Hunkering
Down in
Afghanistan
with
Field-Marshall
Obama
By Mike
Whitney
03/07/08
"ICH" -- - Afghanistan
was supposed
to be the
"good war";
a "just
response" to
the attacks
of September
11. It was
supposed to
bring Bin
Laden to
justice
"dead or
alive" and
quash
terrorism in
the places
where it
originated.
95 per cent
of the
American
people
supported
the invasion
of
Afghanistan.
Now less
than half
think the
U.S. will
prevail. The
war was
promoted as
a way to
replace a
repressive
fundamentalist
regime with
a democratic
government
based on
western
ideals. The
Bush
administration
promised to
rebuild
war-torn
Afghanistan,
transform
its feudal
system into
a free
market
economy, and
liberate its
women from
the
oppression
of Islamic
extremism.
It was all
hogwash.
None of the
promises
have been
kept and
none of the
goals have
been
achieved.
The Bush P.R.
campaign was
a hoax. War
isn't an
instrument
for positive
social
change; it's
about
killing
people and
blowing up
things.
Dressing-up
military
aggression
and calling
it
"preemption"
can work for
a while, but
eventually
the truth
comes out.
Democracy
and
modernity
don't come
from the
barrel of a
gun.
Far from
being the
"good war",
Afghanistan
has turned
out to be a
brutal war
of revenge.
Three
decades of
fighting has
left the
country in
ruins and
the violence
is only
getting
worse. As
victory
becomes more
elusive, the
US has
stepped up
its bombing
campaign
making 2008
the most
deadly year
on record.
Civilian
casualties
have
skyrocketed
and millions
of Afghans
have become
refugees. At
the same
time, the
Taliban have
regrouped
and taken
over
strategically
vital areas
in the south
which is
disrupting
US supply
lines from
Pakistan.
Khost has
fallen into
the hands of
the Afghan
resistance
just as it
did before
the Soviet
Army was
defeated in
the 1980s.
The Taliban
are moving
towards
Kabul and a
battle for
the capital
now seems
inevitable.
For the
second month
in a row,
the number
of foreign
troops
killed in
Afghanistan
has exceeded
Iraq. The
fighting has
intensified
while
security has
steadily
deteriorated.
The
Taliban's
numbers are
growing
while the
total allied
commitment
is still
under 60,000
troops for a
country of
32 million.
This makes
it
impossible
to capture
and hold
territory.
The military
is limited
to "hit and
run"
operations.
The ground
belongs to
the Taliban.
Michael
Scheuer,
former CIA
chief of the
Bin Laden
Issue
Station,
made this
statement at
a recent
conference
at the
Middle East
Institute in
Washington,
DC:
"Afghanistan
is lost for
the United
States and
its allies.
To use
Kipling's
term, 'We
are watching
NATO bleed
to death on
the Afghan
plains.' But
what are we
going to do.
There are 20
million
Pashtuns;
are we going
to invade?
We don't
have enough
troops to
even form a
constabulary
that would
control the
country. The
disaster
occurred at
the
beginning.
The fools
that run our
country
thought that
a few
hundreds CIA
officers and
a few
hundred
special
forces
officers
could take a
country the
size of
Texas and
hold it,
were quite
literally
fools. And
now we are
paying the
price."
Scheuer
added, "We
are closer
to defeat in
Afghanistan
than Iraq at
the moment."
Scheuer's
pessimism is
more
widespread
among
military and
political
elites than
many
realize. The
situation on
the ground
is hopeless;
there is no
light in the
tunnel.
Author
Anatol
Lieven put
it like this
in an
article in
the
Financial
Times, "The
Dream of
Afghan
Democracy is
Dead":
"The first
step in
rethinking
Afghan
strategy is
to think
seriously
about the
lessons of a
recent
opinion
survey of
ordinary
Taliban
fighters
commissioned
by the
Toronto
Globe and
Mail. Two
results are
striking:
the
widespread
lack of any
strong
expression
of
allegiance
to Mullah
Omar and the
Taliban
leadership;
and the
reasons
given by
most for
joining the
Taliban --
namely, the
presence of
western
troops in
Afghanistan.
The deaths
of relatives
or neighbors
at the hands
of those
forces was
also stated
by many as a
motive. This
raises the
question of
whether
Afghanistan
is not
becoming a
sort of
surreal
hunting
estate, in
which the US
and Nato
breed the
very
“terrorists”
they then
track down.
"
Lieven is
right. The
occupation
and the
careless
killing of
civilians
has only
strengthened
the Taliban
and swollen
their ranks.
The US has
lost the
struggle for
hearts and
minds and
they don't
have the
troops to
establish
security.
The mission
has failed;
the Afghan
people have
grown tired
of foreign
occupation.
The US is
just digging
a deeper
hole by
staying.
By every
objective
standard,
conditions
are worse
now than
they were
before the
invasion in
2001. The
economy is
in shambles,
unemployment
is soaring,
reconstruction
is minimal,
security is
non-existent
and
malnutrition
is at levels
that rival
sub-Saharan
Africa.
Afghanistan
not safer,
more
prosperous,
or freer.
The vast
majority of
Afghans are
still living
in grinding
poverty
exacerbated
by the
constant
threat of
violence.
The Karzai
government
has no
popular
mandate nor
any power
beyond the
capital. The
regime is a
sham
maintained
by a small
army of
foreign
mercenaries
and a
collaborative
media which
promotes it
as a sign of
budding
democracy.
But there is
no democracy
or
sovereignty.
Afghanistan
is occupied
by foreign
troops.
Occupation
and
sovereignty
are mutually
exclusive.
According to
The Senlis
Council's
report,
"Stumbling
into Chaos:
Afghanistan
on the
brink":
"The
security
situation in
Afghanistan
has reached
crisis
proportions.
The
Taliban's
ability to
establish a
presence
throughout
the country
is now
proven
beyond
doubt; 54
per cent of
Afghanistan’s
landmass
hosts a
permanent
Taliban
presence,
primarily in
southern
Afghanistan.
The Taliban
are the de
facto
governing
authority in
significant
portions of
territory in
the south
and east,
and are
starting to
control
parts of the
local
economy and
key
infrastructure
such as
roads and
energy
supply. The
insurgency
also
exercises a
significant
amount of
psychological
control,
gaining more
and more
political
legitimacy
in the minds
of the
Afghan
people who
have a long
history of
shifting
alliances
and regime
change."
Journalist
Eric Walberg
further
clarifies
the role
played by
the Taliban
in his
article "The
Princess and
the
Taliban":
"Western
readers have
become
numbed into
accepting
the code
words
'enemy' and
'insurgents',
ignoring the
underlying
fact that
the Taliban
are still
the
legitimate
government,
that these
so-called
insurgents
are in fact
widely seen
as freedom
fighters
battling the
non-Muslim
foreign
occupiers —
the real
'enemy' —
who invaded
the country
illegally
and have
killed
hundreds of
thousands of
resistance
fighters and
innocent
civilians
illegally.
Rather than
'killed',
the word
'murdered'
might be
more
appropriate.
For locals,
the dead are
'martyred',
as in Iraq
and
Palestine.....
The
country’s
declining
socioeconomic
situation
point to the
Taliban as
the only
feasible
force to
control the
situation."
It is not
even clear
that women
are better
off now than
they were
under
Taliban
rule.
According to
Afghan
Parliament
member,
Malalai Joya:
"Every month
dozens of
women commit
self-immolation
to end their
desolation....The
American war
on terror is
a mockery
and so is
the US
support of
the present
government
in
Afghanistan
which is
dominated by
Northern
Alliance
terrorists....Far
more
civilians
have been
killed by
the US
military in
Afghanistan
than were
killed in
the US in
the tragedy
of September
11. More
Afghan
civilians
have been
killed by
the US than
were ever
killed by
the
Taliban.....The
US should
withdrawal
as soon as
possible. We
need
liberation
not
occupation."
("The War on
Terror is a
Mockery",
Elsa
Rassbach, Z
Magazine Nov
2007)
The Taliban
had
effectively
eradicated
poppy
cultivation
before the
invasion in
2001. Now,
after six
years of
war, the
opium trade
is back with
a vengeance
and
Afghanistan
accounts for
93% of
world's
heroin
production.
2007 was a
particularly
good year
yielding 20%
more opium
than a year
before.
Heroin is
now
Afghanistan's
number one
export; the
nation has
become a US
narco-colony.
Bush could
care less
about drug
trafficking.
What matters
to him is
stabilizing
Afghanistan
so that the
myriad US
bases that
are built
along
pipeline
corridors
can provide
a safe
channel for
oil and
natural gas
heading to
markets in
the Far
East. That's
what really
counts. The
administration
has staked
America's
future on a
risky
strategy to
establish a
foothold in
Central Asia
to control
the flow of
energy from
the Caspian
to China and
India.
But US
policymakers
are no
longer
confident of
victory in
Afghanistan.
In fact,
according to
a Pentagon
report:
"Taliban
militants
have
regrouped
after their
initial fall
from power
and
'coalesced
into a
resilient
insurgency.'
The report
paints a
grim picture
of the
conflict,
concluding
that
Afghanistan's
security
conditions
have
deteriorated
sharply
while the
fledgling
national
government
in Kabul
remains
incapable of
extending
its reach
throughout
the country
or taking
effective
counternarcotics
measures."
The
situation is
dire and
it's forcing
Bush to
decide
whether to
shift more
troops from
Iraq or face
growing
resistance
in
Afghanistan.
Meanwhile
the violence
is spreading
and combat
deaths are
on the rise.
Pentagon
chieftains
now believe
they can
only defeat
the Taliban
by striking
at bases in
Pakistan, a
reckless
plan that
could
inflame
passions in
Pakistan and
trigger a
regional
conflict.
Gradually,
the US is
being lured
into a
bigger
quagmire.
FIELD-MARSHALL
OBAMA TO THE
RESCUE
Presidential
candidate
Barak Obama,
"The Peace
Candidate",
supports a
stronger
commitment
to the war
in
Afghanistan
and has
proposed
"sending at
least two
additional
combat
brigades --
or 7,000 to
10,000
troops -- to
Afghanistan,
while
deploying
more Special
Operations
forces to
the
Afghan-Pakistan
border. He
has also
proposed
increasing
non-military
aid to
Afghanistan
by at least
$1 billion
per year."
(Wall Street
Journal)
Obama,
backed by
Brzezinski
and other
Clinton
foreign
policy
advisers,
has focussed
his
attention on
the "war on
terror",
that dismal
public
relations
coup which
conceals
America's
desire to
become a
major player
in the Great
Game, the
battle for
supremacy on
the Asian
continent.
Obama
appears to
be even more
eager to
repeat
history than
McCain.
In November,
voters will
be asked to
pick one of
the two
pro-war
candidates.
McCain has
made his
position
clear; his
focus is on
Iraq. Now it
is up to
Obama to
point out
why it's
more
acceptable
to kill a
man who is
fighting for
his country
in
Afghanistan
than it is
in Iraq. If
he can't
answer that
question,
then he
deserves to
lose.
