Afghanistan: The Other Lost War
By Stephen Lendman
09/28/06 "Information
Clearing House" -- -- In his important new book
Freedom Next Time
, dealing with "empire, its facades and the enduring
struggle of people for their freedom," John Pilger has a chapter
on Afghanistan. In it he says that "Through all the humanitarian
crises in living memory, no country has been abused and suffered
more, and none has been helped less than Afghanistan." He goes
on to describe what he sees as something more like a moonscape
than a functioning nation. In the capitol, Kabul, there are
"contours of rubble rather than streets, where people live in
collapsed buildings, like earthquake victims waiting for
rescue....(with) no light or heat." It seems like it's always
been that way for these beleaguered people who've had a long
history of conflict and suffering with little relief.
In the
19th century, the Afghan people were victimized by the "Great
Game" struggle pitting the British empire against Tsarist Russia
for control of that part of the world. More recently in the
1980s, it paid dearly again when a US recruited mujahideen
guerrilla army battled against a Soviet occupation. It forced
the occupiers out but at the cost of a ravaged country and one
forced to endure still more suffering and destruction from the
brutal civil war in the 1990s that followed the Soviet
withdrawal. Then came 9/11, the US attack, invasion, occupation
and further devastation that's ongoing with no end in sight and
now intensifying in ferocity.
In his book, Pilger explains that Afghanistan today is what the
CIA once called Vietnam - "the grand illusion of the American
cause." There's no assured safety even in most parts of the
capitol now where for a brief time after the US invasion the
people of Kabul enjoyed a degree of freedom long denied them by
the Taliban. Now there's neither freedom nor safety almost
anywhere in the country as the brutal regional "warlords" rule
most parts of it, and the Taliban have begun a resurgence
reigniting the conflict that for a time subsided. Today the
nation is once again a war zone and narco-state with the
"warlords" and drug kingpins controlling everything outside the
capitol and the Taliban gaining strength and fighting back in
the south trying to regain what they lost. In Kabul itself, the
country's selected and nominal president Hamid Karzai (a former
CIA asset and chief consultant to US oil giant UNOCAL) is a
caricature of a man and willing US stooge who functions as
little more than the mayor of the city. Outside the capitol he
has no mandate or support and wouldn't last a day on his own
without the round the clock protection afforded him by the US
military and the private contractor DynCorp.
When they ruled most of the country in the 1990s, the Taliban at
least kept order and wouldn't tolerate banditry, rape or murder,
despite their ultra-puritanical ways and harsh treatment of the
disobedient. They also virtually ended opium production. Now all
that's changed. The US - British invasion in 2001 ended the ban
on opium production, allowed the "warlords" to replant as much
of it as they wanted, and the result according to a report
released by the UN is that cultivation of this crop is spiraling
out of control. Antonio Maria Costa, the UN anti-drug chief,
said this year's opium harvest will be a record 6,100 tons
(enough to make 610 tons of heroin) or 92% of the total world
supply and 30% more than the amount consumed globally. Costa
went much further in his comments saying southern Afghanistan "display(s)
the ominous hallmarks of incipient collapse, with large-scale
drug cultivation and trafficking, insurgency and terrorism,
crime and corruption (because) opium cultivation is out of
control." He directed his comments at President Karzai for not
acting forcefully to deal with the problem saying provincial
governors and police chiefs should be sacked and held to
account. He also accused government administrators of
corruption.
The reason why this is happening is that elicit drug trafficking
is big business with an annual UN estimate gross of around $400
- 500 billion or double the sales revenue from legal
prescription drugs the US pharmaceutical giants reported in
2005. Those profiting from it include more than the "kingpins"
and organized crime. The elicit trade has long been an important
profit center for many US and other banks including the giant
international money center ones. It's also well-documented that
the CIA has been involved in drug-trafficking (directly or
indirectly) throughout its half century existence and especially
since the 1980s and the Contra wars in Nicaragua. Today the CIA
is partnered with the Afghan "warlords" and criminal syndicates
in the huge business of trafficking heroin. It guarantees the
crime bosses easy access to the lucrative US market and the CIA
a large and reliable revenue stream to augment its annual
(heretofore secret) budget disclosed by Mary Margaret Graham,
Deputy Director of National Intelligence for Collection, to be
$44 billion in
2005.
Why the US Attacked and Invaded Afghanistan
The now famous (or infamous) leaked Downing Street (or
smoking-gun) memo on the secret July, 2002 UK Labor government
meeting discussed how the Bush administration "wanted to remove
Saddam, through military action (and) had no patience with the
UN route. (So to justify it) the intelligence and facts were
being fixed around the policy." It doesn't get much clearer than
that, and the high UK official
(Richard Dearlove, head of British intelligence MI6) had to know
as he sat in on the high-level secret meetings in Washington at
which the plan was discussed. So to help out in serious
damage-control, the US corporate media, in its customary
empire-supportive role, either called the document a fake or
ignored it altogether. It was no fake, and as such, got front
page coverage in the European press after the Rupert
Murdoch-owned London Sunday Times broke the story in their
online edition on May 1,
2005.
The US war on Afghanistan was also planned well in advance (at
least a year or more) of the 9/11 attack that provided the
claimed justification for it. It was part of the US strategic
plan to control the vast oil and gas resources of Central Asia
that former National Security Advisor Zbigniew Brzezinski under
President Carter explained the importance of in his
1997 book The Grand Chessboard. In it he referred to Eurasia as
the "center of world power extending from Germany and Poland in
the East through Russia and China to the Pacific and including
the Middle East and Indian subcontinent." By dominating this
region including Afghanistan with its strategic location, the US
would assure it had access to and controlled the vast energy
resources there.
Early on the US was very willing to work with the Taliban
believing their authoritarian rule would bring stability to the
country without which any plan would be in jeopardy. Their
religious extremism, harsh treatment of women and the
disobedient, and overall human rights abuses were of no concern
and never are anywhere else despite the pious rhetoric from
Washington to the contrary. It was only in 1999 when the Taliban
failed to stabilize the areas they controlled and negotiations
broke down trying to convince them to bow to US interests that
official policy changed and the decision was made to remove
them. Initially the plan to do it was to be a joint US - Russia
operation, and at the time, meetings were held between US
officials and those from Russia and India to discuss what kind
of government should be installed. The US needs stability in
Afghanistan and control of the country for the oil and gas
pipelines it wants built from the landlocked Caspian Basin to
warm water ports in the south. It wants them gotten there
through Pakistan and Afghanistan as the prime transhipment route
to avoid having them cross Russia or Iran.
September 11, 2001 provided the US with the pretext it needed to
begin the war it intended to wage using whatever reason it
decided to pick to justify it. It began a scant four weeks later
on October 7 as a joint US - British intensive aerial assault
against a country unable to put up any kind of defense against
it. It then ended a second scant 5 weeks after that on November
12 when the Taliban fled from Kabul allowing the Northern
Alliance forces the US had recruited to replace them to enter
the city the following day.
The intense but brief conflict came at an enormous cost to the
Afghan people already devastated by the effects of almost
endless war and internal turmoil for over two decades. It
displaced as many as about six million or more people fleeing to
neighboring countries or becoming internally displaced persons
and being categorized as IDPs. About half to two-thirds of those
refugees have now returned home but most are unable to find much
relief from where they'd been. Refugees International
interviewed returnees to Kabul in 2002, where conditions are
much more stable than elsewhere, and learned that while people
were happy to be back they found conditions there to be terrible
- no shelter, no schools, no work, no medical care, no security,
and for many little or no food.
Things are no better today, and according to UK-based Christian
Aid are likely to become worse. It recently assessed conditions
in 66 villages in the west and northwest of the country and
learned millions of Afghans face hunger because because draught
caused complete crop failures in the worst hit areas. It
reported people are already going hungry and without
considerable aid famine is a real possibility. Things are all
the harder because the internal conflict resumed beginning with
the resurgent Taliban
(discussed below) that began slowly in late 2002, grew
significantly by mid-2003 and has been building in intensity
since.
It all began with the US-led attack on Afghanistan that from the
start took a great toll in injuries and deaths, mostly affecting
innocent civilians. Marc Herold of the University of New
Hampshire estimated between 3,100 - 3,600 deaths resulted from
the 5 week conflict or as many as over 600 more than those
killed on 9/11 in the US which was the pretext used to go to
war. Herold continues estimating deaths and injuries to Afghans
and occupying forces since and believes as of July, 2004 about
12,000 Afghan troops and civilians have been killed in the
conflict and about 32,000 seriously injured. As things have
intensified since, those numbers increase daily and are now
considerably higher but it's not known to what level. And what's
not included in any of the estimates is the many unknown number
of thousands who've died since October,
2001 from the crushing poverty causing starvation and disease.
US "Liberation" Brought No Relief
For a brief time after mid-November, 2001, the Afghan people
were free from the repression forced on them under Taliban rule,
but what replaced them was no improvement nor did the US
"liberator" intend it to be. The US-installed so-called Northern
Alliance is terminology used to identify the United Islamic
Front for the Salvation of Afghanistan that prior to October
7, 2001 controlled less than one-third of the country. They
never were in the past or were they to be now the "salvation" of
anything but their own self-interest. The Alliance is comprised
of about five dominant mujahideen factions each led by a thugish
"warlord" ruling over a band of murderers, brutes and rapists
whose criminal acts Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch
have condemned.
As a result, the brief respite from conflict the Afghan people
enjoyed was short-lived under their new rulers. With them back
in charge in the regions their respective "warlords" controlled,
murder, rape and mayhem became common again as it was under
their previous rule that gave rise to the Taliban in the first
place. So while the Taliban initially faded away after
mid-November, 2001, defenseless against the US-led onslaught
against them, growing anger and discontent with the present rule
has allowed them to regroup and begin a campaign of resurgence.
That campaign is gaining strength and looking more all the time
like it may turn Afghanistan into a Central Asian version of the
conflict in Iraq that cooler civilian heads in Washington and at
the Pentagon know is out of control, a lost cause and only will
end when the occupation does under a future US administration.
The Bush administration, that's usually wrong but never in
doubt, makes it clear it will "stay the course" and not "cut and
run."
Conditions In Afghanistan Today
Life in Afghanistan today is surreal. In parts of Kabul an
opulent elite has emerged many of whom have grown rich from
rampant corruption and drug trafficking, and the city actually
has an upscale shopping area catering to them offering for sale
specialty products like expensive Swiss watches and other luxury
goods. They can be found at the Roshan Plaza shopping mall and
Kabul City Center plaza that has three floors of heated shops, a
cappuccino bar and the country's first escalator. The rutted
streets are locked down and deserted at night, but during the
day luxury jeeps and four-wheel drive limousines are seen on
them. There are also upscale hotels including the five-star
Serena, built and run by the Aga Khan Development Network
(AKDN), offering luxury accommodations for visiting dignitaries,
Western businessmen and others able to afford what they cost in
an otherwise impoverished city still devastated by years of
conflict and destruction. The arriviste class there can,
mansions are being built for them, foreign branch banks are
there to service their needs, and an array of other amenities
are there to accommodate their extravagant tastes and wishes. In
a country where drug trafficking is the leading industry and
corruption is systemic, there's a ready market for those able to
afford most anything, even in a place as unlikely as
Afghanistan.
There's also a ready market provided by the array of well-off
foreign ex-pats, a well-cared for NGO community (with their own
guest houses for their staff), colonial administrators,
commercial developers, mercenaries, fortune-hunters, highly-paid
enforcers and assorted other hangers-on looking to suck out of
this exploited country whatever they can while they're able to
do it. So far at least, there's nothing stopping them except the
threat of angry and desperate people ready to erupt on any
pretext and the growing resistance gaining strength and support
from the resurgent Taliban. There's also no shortage of alcohol
in a fundamentalist Muslim country where it's not allowed,
high-priced prostitutes are available on demand with plenty of
ready cash around to buy their services, a reported 80 brothels
operate in the city, and imported Thai masseuses are at the
luxury Mustafa Hotel where the owner is called a Mr. Fix It, an
Internet Cafe is located on the bottom floor offering ethernet
and wireless connectivity, and the restaurant fare ranges from
traditional Afghan to steaks, pizza and "the best burger in all
of Kabul." The impoverished local population would surely not be
amused or pleased comparing their daily plight to the luxury
living afforded the elite few able to afford it. Their city is
in ruins, and desperation, neglect, despair and growing anger
characterize their daily lives.
This Potemkin facade of opulence doesn't represent what that
daily life is like in the city and throughout the country for
the vast majority of the approximate 26 million or so Afghans.
For them life is harsh and dangerous, and they show their
frustration and impatience in their anger ready to boil over on
any pretext. As in Iraq, there's been little reconstruction
providing little relief from the devastation and making what
work there is hard to find and offering little pay. The result
makes depressing reading:
-- Unemployment is soaring at about 45% of those wanting work.
--The half of the working population getting it earns on average
about a meager $200 a year or a little over $300 for those
involved in the opium trade which is the main industry in the
country.
--The poverty overall is overwhelming and about one-fourth of
the population depends on scarce and hard to find food aid
creating a serious risk of famine.
-- The life expectancy in the country at 44.5 years is one of
the lowest in the world.
--The infant mortality rate is the highest in the world at 161
per 1,000 births
-- One-fifth of children die before age five.
-- An Afghan woman dies in childbirth every 30 minutes.
--In Kabul alone an estimated 500,000 people are homeless or
living in makeshift and deplorable conditions.
-- Only one-fourth of the population has access to safe drinking
water and adequate sanitation.
-- Only one doctor is available per 6,000 people and one nurse
per 2,500 people.
--100 or more people are killed or wounded each month by
unexploded ordnance.
--Children are being kidnapped and sold into slavery or murdered
to harvest their organs that bring a high price.
-- Less than 6% of Afghans have access to electricity available
only sporadically.
-- Women's literacy rate is about 19%, and schools are being
burned in the south of the country and teachers beheaded in
front of their students.
--Many women are also forced to beg in the streets or turn to
prostitution to survive.
In addition, lawlessness is back, Sharia law has been
reinstated, the internal conflict has resumed, and no one is
safe either from the country's warring factions or from the
hostile occupying force making life intolerable for the vast
majority of the Afghan people.
Afghanistan, Inc. - The Lucrative Business of War-Profiteering
Those wondering why the US engages in so many conflicts (aside
from the geopolitical reasons) and is always ready for another
might consider the fact that wars are so good for business.
Corporate America, Wall Street and large insider investors love
them because they're so profitable. It shows up noticeably on
the bottom line of all contractors the Bush administration
choose to "rebuild" Iraq and Afghanistan. It's also been a
bonanza for the many consultants, engineers and mercenaries
working for them who can pocket up to $1,000 a day compared to
Afghan employees lucky to earn $5 for a day's work when they can
find it.
In both Iraq and Afghanistan, huge open-ended, no-bid contracts
amounting to many billions of dollars were awarded to about 70
US firms including the usual array of politically connected ones
whose names have now become familiar to many - Bechtel, Fluor,
Parsons, Shaw Group, SAIC, CH2M Hill, DynCorp, Blackwater, The
Louis Berger Group, The Rendon Group and many more including the
one that nearly always tops the list, Halliburton and its
subsidiary Kellogg, Brown and Root. Since 2001, this arguably
best-connected of all war-profiteers was awarded $20 billion in
war-related contracts the company then exploited to the fullest
by doing shoddy work, running up massive cost-overruns and then
submitting fraudulent billings.
Halliburton and other contractors have managed to build
permanent military bases in Iraq and Afghanistan for the
Pentagon and prisons to house and torture whomever US
authorities choose to arrest and for whatever reason. But their
work is nothing short of shoddy and sloppy when it comes to
assessing the job they've done rebuilding both countries. In
Iraq Halliburton did such a poor job repairing the country's oil
fields the US Army estimates it's cost the country $8 billion in
lost production. It also botched the simple job of installing
metering systems at ports in southern Iraq to assure oil wasn't
being smuggled out of the country.
No Serious US-Directed Effort To Rebuild Two War-Torn Countries
Far more important for most Iraqis and Afghans, there's been no
serious effort to rebuild these war-torn countries across the
board. That effort is desperately needed to restore the
essential infrastructure destroyed in both conflicts like power
generating stations and water and sewage facilities, but the
funding for them has been poorly directed, lost in a black hole
of corruption or wasted because of inefficiency, design flaws,
construction errors or deliberate unwillingness to do much more
than hand out big contracts to US chosen companies then able to
pocket big profits while doing little for the people in return
for them. It also shows in the state of the countries' basic
facilities like schools, health clinics and hospitals that are
in deplorable condition with little being done to improve them
despite lofty promises otherwise. One example is the US pledge
of $17.7 million in 2005 for education in Afghanistan that
turned out, in fact, to be for a private for-profit American
University of Afghanistan only available to Afghans who can
afford its cost - meaning none of them but the privileged few.
It's clear the US occupier has no interest in helping the people
it said it came to "liberate" unless by "liberate" it meant from
their freedom to be able to exploit and abuse them in service to
the interests of capital which is all the Bush administration
ever has in mind. Just as Iraq has the misfortune of having a
vast oil reserve beneath its sand the US wants to control, so
too Afghanistan happens to be strategically located as part of a
prime transhipment route over which the Caspian Basin's great
oil and gas reserves can be transported by pipeline to the warm
water southern ports the US wants to ship it out from to
countries it will allow it to be shipped to. These are the
reasons the US invaded both countries, and that's why no serious
effort is being made to do any reconstruction or redevelopment
to help the people. There are also reports, unconfirmed for this
article, that hydrocarbon reserves have been discovered in the
northeast of Afghanistan amounting to an estimated 1.5 billion
barrels of oil and from 15 - 30 trillion cubic feet of natural
gas. If this proves accurate, it will be one more curse for the
Afghan people who already have an unbearable number of others to
deal with.
There isn't likely to be relief for them in reconstruction or
anything else as long as the US occupies the country and remains
its de facto ruler. It's sole funding priority (besides what it
ignores lost to corruption) is to its chosen contractors and the
bottom line boosting profits they get from being on the
corporate welfare dole. A revealing window into this and how
reality diverges from rhetoric is seen in a June, 2005 report by
the well-respected Johannesburg based NGO Action Aid. It
documents what it calls phantom aid that's pledged by the US and
other countries but never shows up. At most, maybe
40% of it does while the rest never leaves the home country. It
goes to pay so-called American "experts" who overprice their
services but provide ineffective "technical assistance" for it.
It also obliges recipient countries to buy US products and
services even when cheaper and more accessible ones are
available locally. The report goes on to accuse the US to be one
of the two greatest serial offender countries (France being the
other one) with 70% of what it calls aid requiring receiving
countries to get from US companies (and much of that is for
US-made weapons) and that 86% of all the US pledges turn out to
be phantom aid. So, in fact, so-called US donor aid to rebuild a
war-torn country is just another scam to enrich
politically-connected American corporations by developing new
export markets for them. Iraq, Afghanistan and other recipient
countries get nothing more than the right to have their nations,
resources, and people exploited by predatory US corporations as
one of the spoils of war or one-way trade agreements.
All of this has caused deep-seated mostly repressed anger that
erupted in Kabul this past May in the worst street violence seen
in the capitol since the fall of the Taliban in 2001. It
happened after a US military truck speeding recklessly smashed
into about a dozen civilian vehicles at a busy intersection
killing five people in the collision. It touched off mass
rioting in angry protest against an already hated occupier with
crowds of men and boys shouting "death to America, death to
Karzai" and blaming the government and US military for what
happened. People set fires to cars, shops, restaurants and
dozens of police posts. They also attacked buildings and clashed
with US forces and Afghan police on the scene throwing rocks at
their vehicles. US troops responded by opening fire on unarmed
civilians killing at least 4 and leaving many others injured.
When it finally ended, eight people were reported dead and 107
injured. This uprising in the Kabul streets showed the great
anger and frustration of the people breaking out in mass rage in
response to one dramatic incident that symbolized for them
everything gone wrong in the country now under an unwanted
occupier, the oppressive US-installed Northern Alliance
"warlord" rule, and the deprivation of the people suffering
greatly as a result. There's no end of this in sight, and it's
almost certain the resistance will only intensify in response as
it's now doing.
Growing Resistance Against Repression and War Crimes
Like the mythological phoenix rising from the ashes, the Taliban
have capitalized on the turmoil and discontent and have
reemerged to reclaim most parts of southern Afghanistan. This
part country has long been ungovernable and is known as an area
too dangerous even for aid agencies. The Taliban now openly
control some districts there, have set up shadow administrations
in others, and have moved into the province of Logar located
just 25 miles from Kabul where they have easy access to the
capitol. For the British who know their history, it should be no
surprise. Sir Olaf Caroe, the last British governor of North
West Frontier Province in bordering Pakistan spoke of it when he
said: "Unlike other wars, Afghan wars become serious only when
they are over." Surely the former Soviet occupiers also could
have told George Bush in 2001 what he'd be up against. The Brits
could have as well.
The Taliban are now gaining supporters among the people fed up
with the misery inflicted on them by the US and multinational
force invaders and the Northern Alliance rule that's even more
repressive than the Taliban were during their years in power. It
led to their 1990s rise and conquest of over two-thirds of the
country in the first place. It happened in the wake of the
vacuum created in the country following the withdrawal of the
defeated Soviet forces. During the decade-long conflict while
they were there, the Afghan resistance fought the West's war
with its funding and arms. It was heroic and the darling of the
US media. But once the war ended and the Soviet Union collapsed,
Afghans were abandoned and left on their own to deal with the
ravages of their war-torn country and the chaos of warlordism
and civil war that erupted in its aftermath. Out of that despair
and with considerable aid from Pakistan, the Taliban fighters
emerged and by 1996 had defeated the competing warlords to
control most of the country.
Today it looks like de jeva vu all over again as many Afghans
apparently prefer Taliban rule again they see as the lesser of
the only choices they now have. The result is that daily
violence has erupted into a growing catastrophic resistance
guerrilla war, slowly becoming more like the one in Iraq, that's
intensifying and making the country unsafe and ungovernable.
It's led the international policy Senlis Council think tank,
that does extensive monitoring of Afghanistan, to issue a
damning report called: Afghanistan Five Years Later: The Return
Of The Taliban. The report blamed the occupying forces for doing
nothing to address the crushing poverty, failing to achieve
stability and security, and claims Afghanistan "is falling back
into the hands of the Taliban (and their) frontline now cuts
halfway through the country encompassing all of the southern
provinces" (that have) limited or no central government
control." Emmanuel Reinert, Executive Director, concluded "The
Taliban community are winning control of Afghanistan (and) the
international community is progressively losing control of the
country." He added that Afghanistan today is a humanitarian
disaster, and that there's a hunger crisis with children
starving in makeshift unregistered refugee camps because of lack
of donor interest.
It's fueling the Taliban guerrilla resistance that's close to
critical mass, and, despite official reports to the contrary,
the US-led occupying force won't likely be able to contain it.
It's what always happens in one form or other eventually under
any kind of foreign occupation and system of governance
unwilling to address the basic needs of the people - extreme
poverty and desperation demanding relief, without which people
can't even survive. It's also a response to the brutality of
this occupation where war crimes are just standard operating
procedure and an outrageous strategy used to contain the growing
resistance. One example of it, most people in the West wouldn't
understand, was the public burning of supposed Taliban fighters
killed by US soldiers. This is forbidden under Islamic law, and
the images of it provoked outrage in Afghanistan and throughout
the Muslim world that views the US occupiers as barbarians. This
is just one of many instances of deliberately inflicted offenses
against Islam including defiling the Koran, arbitrary and
unlawful indefinite detentions as well as humiliations, torture
and other atrocities committed routinely against Afghans taken
prisoner for any reason. The same things happen in most parts of
Iraq as well.
Amnesty International documented some of the crimes and abuses
it learned from former detainees. Just like in Iraq they
reported being made to kneel, stand or maintain painful
positions for long periods, being hooded, deprived of sleep,
stripped and humiliated. They were also held without charge and
denied access to family, legal counsel or any kind of due
process. In December, 2004, US officials acknowledged eight
prisoners died in US military custody with little detail as to
why. Earlier in October, the US Army's Criminal Investigation
Division recommended that 28 US soldiers be charged with beating
to death two prisoners at the Bagram air base after autopsies
found "blunt force injuries." At year end only one of the
soldiers was charged with any offense, and it was just for
assault, maltreatment and dereliction of duty.
One other report in September showed US Special Forces beat and
tortured eight Afghan soldiers for over two weeks at a base near
Gardez killing one of them. The US military refused calls for
independent investigations of torture and deaths of those held
in custody and instead went through the motions of conducting
them under the auspices of the US Department of Defense (DOD) -
meaning, of course, they were whitewashed. US authorities also
routinely refuse requests by human rights groups, NGOs, and the
Afghanistan Independent Human Rights Commission
(AIHRC) for access to detainees to assess their condition and
treatment. Amnesty also reported on death sentences being meted
out, secret trials in a special court held without the right to
counsel or any form of due process, and many cases of Afghan
refugees returning home and being unable to recover land or
property stolen from them.
Amnesty also reported on the many civilian deaths resulting from
randomly targeted US air strikes supposedly directed at "armed
militants." These attacks are frequent killing many hundreds of
innocent Afghans and always claimed by the US military only to
have been directed against Al Queda or Taliban fighters. The
evidence shows otherwise. On one dramatic occasion early in the
conflict in December,
2001, US airstrikes against the village of Niazi Kala in eastern
Afghanistan killed dozens of civilians resulting in the London
Guardian and Independent each running front page stories with
headlines: "US Accused of Killing Over 100 Villagers in
Airstrike" in the Guardian and "US Accused of Killing 100
Civilians in Afghan Bombing Raid" in the Independent. Even the
Rupert Murdoch-owned London Times reported "100 Villagers Killed
in US Airstrike." In contrast, Fairness and Accuracy in
Reporting (FAIR) reported the New York Times (known as the
nation's newspaper of record) could barely get itself to
headline "Afghan Leader Warily Backs US Bombing." Instead of
accurately reporting what happened, the NYT instead merely
mentioned these villagers had been killed as background
information in an article about whether the nominal Afghan
leader (and former CIA asset) Harmid Karzai was holding firm in
"his support for the war against terrorism." As it usually does,
the NYT plays the lead role in directing the rest of the US
corporate media away from any disturbing truths replacing them
with a sanitized version acceptable to US authorities. They call
it "All The News That's Fit To Print."
There was also no account at all in the US corporate media,
beyond the usual distorted version, of the killing of about 800
captured Taliban prisoners in November, 2001 at Mazar-i-Sharif
by Northern Alliance soldiers shooting down from the walls of
the fortress-like prison at the helpless Taliban fighters
trapped below. It was never explained in the US corporate-run
media it was in response to a revolt they staged because they
were subjected to torture and severe maltreatment. US Special
Forces and CIA personal were on the ground assisting in the
slaughter by directing supportive air strikes by helicopter
gunships and fighter-bombers in an act of butchery. It recalled
many like it earlier in Vietnam at My Lai, the many thousands
murdered by the infamous Phoenix assassination program in that
war, the CIA organized and financed Salvadoran death squads in
the
1980s and earlier that killed many thousands more, or the later
many thousands of Fallujah residents killed along with mass
destruction inflicted on this Iraqi city in November, 2004 in a
savage act of vengeance and butchery following the killing of
four Blackwater USA paramilitary hired-gun enforcers earlier in
the year. There was also no report on 3,000 other Taliban and
innocent civilian non-combatant prisoners who were separated
from 8,000 others who'd surrendered or had been picked up
randomly. They were then transported in what was later called a
convoy of death to the town of Shibarghan in closed containers
lacking any ventilation. Half of them suffocated to death en
route and others were killed inside them when a US commander
ordered a Northern Alliance soldier to fire into the containers
supposedly to provide air but clearly to kill or wound those
inside who couldn't avoid the incoming fire.
The response from people suffering the effects of these attacks
and atrocities or knowing about them is what would be expected
anywhere but especially in a country known for its history of
determined resistance by any means to free itself from an
oppressive occupier. It happened in Afghanistan during the 19th
century "Great Game" period and then during the decade of Soviet
occupation in the 1980s. It's now happening again and getting
especially intense as described by General David Richards, the
British commander of NATO forces in the country. In early August
he described the fighting as some of the worst, most prolonged
and ferocious he knew of in 60 years with his forces coming
under repeated "hit-and-run" and other attacks by Taliban
guerrilla fighters engaging in machine gun and grenade battles
before dispersing and later regrouping for more attacks. He
said: "This sort of thing hasn't really happened so
consistently, I don't think, since the Korean War or the Second
World War. It happened for periods in the Falklands, obviously,
and it happened for short periods in the Gulf on both occasions.
But this is persistent, low-level, dirty fighting." One has to
wonder if the general thinks cluster-bombing and using other
terror weapons from
30,000 feet to kill innocent civilians in villages is fighting
clean.
The kind of intense fighting the general is talking about was
reported in the London Observer on September
17 on what relatives of British troops serving in Afghanistan's
southern Helmand province have to say. They're raising grave
concerns for their loved ones safety claiming they face
"intolerable" pressures and dangers, relentless fighting,
inadequate supplies of rations and water, having to get by on
three hours sleep a night, having no body armour, and so
shattered and exhausted by the experience they can't function
properly. With this to expect, why would any sensible foreign
leader heed NATO's request for more troops to help a failed
mission guaranteed to get numbers of them killed and wounded and
frighten and anger their own people at home in the process. So
far only Poland, likely under intense pressure, agreed to do it
in any meaningful numbers in a high-level decision it may end up
regretting.
The result of recent fighting on the British alone is that 33 of
their soldiers have been reported killed in the last two months
up to late-September - including
14 killed on September 2 in a warplane the Taliban claim they
downed over Banjwai and Kandahar province and 22 known killed
since September 1. The reported number of deaths and injuries
are likely understated as a good many of the wounded later die
but aren't added to the official count. It's known and
documented this kind of sanitized casualty reporting is the way
it's done in Iraq. No doubt it's handled the same way in
Afghanistan as well.
It's happening because the Taliban resistance is gaining
strength fueled by the repressive occupation and brutality of
the Northern Alliance "warlords," making a growing number of
Afghans determined to fight back. It's also because of the
extreme level of desperation and deprivation Afghans now
experience resulting from the so-called neoliberal Washington
Consensus model the US has imposed on the country just like it
wants to do everywhere else it can get away with it. It's a
model solely beholden to the interests of capital, ignores the
essential needs of the people desperate for relief and help, but
in an impoverished country like Afghanistan, that's a recipe for
pushing people toward Islamic fundamentalist leaders promising
something better than their current state of immiseration. It
makes it easy for them to get recruits to join the struggle to
end it. Apparently growing numbers of them are doing just that
as they have been for the past three years in Iraq to fight back
relentlessly refusing to quit until the occupation ends which it
likely will eventually in both countries.
The US Plan to Pacify Afghanistan and Control It As A
Neocolonial State
The Bush administration has no sense of history judging by its
plan to control Afghanistan by neutralizing any resistance in it
to make the country one more de facto pacified US colony. It
failed to heed the lessons learned in Vietnam where the US was
defeated or even in Korea before it where the war there ended in
a standoff. It's proceeding anyway in spite of the information
from the Pentagon's latest quarterly progress report on Iraq to
the Congress. In it Pentagon officials paint a grim assessment
of a lost war where the same tactics now used in Afghanistan
have failed. Those facts, however, don't deter US planners who
won't admit they're wrong and intend to keep repeating the same
mistakes no matter how many times before they haven't worked.
It's part of the Bush administration's Messianic mission of
madness under which the thinking must be if at first you don't
succeed, try again by making things worse with another
misadventure. It's also part of the misbegotten belief that
superior air power, high tech weapons, and a little help mostly
from a proxy force on the ground can solve all problems.
High-level military strategists once again intend to try proving
it in Afghanistan even though they know it hasn't worked in
Iraq.
The Afghanistan plan involves the use of overwhelming US air
power that can quickly send down a reign of death and
destruction against any area or resistance it wishes to attack.
It's to be done by concentrating its hub activities at two
large, permanent US-constructed bases, Bagram and Kandahar,
while it wants NATO forces to operate a large new base under
construction in Herat that can accommodate about
10,000 troops. In 2005, the US Air Force spent about $83 million
upgrading the two bases it will use in the country.
The plan is also to have US forces maintain about 30 smaller,
forward operating bases with 14 small airfields housing highly
mobile air and ground forces secured in fortified areas and only
used for special search operations leaving routine patrol
missions for the local satraps to handle. The plan calls for a
reduction in US ground forces with NATO troops replacing them,
especially in the more volatile Kandahar, Helmand and Urzugan
provinces. In its "first (ever) mission outside the
Euro-Atlantic area" NATO forces took command of the
International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) in Afghanistan in
August, 2003 "to assist the Government of Afghanistan....in
maintaining security....and in providing a safe and secure
environment (for) free and fair elections, the spread of the
rule of law, and the reconstruction of the country." This was
pious rhetoric belying the reality on the ground that all
occupiers are there only as enforcers to make Afghanistan safe
for corporate predators wanting to exploit the country and its
people for profit.
The US is also recruiting, training and wants to employ a local
proxy Afghan National Army and Police to perform the same role
by doing much of the routine patrolling and to engage in ground
combat when necessary. This is a common US tactic to use a
surrogate force of expendable locals to do as much of its
fighting and dying for it to keep its own casualties to a
minimum. It intends to support them with its tactical air
strength mostly out of harm's way and sell the whole package
apparently to the Afghan people and US public by using what the
Bush administration calls "strategic communication" - aka
well-crafted propaganda, disinformation and carefully sanitized
versions of the truth to suppress an honest account of it from
ever coming out so that the perception they're able to craft
replaces the reality they wish to conceal.
When it comes to deploying overwhelming conventional military
superiority including the most highly developed and destructive
high-tech weapons and a vast array of almost limitless air
power, no competing force can challenge the US. The Pentagon is
now deploying those air assets round the clock across the
country using its most sophisticated bombers and other aircraft
deployed from its bases in Diego Garcia. They're on call at all
times for tactical support and heavy strike missions as needed.
In addition, unmanned Predator and Desert Hawk aerial drones are
also airborne over the country at all times, especially in areas
thought to be most hostile. The Predator is able to launch
rocket attacks on targets while the tiny Desert Hawk is a spy
plane used for surveillance around US bases. Put it all together
and this is what an unwanted foreign occupier has to do to keep
a population in check after it "liberated" it. The plain fact is
it hasn't worked in Iraq and likely won't fare any better in
Afghanistan.
But there's more to this story though as reported on September 5
in the online publication Capitol Hill Blue titled Has Bush gone
over the edge? It explains that Republican and Bush family
insiders including the President's father and former President
are worried George Bush may be heading for a "full-fledged
mental breakdown" judging by his bizarre behavior at times.
Jeffrey Steinberg writing in Executive Intelligence Review said
G.H.W. Bush fears G.W. is obsessed with his Messianic mission
and is "unreachable" even by some of his closest advisors like
Secretary of State Rice. Prominent psychiatrist Dr. Justin
Frank, who wrote Bush on the Couch: Inside the Mind of the
President, agrees and believes: "With every passing week,
President Bush marches deeper and deeper into a world of his own
making. Central to Bush's world is an iron will which demands
that external reality be changed to conform to his personal view
of how things are." He goes on to say Bush needs psychiatric
analysis and help. These observations explain a lot - that
George Bush indeed has a Messianic mission and intends to pursue
it no matter how failed it is because he believes it's the right
thing to do. And apparently he has enough close advisors around
him reinforcing this view making it very likely there will be no
Middle East or Central Asian policy change as long as he's
President. It helps explain why the policy that's failed in Iraq
is still being followed, why it's the plan for Afghanistan as
well even though it isn't likely to succeed there either, and
why this administration wants to go even further and is willing
to compound the disaster it already created.
George Bush announced his policy intentions in a speech he made
on September 5 to an association of US military officers in
which he virtually declared war against the entire Muslim world.
In it he used the kind of inflammatory language that should give
the senior Bush far greater cause to worry whether his son has
lost his senses entirely. The speech was more of the
administration's rhetoric to rebrand the "global war on terror"
to what it now calls the "long war with Islamic fascists" and
the threat of "Islamic fascism" that must be confronted by its
reasoning (and by implication) where it's centered in Tehran. It
was also George Bush's apparent attempt to rescue his failing
presidency by appealing to his most extremist backers, shore up
his base, and scare everyone else to death enough to support his
"long war" agenda on November 7 by reelecting Republicans to
Congress many of whom see him as radioactive and keep their
distance.
No doubt the Svengali hand of Karl Rove is behind this. It can't
be dismissed because it signals another reckless step toward a
widened "long war" crusade against Islam. It further angered the
nearly
1.8 billion Muslims worldwide who were even more enraged by Pope
Benedict's inflammatory September 12 quote of a 14th century
Byzantine Christian emperor who said (during the Crusades at
that time) that the Prophet Muhammad had brought the world only
"evil and inhuman" things. Despite his disingenuous claim of
being misunderstood, Popes don't make accidental comments,
especially in an age of instant worldwide communication, so
clearly this one made his with another purpose in mind. It may
relate to why he disturbingly chose to withdraw from the
interfaith initiatives begun by his predecessor, John Paul II.
He did it at a time when such efforts are more needed than ever
and tells Muslims he believes in the myth that Islam is a
violent faith, war and occupation of Muslim lands is the way to
counteract it, and he's part of the West's new crusade against
them.
Put another way, Pope Benedict's comment was a clear papal
genuflection and declaration of fealty to the exploitive and
racist war on the Muslim world policies of the Bush
administration. He added resonance and, in effect, gave his
blessing to an out-of-control US President's belief in the same
notion only made worse by George Bush's further public
pronouncement that dissent is an act of terrorism, saying it
solely on his own authority, and effectively abrogating the
First Amendment that prohibits the criminalization of speech.
This kind of assertion reinforces George Bush's earlier in the
year self-anointment as a "Unitary Executive" giving himself
absolute power to suspend the Constitution and declare martial
law to protect the national security any time he alone decides a
"national emergency" warrants it. Unless the public refuses to
accept this reckless endangerment of our sacred constitutional
rights and enough prominent public figures join in as well to
denounce this kind of talk, there's a real danger this
administration is moving toward "crossing the Rubicon" to
tyranny on the false pretext of protecting us from an Islamic
terrorist threat that doesn't exist.
Looking Ahead In Afghanistan
US directed repression of the Afghan people aided by its brutal
Northern Alliance regional "warlord" proxies has led to the
beginning of a growing insurrection against an intolerable
situation that's unsustainable. It has the upper hand in Iraq
and is fast becoming more of the same in Afghanistan. It's what
always happens because no unwanted occupier is ever accepted by
the people it subjugates, especially one whose prime mission is
to terrorize the civilian population to pacify it. The mission
is doomed to fail as eventually it becomes inefficient,
ineffective and people back home no longer will tolerate it. By
now it would seem cooler heads in Washington and at the Pentagon
would have made some headway convincing the hard line neocons
behind this growing misadventure and the out-of-control one in
Iraq that it was time to cut losses, pull out, and go another
way. Those among them with enough good sense have to realize
even the most powerful military in the world has no chance to
defeat a determined guerilla force gaining strength because it
has most of the people in the country behind it. And there have
to be at least a few high-level mandarins with a sense of
history to understand they saw this script before, and it has a
bad ending. It brought Rome to its knees a millennium and a half
ago and did the same thing more recently to the Nazis with
delusions of grandeur who thought their way would prevail for
1,000 years. They only missed by 988.
So it goes for the modern-day Romans in charge in Washington led
by a President who believes his cause is just and the Almighty
is directing him. They also feel with enough super-weapons they
can rule the world forever as long as they don't miscalculate
and blow it up instead (a very real and disturbing possibility).
It didn't work for the original rulers of ancient Rome, and it's
also not working now for those in charge in Israel apparently
under the same illusions, who also have no sense of history
except their own false version of it. It won't work for the US
rulers either who want their dominion to be all of planet earth.
It's high time some clear-thinking high-level insiders went
public convincingly to drive home this point the ones in charge
with "delusions of grandeur" won't ever see without help and
unless forced to. The plain fact is the war in Iraq is lost
militarily and politically. The longer US forces stay there the
greater their losses will be, the larger the number of alienated
countries no longer willing to support us will become, the more
likely the enormous and unsustainable cost will move the nation
closer to economic bankruptcy, and the harder it will be to
reverse the mind-set of the majority of countries that already
see us as a moral pariah and terror state. Conditions are no
less true in Afghanistan where the resistance is close to
critical mass and the situation is fast becoming another lost
cause because the momentum carrying it there is almost
irreversible.
It's never easy changing the hearts and minds of the privileged
elite riding high and mesmerized by their own self-adulation and
that heaped on them by the corporate media, PR flacks, and
assorted hangers-on portraying their cause as just. Charting a
new course with that kind of strong tailwind is like trying to
get a battleship to make a quick U-turn - darn-near impossible.
It makes for the same likely conclusion just as in the past.
Empires ruling the waves, and having it their own way, almost
never spot the time when the tide begins to turn and they're
swimming against it. Sooner or later, they're wrecked on the
shoals of their own hubris, a new force is rising to replace
them, and an old familiar refrain is heard again - the king is
dead, long live the king.
Stephen Lendman lives in Chicago and can be reached at
lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net. Also visit his blogspot at
sjlendman.blogspot.com.
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