improvement; red said they couldn’t do
it at all.
I was delighted to see how far along they were on
paper — until I actually began working with them. I attempted to adjust
the charts to reflect reality and was quickly shut down. The ratings
could not go down. That was the deal. It was the kind of lie that kept
the war going.
So when people ask me if we made the right call
getting out of Afghanistan in 2021, I answer truthfully: Absolutely not.
The right call was getting out in 2002. 2003. Every year we didn’t get
out was another year the Taliban used to refine their skills and tactics
against us — the best fighting force in the world. After two decades,
$2 trillion and nearly 2,500 American lives lost, 2021 was way too late
to make the right call.
You’d think when it all came crumbling down around them, they’d accept the truth. Think again.
War-hungry hawks are suggesting our soldiers weren’t in harm’s way. Well, when I was there, two incredible Marines in my unit were killed.
Elitist hacks are even blaming
the American people for what happened last week. The same American
people that they spent years lying to about Afghanistan. Are you kidding
me?
We deserve better. Instead of politicians spending $6.4
trillion to “nation build” in the Middle East, we should start nation
building right here at home.
I can’t believe that would be a
controversial proposal, but already in Washington, we see some of the
same architects of these Middle Eastern disasters balking at the idea of
investing a fraction of that amount to build up our own country.
The lies about Afghanistan matter not just because of
the money spent or the lives lost, but because they are representative
of a systematic dishonesty that is destroying our country from the
inside out.
Remember when they told us the economy was back? Another lie.
Our
state of Missouri was home to the worst economic recovery from the
Great Recession in this part of the country. I see the boarded-up stores
and the vacant lots — one of which used to be my family’s home. When
our country’s elites were preaching about how they had solved the
financial crisis and the housing market was booming, I watched the house
I joined the Marine Corps out of sit on the market for two years. My
dad finally got $43,000 for it. He owed $78,000.
The only way
out is to level with the American people. I’ll start. With the
two-sentence truth about what we are seeing in Afghanistan right now:
For 20 years, politicians, elites and D.C. military leaders lied to us about Afghanistan.
What happened last week was inevitable, and anyone saying differently is still lying to you.
Cole County native Lucas Kunce is a Marine veteran and antitrust advocate. He is a Democratic candidate for U.S. Senate.
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