The "Good
Good War" Is A Bad War
By John Pilger
10/01/08 "ICH"
-- - In his latest article for the New Statesman, John
Pilger describes how the invasion of Afghanistan, which was
widely supported in the West as a 'good war' and justifiable
response to 9/11, was actually planned months before 9/11
and is the latest instalment of 'a great game'.
"To me, I confess,
[countries] are pieces on a chessboard upon which is being
played out a game for dominion of the world."
Lord Curzon, viceroy of India, speaking about
Afghanistan, 1898
I had suggested to Marina
that we meet in the safety of the Intercontinental Hotel,
where foreigners stay in Kabul, but she said no. She had
been there once and government agents, suspecting she was
Rawa, had arrested her. We met instead at a safe house,
reached through contours of bombed rubble that was once
streets, where people live like earthquake victims awaiting
rescue.
Rawa is the Revolutionary
Association of the Women of Afghanistan, which since 1977
has alerted the world to the suffering of women and girls in
that country. There is no organisation on earth like it. It
is the high bar of feminism, home of the bravest of the
brave. Year after year, Rawa agents have travelled secretly
through Afghanistan, teaching at clandestine girls' schools,
ministering to isolated and brutalised women, recording
outrages on cameras concealed beneath their burqas. They
were the Taliban regime's implacable foes when the word
Taliban was barely heard in the west: when the Clinton
administration was secretly courting the mullahs so that the
oil company Unocal could build a pipeline across Afghanistan
from the Caspian.
Indeed, Rawa's understanding
of the designs and hypocrisy of western governments informs
a truth about Afghanistan excluded from news, now reduced to
a drama of British squaddies besieged by a demonic enemy in
a "good war". When we met, Marina was veiled to conceal her
identity. Marina is her nom de guerre. She said: "We, the
women of Afghanistan, only became a cause in the west
following 11 September 2001, when the Taliban suddenly
became the official enemy of America. Yes, they persecuted
women, but they were not unique, and we have resented the
silence in the west over the atrocious nature of the
western-backed warlords, who are no different. They rape and
kidnap and terrorise, yet they hold seats in [Hamid]
Karzai's government. In some ways, we were more secure under
the Taliban. You could cross Afghanistan by road and feel
secure. Now, you take your life into your hands."
The reason the United States
gave for invading Afghanistan in October 2001 was "to
destroy the infrastructure of al-Qaeda, the perpetrators of
9/11". The women of Rawa say this is false. In a rare
statement on 4 December that went unreported in Britain,
they said: "By experience, [we have found] that the US does
not want to defeat the Taliban and al-Qaeda, because then
they will have no excuse to stay in Afghanistan and work
towards the realisation of their economic, political and
strategic interests in the region."
The truth about the "good
war" is to be found in compelling evidence that the 2001
invasion, widely supported in the west as a justifiable
response to the 11 September attacks, was actually planned
two months prior to 9/11 and that the most pressing problem
for Washington was not the Taliban's links with Osama Bin
Laden, but the prospect of the Taliban mullahs losing
control of Afghanistan to less reliable mujahedin factions,
led by warlords who had been funded and armed by the CIA to
fight America's proxy war against the Soviet occupiers in
the 1980s. Known as the Northern Alliance, these mujahedin
had been largely a creation of Washington, which believed
the "jihadi card" could be used to bring down the Soviet
Union. The Taliban were a product of this and, during the
Clinton years, they were admired for their "discipline". Or,
as the Wall Street Journal put it, "[the Taliban] are the
players most capable of achieving peace in Afghanistan at
this moment in history".
The "moment in history" was
a secret memorandum of understanding the mullahs had signed
with the Clinton administration on the pipeline deal.
However, by the late 1990s, the Northern Alliance had
encroached further and further on territory controlled by
the Taliban, whom, as a result, were deemed in Washington to
lack the "stability" required of such an important client.
It was the consistency of this client relationship that had
been a prerequisite of US support, regardless of the
Taliban's aversion to human rights. (Asked about this, a
state department briefer had predicted that "the Taliban
will develop like the Saudis did", with a pro-American
economy, no democracy and "lots of sharia law", which meant
the legalised persecution of women. "We can live with that,"
he said.)
By early 2001, convinced it
was the presence of Osama Bin Laden that was souring their
relationship with Washington, the Taliban tried to get rid
of him. Under a deal negotiated by the leaders of Pakistan's
two Islamic parties, Bin Laden was to be held under house
arrest in Peshawar. A tribunal of clerics would then hear
evidence against him and decide whether to try him or hand
him over to the Americans. Whether or not this would have
happened, Pakistan's Pervez Musharraf vetoed the plan.
According to the then Pakistani foreign minister, Niaz Naik,
a senior US diplomat told him on 21 July 2001 that it had
been decided to dispense with the Taliban "under a carpet of
bombs".
Acclaimed as the first
"victory" in the "war on terror", the attack on Afghanistan
in October 2001 and its ripple effect caused the deaths of
thousands of civilians who, even more than Iraqis, remain
invisible to western eyes. The family of Gulam Rasul is
typical. It was 7.45am on 21 October. The headmaster of a
school in the town of Khair Khana, Rasul had just finished
eating breakfast with his family and had walked outside to
chat to a neighbour. Inside the house were his wife,
Shiekra, his four sons, aged three to ten, his brother and
his wife, his sister and her husband. He looked up to see an
aircraft weaving in the sky, then his house exploded in a
fireball behind him. Nine people died in this attack by a US
F-16 dropping a 500lb bomb. The only survivor was his
nine-year-old son, Ahmad Bilal. "Most of the people killed
in this war are not Taliban; they are innocents," Gulam
Rasul told me. "Was the killing of my family a mistake? No,
it was not. They fly their planes and look down on us, the
mere Afghan people, who have no planes, and they bomb us for
our birthright, and with all contempt."
There was the wedding party
in the village of Niazi Qala, 100km south of Kabul, to
celebrate the marriage of the son of a respected farmer. By
all accounts it was a wonderfully boisterous affair, with
music and singing. The roar of aircraft started when
everyone was asleep, at about three in the morning.
According to a United Nations report, the bombing lasted two
hours and killed 52 people: 17 men, ten women and 25
children, many of whom were found blown to bits where they
had desperately sought refuge, in a dried-up pond. Such
slaughter is not uncommon, and these days the dead are
described as "Taliban"; or, if they are children, they are
said to be "partly to blame for being at a site used by
militants" – according to the BBC, speaking to a US military
spokesman.
The British military have
played an important part in this violence, having stepped up
high-altitude bombing by up to 30 per cent since they took
over command of Nato forces in Afghanistan in May 2006. This
translated to more than 6,200 Afghan deaths last year. In
December, a contrived news event was the "fall" of a
"Taliban stronghold", Musa Qala, in southern Afghanistan.
Puppet government forces were allowed to "liberate" rubble
left by American B-52s.
What justifies this? Various
fables have been spun – "building democracy" is one. "The
war on drugs" is the most perverse. When the Americans
invaded Afghanistan in 2001 they had one striking success.
They brought to an abrupt end a historic ban on opium
production that the Taliban regime had achieved. A UN
official in Kabul described the ban to me as "a modern
miracle". The miracle was quickly rescinded. As a reward for
supporting the Karzai "democracy", the Americans allowed
Northern Alliance warlords to replant the country's entire
opium crop in 2002. Twenty-eight out of the 32 provinces
instantly went under cultivation. Today, 90 per cent of
world trade in opium originates in Afghanistan. In 2005, a
British government report estimated that 35,000 children in
this country were using heroin. While the British taxpayer
pays for a £1bn military super-base in Helmand Province and
the second-biggest British embassy in the world, in Kabul,
peanuts are spent on drug rehabilitation at home.
Tony Blair once said
memorably: "To the Afghan people, we make this commitment.
We will not walk away . . . [We will offer] some way out of
the poverty that is your miserable existence." I thought
about this as I watched children play in a destroyed cinema.
They were illiterate and so could not read the poster
warning that unexploded cluster bombs lay in the debris.
"After five years of
engagement," reported James Fergusson in the London
Independent on 16 December, "the [UK] Department for
International Development had spent just £390m on Afghan
projects." Unusually, Fergusson has had meetings with
Taliban who are fighting the British. "They remained
charming and courteous throughout," he wrote of one visit in
February. "This is the beauty of malmastia, the Pashtun
tradition of hospitality towards strangers. So long as he
comes unarmed, even a mortal enemy can rely on a kind
reception. The opportunity for dialogue that malmastia
affords is unique."
This "opportunity for
dialogue" is a far cry from the surrender-or-else offers
made by the government of Gordon Brown. What Brown and his
Foreign Office advisers wilfully fail to understand is that
the tactical victory in Afghanistan in 2001, achieved with
bombs, has become a strategic disaster in south Asia.
Exacerbated by the assassination of Benazir Bhutto, the
current turmoil in Pakistan has its contemporary roots in a
Washington-contrived war in neighbouring Afghanistan that
has alienated the Pashtuns who inhabit much of the long
border area between the two countries. This is also true of
most Pakistanis, who, according to opinion polls, want their
government to negotiate a regional peace, rather than play a
prescribed part in a rerun of Lord Curzon's Great Game.
www.johnpilger.com