Let's Speak
the Truth
About
Afghanistan
By Eric
Margolis
30/07/08 "Huffington
Post"
-- - NEW
YORK --
During his
triumphant
European
tour,
Senator
Barack Obama
again urged
NATO's
members to
send more
troops to
Afghanistan
and called
the conflict
there, "the
central
front in the
war on
terror."
Europe's
response
ranged from
polite
evasion to
downright
frosty.
It is
unfortunate
that Obama
has adopted
President
George
Bush's
misleading
terminology,
"war on
terror," to
describe the
conflict
between the
United
States and
anti-American
groups in
the Muslim
world. Like
many
Americans,
he and his
foreign
policy
advisors are
sorely
misinformed
about the
reality of
Afghanistan.
One
understands
Obama's need
to respond
with martial
élan to
rival John
McCain's
chest-thumping
about "I
know how to
win wars."
Polls put
McCain far
ahead of
Obama when
it comes to
being a war
leader. But
Obama's
recent
proposal to
send at
least 7,000
more U.S.
troops to
Afghanistan,
and his
threats to
attack
Pakistan's
territory,
and warnings
about
Islamabad's
nuclear
forces, show
poor
judgment and
lack of
knowledge.
The United
States is no
longer
"fighting
terrorism"
in
Afghanistan,
as Bush,
Obama and
McCain
insist. The
2001 U.S.
invasion was
a legitimate
operation
against
al-Qaeda, a
group that
properly fit
the role of
a "terrorist
organization."
But,
contrary to
the White
House's
wildly
inflated
claims that
Osama bin
Laden's
al-Qaeda was
a worldwide
conspiracy,
it never
numbered
more than
300 hard
core
members. Bin
Laden and
his jihadis
long ago
scattered
into all
corners of
Pakistan and
elsewhere.
Only a
handful
remain in
Afghanistan.
Today,
80,000 U.S.
and NATO
troops are
waging war
against the
Taliban.
Having
accompanied
the
mujahidin
fighting the
Soviet
occupation
of
Afghanistan
during the
1980's,
witnessed
the birth of
Taliban, and
penned a
book about
the Afghan
struggle,
"War at the
Top of the
World," I
can attest
that Taliban
is not a
terrorist
organization
as the U.S.
and its
allies
wrongly
claim.
Taliban was
created in
the early
1990's
during the
chaos and
civil war
that
engulfed
Afghanistan
after the
Soviet
invaders
were driven
out. Drawn
from Pashtun
tribes of
southern
Afghanistan,
who make up
half that
nation's
population,
Taliban was
a religious
movement
that took up
arms to
battle the
Afghan
Communists,
stop the
wide-scale
rape of
Afghan
women, and
halt
banditry and
the drug
trade. Both
Pakistan and
the U.S.
secretly
aided
Taliban.
The ranks of
Taliban were
filled with
young
religious
students --
"talibs" --
and veteran
mujahidin
fighters
whom the
U.S. had
armed and
hailed as
"freedom
fighters."
By 1996,
Taliban took
Kabul,
driving out
the Northern
Alliance,
the old rump
of the
Afghan
Communist
Party and
its
Russian-backed
Tajik and
Uzbek tribal
supporters.
Taliban,
most of whom
were
mountaineers,
imposed a
draconian
medievalist
culture that
followed
traditional
Pashtun
tribal
customs and
Islamic law.
The U.S.
quietly
backed
Taliban for
possible use
in Central
Asia,
against
China in the
event of
war, and
against
Iran, a
bitter foe
of the Sunni
Taliban.
U.S. energy
giants
Chevron and
Unocal
negotiated
gas and oil
pipeline
deals with
Taliban. In
2001,
Washington
gave $40
million in
aid to
Taliban
until four
months
before 9/11.
The U.S.
only turned
against
Taliban
when, at
Osama bin
Laden's
advice, it
gave a major
pipeline
deal to an
Argentine
consortium
rather than
an American
one.
Everything
that happens
in
Afghanistan
is based on
tribal
politics.
Taliban came
from the
heart of the
Pashtun
tribal
grouping,
the world's
largest
tribe which
also
accounts for
up to 20% of
Pakistan's
population.
Tribal and
clan
loyalties
trump all
political
alliances.
The Taliban
leadership
had nothing
to do with
9/11, a plot
that,
according to
European
prosecutors,
was hatched
in Germany
and Spain,
not
Afghanistan.
Nor did it
have
anything to
do with
subsequent
attacks
ascribed to
al-Qaeda.
After 9/11,
Secretary of
State Colin
Powell vowed
to published
a White
paper
demonstrating
Osama bin
Laden's
culpability
in the
attacks.
Curiously,
the promised
paper was
never
issued.
Osama bin
Laden was a
national
hero of the
anti-Soviet
struggle,
wounded six
times in
battle.
Taliban's
collective
leadership,
in keeping
with the
Pashtun code
of
hospitality
and honor,
refused U.S.
demands to
hand over
bin Laden
until
Washington
issued a
proper
extradition
request with
evidence of
bin Laden's
guilt and
promised him
a fair
trial.
Washington
refused to
go through
legal
channels
and,
instead,
invaded
Afghanistan.
Fast forward
to 2008.
Today, U.S.
and NATO
forces are
not fighting
"terrorists"
in
Afghanistan
but a loose
alliance of
Pashtun
warrior
tribes whose
resistance
to foreign
occupation
is
legendary.
They are
descendants
of the same
Pashtun
mountain
warriors who
battled
Alexander
the Great,
the Mongols,
the British
Empire and
the Soviet
Union. All
these
invaders
were
eventually
defeated.
Former
U.S.-backed
mujahidin
"freedom-fighters,"
like the
legendary
Jallal
Haqqani and
Gulbadin
Hekmatyar,
have also
joined
Taliban in
resisting
foreign
occupation.
The war now
being waged
in
Afghanistan
by the U.S.
and NATO
closely
resembles
19th century
colonial
"pacifications"
in which a
puppet ruler
is
installed, a
native
mercenary
army ("sepoys")
hired to
fight, and
western
troops sent
to crush
rebellious
tribesmen
who refuse
to follow
the diktat
of the
imperial
power.
Equally
important,
the real
objective of
the ongoing
U.S.
occupation
of
Afghanistan
became
recently
evident. The
U.S.-installed
Karzai
regime in
Kabul
finally
singed a
long-discussed
pipeline
deal that
will bring
energy south
from the new
gas and oil
Klondike of
the Caspian
Basin
through
Afghanistan
to
Pakistan's
coast and
India.
As the
perceptive
writer Kevin
Phillips
notes, U.S.
and NATO
forces in
Afghanistan
-- and Iraq
-- have
become
"pipeline
protection
troops."
Barack Obama
and John
McCain had
better look
carefully
before
plunging
deeper into
the Afghan
morass. In
Afghanistan,
we are not
fighting
"terrorists"
but a
medieval
tribal
people who
just want to
be left
alone. This
is an ugly
little war
about oil
and gas, not
freedom,
democracy,
or woman's
rights.
Every
village we
bomb, every
wedding
party our
air powers
massacres,
brings new
recruits to
Taliban and
its allies.
Even the
secretary
general of
NATO, Jaap
de Hoop
Scheffer,
said last
April that
there could
be no
military
solution to
the war in
Afghanistan,
only a
political
one. That
means
negotiating
with Taliban
and
political
inclusion
for the
Pashtun
people. But
President
Bush and
candidates
McCain and
Obama are
not
listening.
