Time To Face
The Facts On
Afghanistan
By Eric S.
Margolis
08/10/08 --
- Toronto
October 06,
2008 -- For
those who
savor
historical
irony, the
Soviet
Empire
collapsed in
the years
1989-1991
because of
an implosion
of its
economy
brought on
by a ruinous
arms race
with the
United
States and
the heavy
costs of
occupying
Afghanistan.
Seventeen
years later
came the
turn of the
world’s
other great
imperial
power, the
United
States.
Lethally
bloated by
runaway
debt, and
burdened by
50% of the
world’s
military
spending,
the house of
cards known
as the US
economy
finally
collapsed.
The doomsday
news from
New York and
Washington
has obscured
most other
world
affairs.
This is
unfortunate
because for
the first
time there
is a flicker
– and I mean
only a
flicker – of
light at the
end of the
Afghanistan
tunnel. It
may only be
an oncoming
truck bomb.
The
US-installed
Afghan
president,
Hamid Karzai,
revealed
last week he
had asked
Saudi Arabia
to broker
peace talks
with the
alliance of
tribal and
political
groups
resisting
Western
occupation
collectively
known as
Taliban.
Saudi Arabia
had been one
of the few
nations to
recognize
the Taliban
government
and retains
considerable
influence in
Afghanistan
and remains
a loyal
friend of
Pakistan.
Taliban
leader
Mullah Omar
quickly
rejected
Karzai’s
offer, and
claimed the
US was
heading
toward the
same kind of
catastrophic
defeat in
Afghanistan
that the
Soviet Union
had met. The
ongoing
financial
panic in
North
America lent
substance to
his words.
The US
economy is
in grave
peril and
its big
three
automakers
may soon
face
bankruptcy.
In a crazy
sidebar, as
Wall Street
and the Us
banking
system faced
meltdown,
the
insouciant
Pentagon
just
announced it
would spend
$300 million
with
American
`contractors’
to spread
pro-US
propaganda
in Iraq.
This
remarkable
idiocy
notwithstanding,
Washington
could soon
run out of
money
necessary to
keep paying
for
operations
in Iraq, and
bribing
Pakistan
with
$250-300
million a
month to
wage war
against its
own
rebellious
Pashtun
tribes
people along
the
Afghanistan
border.
The able and
forthright
US commander
in
Afghanistan,
Gen. David
McKiernan,
urgently
called for
at least
10,000 more
troops. US
and NATO
forces in
Afghanistan
are
increasingly
on the
defensive,
hard pressed
to defend
vulnerable
supply lines
in spite of
massive fire
power and
total
control of
the air.
Attacks on
US and NATO
convoys are
even
beginning at
the port of
Karachi. The
prospect of
the US
spreading a
war it can’t
win in
Afghanistan
into
Pakistan is
military and
political
madness.
Startlingly,
Gen.
McKiernan
appeared to
break with
Bush
administration
policy by
proposing
political
talks with
Taliban and
admitting
the war had
to be ended
by
diplomacy.
The military
men know
this war
cannot be
won on the
battlefield.
McKiernan’s
predecessor
told
Congress
that 400,000
US troops
would be
needed to
pacify
Afghanistan.
There are
currently
80,000
western
troops in
Afghanistan,
many of them
unwilling to
enter
combat.
By sharp
contrast, I
recently
asked Karl
Rove,
President
Bush’s
former
senior
advisor, how
the US could
ever hope to
win the war
in
Afghanistan.
His eyes
dancing with
imperial
hubris, Rove
brightly
replied,
`More
Predators(missile
armed
drones) and
helicopters!
Then we’ll
go into
Pakistan.’
Which
reminded me
of poet
Hilaire
Beloc’s
wonderful
line about
19th century
British
imperialism
that I use
in my new
book,
`American
Raj:’
`Whatever
happens/we
have got/the
Maxim gun*
/and they
have not.’
*Maxim gun –
early
machine gun
Though
Karzai’s
olive branch
was
rejected,
the fact he
made it
public is
very
important.
By doing so,
both he and
Gen.
McKiernan
broke the
simple-minded
Western
taboo
against
negotiations
with Taliban
and its
allies.
Let us
remember
that Taliban
is not a
`terrorist
movement,’
as claimed
by western
war
propaganda,
but was
founded as
an Islamic
religious
movement
dedicated to
fighting
Communism
and the drug
trade.
Taliban
received US
funding
until May,
2001. In
fact, CIA
keep close
contacts
with
Taliban,
many of
whose
members were
US-backed
mujahidin
from the
anti-Soviet
war of the
1980’s, for
possible
future use
against the
Communist
regimes of
Central Asia
and against
China. The
9/11 attacks
made CIA
immediately
cut its
links to
Taliban and
burn the
associated
files.
In recent
years,
Western war
propaganda
has so
demonized
Taliban that
few
politicians
have the
courage to
propose the
obvious and
inevitable:
a negotiated
settlement
to this
pointless
seven-year
war. A
noteworthy
exception
came last
April when
NATO’s
secretary
general,
Jaap de Hoop
Scheffer,
who admitted
the war
could only
be ended by
negotiations,
not military
means.
The Karzai
government
cannot
extend its
authority
beyond Kabul
because that
would mean
overthrowing
the very
same Uzbek
and Tajik
drug-dealing
warlords and
Communists
chiefs that
are its base
of power.
There is no
real Afghan
national
army, just a
bunch of
unenthusiastic
mercenaries
who pretend
to fight.
The current
war in
Afghanistan
is not
really about
al-Qaida and
`terrorism,’
but about
opening a
secure
corridor
through
Pashtun
tribal
territory to
export the
oil and gas
riches of
the Caspian
Basin of
Central Asia
to the West.
The US and
NATO forces
in
Afghanistan
are
essentially
pipeline
protection
troops
fighting off
the hostile
natives..
Both Barack
Obama and
John McCain
are wrong
about
Afghanistan.
It is not a
`good’ fight
against
`terrorism,’
but a
classic,
19th century
colonial war
to advance
western
geopolitical
power into
resource-rich
Central
Asia. The
Pashtun
Afghans who
live there
are ready to
fight for
another 100
years. The
western
powers
certainly
are not.
As that
great
American
founding
father
Benjamin
Franklin
said, `there
is no good
war, and no
bad peace.’
Time for the
West to face
reality in
Afghanistan.
Eric S.
Margolis is
an
award-winning,
internationally
syndicated
columnist.
His articles
appear in
the New York
Times, the
International
Herald
Tribune, the
Los Angeles
Times, Times
of London,
the Gulf
Times, the
Khaleej
Times and
Dawn. Visit
his blog -
http://www.ericmargolis.com/