"Bleeding
Afghanistan"
Interview
with Sonali
Kolhatkar
By Mike
Whitney
31/07/08 "ICH"
-- - 1--Mike
Whitney:
On a recent
stopover in
France,
Barack Obama
said, "We
must win in
Afghanistan.
There is no
other
option."
Recent
polls,
however,
show that
public
support for
the war in
Afghanistan
has fallen
off sharply.
In fact,
many
American's
don't even
know why we
are still
there. Is
there a big
difference
between what
"winning"
means to the
Bush
administration
and what it
means to the
people of
Afghanistan?
Also, have
you seen any
indication
that the
Bush
administration
intends to
keep its
promises and
establish
security,
rebuild the
country's
infrastructure,
spread
democracy,
remove the
warlords,
liberate
women, and
"modernize"
Afghanistan
or was that
all just a
public
relations
smokescreen
to promote
the
invasion?
Sonali
Kolhatkar:
I’m really
not sure
what Bush,
Obama, and
McCain mean
when they
say they
want to win
in
Afghanistan.
And, I'm not
sure they
know either.
It's
probably
just a
public-relations
gimmick to
sound “tough
on terror.”
But, judging
from what
we've seen,
they seem to
think that
“winning”
means
killing
every last
“terrorist”
in
Afghanistan.
That sort of
thinking is
based on
false
assumptions
and it's an
unattainable
goal. As far
as the
Afghans are
concerned; I
think they
would like
to see an
end to the
fighting and
a safe
Afghanistan
where human
rights are
respected.
They also
want justice
for past
crimes. For
the US to
achieve
this, they
will have to
denounce
their proxy
soldiers,
the Northern
Alliance,
and support
a "justice
and
accountability"
process led
by the
Afghan
people.
The US will
also have to
address the
widespread
poverty and
provide
long-term
economic
solutions
that give
Afghans hope
for the
future. The
US will also
have to
create
viable
alternatives
to the
production
of heroin,
so that poor
farmers
don't have
to depend on
the sale of
illicit
narcotics to
survive.
That means
Bush will
have to
support
multi-lateral
peacekeepers
to protect
the Afghan
people from
the Northern
Alliance and
Taliban.
Most
importantly,
the US will
have to end
the
occupation
and withdraw
its troops.
But of
course, that
probably
won’t happen
any time
soon. After
all, the
real goal of
the invasion
was
vengeance
for 9/11.
All the
promises of
liberation
and
democracy
were a just
“PR-ploy” to
make
Americans
feel better
about
seeking
revenge.
2--MW:
Critics of
the invasion
say that it
had nothing
to do with
Al Qaida or
"liberating"
the Afghan
people from
the Taliban,
but with
establishing
military
outposts in
a
geopolitically
strategic
part of
Central Asia
in order to
surround
China,
intimidate
Russia, and
open up
pipeline
corridors to
the
resource-rich
Caspian
Basin. So,
what is
Obama up to?
Why is he
calling for
more troops
and greater
commitment
from the
other NATO
members? Is
he serious
about
spreading
democracy
and fighting
Islamic
extremism or
is the war
on terror
just a
smokescreen
so he can
carry out an
imperial
agenda?
Sonali
Kolhatkar: I
think the
primary goal
of the war
was always
vengeance,
but the
neocons also
wanted to
pave the way
for an
attack on
Iraq. Bush
wanted to go
to Iraq even
before 9/11.
Unfortunately
for him, Al
Qaeda was
holed up in
Afghanistan
so he had to
invade there
first and
build
support for
attacking
Iraq. It's
true that
the long
term goals
could be
military
bases (John
McCain said
last year
that he
wanted
permanent
military
bases in
Afghanistan),
and pipeline
corridors
(Clinton was
most closely
linked to
supporting
pipeline
contracts
between US
corporations
like UNOCAL
and the
Taliban
before
2000). But
I’m not sure
how much
Bush cared
about those
long-term
objectives
even though
future
presidents
will surely
capitalize
on them.
As far as
Obama’s
motives, I
think he
just wants
to get
elected. But
he knows
that he
cannot be
against all
wars, only
an unpopular
one. He
knows that a
candidate
that is
against all
wars will
not win in
November.
He's talked
about
withdrawing
from Iraq,
but that's
because it's
a popular
position
with the
public. But
he's also
planning to
increase
troop levels
in
Afghanistan
because he
is not being
pressured by
the American
people.
Americans
may be
unclear
about why
our troops
are there,
but they are
not
organized or
speaking out
against the
Afghanistan
war. Obama
needs a war
like
Afghanistan,
because it
was a haven
for Al Qaida
and that
makes him
look “tough
on terror.”
That will
help him win
more votes
from
anti-Iraq
war
conservatives
and
independents.
3--MW: The
United
States has
occupied
Afghanistan
for seven
years now.
Has life
gotten
better for
the people
or worse? Is
there any
security
beyond the
capital of
Kabul or are
the US and
NATO troops
stretched
too thin? Do
the people
generally
support the
ongoing
occupation
or are they
getting
frustrated
by the lack
of progress
and want to
see the US
go?
Sonali
Kolhatkar:
Initially,
life got
better for
many
Afghans,
particularly
in Kabul.
That's
because the
Taliban had
been routed
and the
people felt
somewhat
safe as well
as relieved.
But as the
warlords
took over
positions of
power,
attitudes
changed. It
has gotten
much worse,
now that the
Taliban have
returned and
the
occupation
forces are
killing more
civilians
than the
Taliban.
Kabul is a
bit more
secure than
the rest of
the country.
But Kabul is
also the
warlords’
seat of
power. Most
of them are
even members
of
Parliament,
so people
are
frequently
abused and
live in
fear.
Beyond
Kabul,
things vary
dramatically
depending on
where you
go. In the
parts of the
country with
the heaviest
concentrations
of US/NATO
troops;
Afghans are
frequently
rounded-up,
detained,
tortured,
bombed, or
shot by
foreign
troops just
as in Iraq.
In other
parts of the
country,
where the
Taliban are
strong;
girls
schools are
blown up,
civilians
are killed
in suicide
bombings,
and
journalists,
teachers,
and elected
officials
are harassed
or murdered.
Those areas
controlled
by warlords
are ruled
with an iron
hand, where
extreme
interpretations
of sharia
law rule the
day, and
women suffer
rape and
degradation.
No matter
where you go
in
Afghanistan,
there is
utter,
grinding
poverty. The
US
occupation
has not
changed that
at all.
People are
very
frustrated,
particularly
with the US
puppet Hamid
Karzai. They
blame Karzai
for the high
number of
civilian
casualties.
They also
dislike the
way he has
pardoned
some of the
warlords and
Taliban
leaders.
As far as
the
occupation
goes, people
were
somewhat
supportive
of it
originally,
but as
conditions
have
deteriorated,
they have
begun to see
the presence
of foreign
troops as a
big part of
the problem.
I would say
that a
majority of
Afghans now
want the US
and NATO to
leave as
soon as
possible.
4--MW: Is
the US
military
mainly
fighting the
Taliban or
is the the
armed-resistance
more complex
than that? I
read
recently
that the
so-called
Taliban is
actually a
confederation
of about a
dozen
disparate
groups and
tribes that
have bonded
together
with the
common goal
of ending
foreign
occupation
and that the
main reason
their ranks
are swelling
is because
of the US
military's
indiscriminate
killing of
civilians?
Could you
clarify this
point?
Sonali
Kolhatkar:
It's hard to
understand
the nature
of the
anti-US
resistance,
but it's a
very
important
issue.
Unfortunately,the
media
coverage
only makes
it more
confusing.
The fighters
that are
called the
“Taliban”
are actually
a mix of
"former"
Taliban and
newly
enlisted
Pashtun
fighters
trained in
Pakistan.
Many of them
are just
disgruntled
Afghan
civilians
whose
families and
loved ones
have been
killed
and/or
tortured by
US/NATO
forces.
Recruiting
is always
easy when
you can show
that foreign
soldiers are
killing more
civilians
that the
"so-called"
enemy. But
we should be
careful to
not glorify
the
resistance.
It is
strictly
fundamentalist
and would
not be a
good option
for Afghans
in terms of
future
leadership.
The vast
majority of
Afghans are
moderate
Muslims who
strongly
disagree
with the
Taliban's
extremist
ideology,
but they
have joined
the struggle
to bring an
end to the
occupation.
But, of
course,
their
troubles
won't
disappear
just because
the American
forces
leave.
They'll
still be
stuck with
the Taliban
and the
warlords.
When the
Soviet
occupation
ended in the
late 1980s,
the
US-backed
warlords
began their
reign of
terror on
the people
between 1992
to 1996.
That could
happen
again. These
same
warlords (or
Taliban)
could once
again spread
misery and
death across
Afghanistan.
War is an
entropic
force that
cannot be
undone by
simply
hitting a
rewind
button.
5--MW: What
will happen
if the US
military
leaves
Afghanistan?
Is
withdrawal
the best
solution or
do you see
another,
perhaps,
less bloody,
alternative?
Sonali
Kolhatkar:
There are
always less
bloody
alternatives,
but
withdrawal
is the first
step in a
long and
complex
process. As
I’ve said
before,
Afghanistan’s
solutions do
not fit
neatly on a
placard.
Perhaps
that's why
anti-war
activists
don’t take a
clear stand
against this
war. The
withdrawal
of US/NATO
forces must
be
accompanied
by other
developments,
like
disempowering
the warlords
in
parliament
who have a
long history
of
US-supported
impunity.
This
disempowering
must include
an
"Afghan-led"
disarmament
of their
private
militias;
removing
them from
political
power, and
holding them
accountable
for their
past crimes
through
criminal
prosecution
of some
sort.
There must
also be a
"transitional"
UN
peacekeeping
force that
maintains
security and
protects
ordinary
people the
fundamentalists
(Taliban and
Northern
Alliance)
But they
must make
sure that
they don't
target
civilians.
There must
also be
economic
justice in
the form of
reparations
(matching
the money
that has
been spent
on weapons
since 1979,
dollar-for-dollar)
and a plan
to build up
local
industries,
create jobs,
and provide
alternatives
to poppy
farming.
There must
be political
justice so
that
dissidents
can come out
of the
shadows and
run for
office or
participate
in the
rebuilding
their
national
institutions.
When the
Afghan
people
decide that
it's time
for the
peacekeepers
to leave;
they should
go.
Can such a
solution
work?
Perhaps. But
for this, or
any other
idea to
work, the US
occupation
must end.
That's the
first big
step to
recovery.
6--MW: There
is a very
brave and
outspoken
woman in the
Afghan
parliament,
named
Malalai Joya.
She has
repeatedly
put her own
life at risk
by
denouncing
the warlords
and calling
for an end
to the US
occupation.
She has
consistently
called out
for human
rights and
real
democracy.
Has the Bush
administration
done
anything at
all to
promote or
protect
courageous
women who
embody
"liberal
values" like
Malalai Joya?
Sonali
Kolhatkar:
Women like
Malalai Joya
are
"inconvenient"
for the Bush
administration.
That's
because Joya
echoes the
will of her
people in
calling for
an end to
warlords,
AND an end
to the US
occupation.
Bush and his
cohorts like
to promote
the type of
women who
quietly
accept the
US narrative
and show
gratitude
for being
“saved by
the
Americans.”
In fact,
there are
very few
such women
like that in
Afghanistan.
Joya speaks
for millions
of Afghan
women when
she
denounces
the
warlords.
And she has
repeatedly
put herself
in danger.
She has
nearly been
killed at
least four
times! What
this means
is that
women’s
rights are
available
only to
women who do
not exercise
their
rights. And
it not just
Malalai Joya
who is
putting
herself at
risk due to
her
political
activism. I
have
personally
worked very
closely with
the
Revolutionary
Association
of the Women
of
Afghanistan
(RAWA), and
they have
been saying
the same
things for
years.
Still, RAWA
cannot
operate
openly
without
putting
themselves
in danger of
physical
harm; so
they must
carry out
their work
underground.
RAWA has
NEVER
received any
offer of
help from
the US
government
(although
they would
refuse it if
it anyway to
remain
politically
independent)
Like Joya,
the women of
RAWA are
inconvenient
– they do
not need to
be "saved"
by America.
But they do
need a safe
Afghanistan
and they
deserve
international
solidarity
for their
brave human
rights work.
7--MW: The
invasion of
Afghanistan
was promoted
as a
humanitarian
intervention
to save the
Afghans from
the brutal
Taliban
regime. How
would you
advise
people who
now think we
should take
similar
action in
Darfur to
stop the
killing
there? Is
military
invasion an
acceptable
way to
address
injustice or
spread
democracy?
Sonali
Kolhatkar:
I’m not sure
I have a
definitive
answer to
that
question,
but I do
think it is
one that
progressives
need to
grapple
with. Too
often, we in
the West are
very
selective
when it
comes to the
causes we
support.
Only when
the US is
directly
involved do
activists
choose to
oppose a
regime.
Before the
US war in
Afghanistan,
when the
country was
being
destroyed by
the warlords
and then the
Taliban, it
was not seen
as a cause
worth taking
on by
American
activists.
But if the
people are
being
oppressed by
someone
else, we
ignore it.
The sad
truth is
that until
progressives
come up
strategies
for dealing
with
repressive
regimes,
we'll always
just be
reacting to
unjust
interventions
by our
government.
Military
options are
always the
worst. Even
so,
diplomacy
can be
nearly as
corrupt if
it means
compromising
with
criminals
and warlords
and giving
them
whatever
they want in
exchange for
peace. Peace
without
justice is
meaningless.
We could
have peace
now in
Afghanistan
if we were
willing to
give the
warlords and
Taliban
ultimate
power. In
fact, there
was a kind
of “peace”
under the
Taliban. But
is that what
we want?
If we want
real justice
we need to
figure out a
reasonable
way to deal
with
injustice.
We need to
create
alternatives
that involve
people-to-people
solidarity
and
democracy
that can
transform
society. For
example, one
way we could
have dealt
with the
Taliban
without
invading
would have
been for
individual
Americans
(not our
government)
to
financially
and morally
support the
subversive
(and
non-violent)
work of
groups like
RAWA. That
way, Afghans
would have
been able to
change their
country by
themselves
without
foreign
intervention
and massive
destruction.
Indeed, RAWA
supports
change from
within and
have called
on their
people to
rise up. But
their
effectiveness
has limited
by a lack of
resources to
help them
get the word
out while
organizing
underground.
Solidarity
with groups
like RAWA
(and there
may be
similar ones
in Darfur)
is one
long-term,
progressive
alternative
to foreign
intervention.
BIO: Sonali
Kolhatkar is
the host and
producer of
Uprising, a
popular
radio
program
through
Pacifica
Network,
that airs on
stations
around the
country. She
is also the
Co-Director
of Afghan
Women's
Mission, a
US-based
non-profit
organization
that works
in
solidarity
with the
Revolutionary
Association
of the Women
of
Afghanistan
(RAWA). She
is the
co-author,
with James
Ingalls, of
Bleeding
Afghanistan:
Washington,
Warlords,
and the
Propaganda
of Silence
(Seven
Stories
2006). More
information
at
www.afghanwomensmission.org
,
www.rawa.org
.
