The
Adventures
of the
Parasite
Army
Why
Afghanistan
is Not the
Good War
By Ron
Jacobs
19/07/08 "Counterpunch"
-- - It's
the
perennial
thorn in the
colonialist's
side. It's
the war that
won't go
away. It's a
wasp sting
that swells,
slowly
choking the
life out of
the sting's
recipient.
It is the
nearly
seven-year
old
occupation
of
Afghanistan
by the
United
States and
various NATO
allies.
Nearly
forgotten by
most
Americans,
the
situation in
that country
has taken
headlines
away from
the
occupation
of Iraq
because of
the
resurgence
of the
anti-occupation
forces. Nine
US troops
were killed
in one day,
easily
topping any
recent US
fatality
figures
coming out
of Iraq in
recent
months. The
growing
ferocity of
the
resistance
was brought
home to me
when a young
man whom I
have been
close to
since he was
three years
old was
removed from
the battle
zone with
wounds
serious
enough to
send him
stateside
for surgery
and
recovery.
(He's
scheduled to
get out of
the Marines
in
October--hopefully
he won't get
stop-lossed
and sent
back over
there).
Like that
wasp
mentioned
above, the
Afghani
resistance
is not
necessarily
anything a
Westerner
can support
wholeheartedly.
Almost all
of its
elements,
Taliban and
otherwise,
have a
history of
misogyny and
antagonism
toward
values we
consider
essential to
freedom.
However,
also like
that wasp,
their
resistance
to those
attacking
their lives
and their
homes is
seen by them
as essential
to the
survival of
both. To
carry the
analogy a
step
further, the
imperial
forces
arrayed
against the
Afghani
resistance
are like a
predator
insect that
sets up a
parasitic
home on the
host and
then
attempts to
take over
the host.
There are
those wasps
that fight
the invading
parasite and
there are
those who
merely exist
within their
nest. The US
and NATO
occupiers
are the
parasites
hoping to
install
their
host--represented
in the
person of
Unocal
president
Karzai--on
the people
of
Afghanistan.
At this
point the
parasites
have failed
to achieve
their goal.
Because of
this
failure, the
parasite
army is
planning to
intensify
their
assault.
This is
where we
leave the
analogy and
ask why
Washington
thinks it
can achieve
what the
British and
the Soviets
could not?
The
Afghanistan
region has
always been
the piece of
the puzzle
known as the
Great Game
that refuses
to fit into
the
proscribed
plans of any
colonial
power. It is
as if this
particular
puzzle piece
was cut from
another die.
No matter
how much
firepower is
brought upon
the Afghani
people, they
have been
able to
resist any
type of
lasting fit
into any of
the pictures
hoped for by
the colonial
power of the
day. They
have done so
by
manipulation
of the
invader’s
desires and
by playing
the various
invaders off
each other;
and they
have done so
through
sheer
determination
and the
unforgiving
nature of
the land.
Most
recently,
they used
the US
secret
services to
fend off the
domination
of their
capital by
the Soviets,
and now they
are using
their own
devices to
fend off the
domination
of their
country
desired by
Washington.
Despite what
the majority
of the
western
media tells
its readers
and viewers,
there is
more to the
Afghani
resistance
than the
Taliban. In
fact,
according to
a recent
report in
the US News
and World
Report, U.S.
forces are
facing an
increasingly
complex
enemy here
composed of
Taliban
fighters and
powerful
warlords who
were once on
the payroll
of the
Central
Intelligence
Agency. As a
military
official
stated in
the
aforementioned
article "You
could almost
describe the
insurgency
as having
two
branches.
It's the
Taliban in
the south
and a
'rainbow
coalition'
in the
east." Add
to this the
various
armed drug
traders and
their
backers and
you have a
mix at least
as volatile
as that in
Iraq during
its worst
periods over
the last
five years.
Despite the
apparent
failure of
the armed
approach
taken by
Washington
in
Afghanistan,
both
presidential
candidates
and the
majority of
Congress
support not
merely
continuing
this
approach but
intensifying
it. McCain
and Obama
are not only
in agreement
that the
Pentagon
needs to
send more
troops into
Afghanistan,
they are
also in
agreement
that it is
the war that
the US must
win.
Operating
under the
pretext that
killing more
Afghanis is
somehow
going to end
the desire
of
Washington's
Islamist
enemies to
attack it
has not only
created the
current
stalemate in
Afghanistan,
it has also
spread the
anti-American
resistance
into the
tribal areas
of Pakistan
and
threatens to
engulf the
Pakistani
city of
Peshawar.
The recent
killings of
civilians by
US and NATO
forces only
adds to the
resistance,
especially
when the US
denies the
killings
ever
happened.
As hinted at
above, the
Taliban and
other
resistance
forces are
difficult
for most
Westerners
(and many
others, as
well) to
support.
Their stance
against
women and
their
distaste for
certain
values we
consider
essential to
the human
experience
creates a
quandary for
some of us
who
understand
the imperial
nature of
the US/NATO
presence but
find the
fundamentalist
society
created by
the Taliban
in the wake
of their
defeat of
the Soviets
an
undesirable
alternative.
Without
going into
the role the
CIA and
Pentagon
played in
the rise of
the Taliban,
suffice it
to say they
continue to
exist
primarily
because they
resist the
imperial
aggressor,
not because
the Afghani
majority
necessarily
agrees with
their
understanding
of Islam.
Apparently
less
sophisticated
than other
religiously
oriented
anti-imperialist
movements
like Hamas
and perhaps
the Sadrist
movement in
Iraq that
also feature
a political
wing more
inclusive of
those who
don't share
either
organization's
religious
viewpoints,
the Taliban
would
probably
have no more
political
power than
the
polygamist
Mormon sects
in the US
west if it
weren't for
the presence
of foreign
troops in
Afghanistan.
Back to US
politics and
Afghanistan.
This is not
the "good"
war. It is
just as
wrong as the
US adventure
in Iraq.
Likewise, it
can not be
won, no
matter what
the
politicians
and the
generals
say. The
government
put in Kabul
by
Washington
is
comparable
to a new
branch head
of a
multinational
corporation.
Its power is
dependent on
the whim of
corporate
headquarters
and will
never garner
the support
of those not
on its
payroll.
There are
clearly
human rights
being abused
in
Afghanistan,
but those
abuses are
committed as
much by the
occupying
forces as
they are by
the forces
opposed to
the
occupier.
The solution
to
Afghanistan
begins, just
like in
Iraq, with
the
unconditional
and
immediate
withdrawal
of the US
military.
