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: Afghanistan
Signs of growing opposition:
US launches large military operation in southern Afghanistan
By Peter Symonds
31 January 2003
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Serious fighting in south-eastern Afghanistan this week has
highlighted the existence of continuing armed resistance to the
US occupation of the country, which in turn reflects a broader
hostility and opposition to the American presence.
Hundreds of US, European and Afghan soldiers have been engaged
in the largest operation for months near the town of Spin Boldak
on the border with Pakistan. The US military claims to have killed
18 out of an estimated force of 80 armed men during 12 to 14 hours
of sporadic fighting on Monday and Tuesday.
US commanders launched the operation based on information obtained
during an American Special Forces raid on a compound just north
of Spin Boldak. After coming under fire, US and Afghan troops
killed one attacker, wounded another and detained a third. Under
interrogation, the detained man reportedly divulged that there
was a larger concentration of opposition fighters in a cave complex
further north in the Adi Ghar mountain range.
When Apache helicopters sent to investigate came under small
arms fire, the US military commanders dispatched a force of some
350 American, European and Afghan soldiers. Air strikes accounted
for most of the dead. US B-1 bombers and Norwegian F-16s pulverised
the caves with high explosives while AC-130 gunships and Apache
attack helicopters unleashed a withering barrage of fire against
any suspected pockets of resistance.
The remnants of the opposition force apparently escaped, possibly
to neighbouring Pakistan. US military spokesman Colonel Roger
King indicated on Wednesday that American troops were continuing
to search at least 160 caves, previously unknown, in the area.
The soldiers recovered a quantity of 107mm rockets and other weapons,
as well as ammunition, fuel, food and other supplies.
While there are conflicting reports as to the allegiance of
the fighters, King claimed that the force was aligned with Afghan
militia leader Gulbuddin Hekmatyar and his Hezb-e-Islami group.
During the 1980s, the CIA patronised Hezb-e-Islami, along with
other Mujaheddin militia fighting to oust the Soviet-backed regime
in Kabul. In fact, Hekmatyar, an ethnic Pashtun, received the
lions share of American arms and funding.
Following the fall of the Moscow-supported administration in
1992, Hezb-e-Islami engaged in a bitter struggle for political
supremacy with other militia groups, destroying large sections
of Kabul and resulting in thousands of deaths. Hekmatyar briefly
held the post of prime minister in 1996, as the feuding militia
groups attempted to unite against the Taliban. He fled to Iran
after Kabul fell to the Taliban in the same year.
In setting up the post-Taliban regime last year, Washington
passed over its former freedom fighter Hekmatyar,
as well as other prominent Mujaheddin leaders, in favour of more
malleable figures like Hamid Karzai. Last May, based on unproven
claims that he had joined forces with the Taliban, the CIA attempted
to assassinate Hekmatyar using an anti-tank missile fired from
an unmanned Predator drone. Hekmatyar survived but several of
his supporters died in the attack.
Hekmatyar has since called for a jihad or holy war against
the US occupation of Afghanistan, denouncing Karzai as a puppet
of Washington. Whether the 80 or so fighters at Adi Ghar were
allied to Hekmatyars Hezb-e-Islami remains uncertain. What
is clear, however, is that a year of US military thuggery, combined
with ongoing poverty and deprivation throughout much of Afghanistan,
has antagonised broad layers of the population and produced a
rising tide of opposition to the US occupation.
US military spokesmen now routinely report minor, largely ineffectual
attacks on US forces or their Afghan allies. As a BBC report noted:
Small bands of fighterssome of whom are not linked
to the Taliban or Hekmatyar but are seeking revenge after suffering
human and material losses due to US bombingare operating
in the mountainous Paktia, Paktika and Khost provinces in southern
Afghanistan.
In some areas, particularly along the border with Pakistan,
the Karzai governments control is limited. A recent article
in the Christian Science Monitor cited the remarks of Najibullah,
security chief for Asadabad, a town on the border with Pakistan.
He listed a number of neighbouring towns that were effectively
outside his control. Up there, they are against the government,
and against us, he commented. And the reason they
are against us is that we havent brought them anything.
No hospitals, no doctors, no roads, no security. Nothing has changed,
only the faces of the leaders.
Najibullah explained that he had 1,800 poorly trained and equipped
troops under his command. Their nominal wage is $US1 a month but
they have not received any money for months. We cant
trust our own men. Somebody could offer them thousands of rupees,
and I can only offer them 10. Its possible for even 300
men to take everything from us, not just the city but the province,
he said.
General Hilmi Akin Zorlu, the Turkish commander of the International
Security Assistance Force (ISAF) in Kabul, has expressed fears
that a US invasion of Iraq will intensify opposition to the foreign
presence in Afghanistan. If there is a war in Iraq, there
might be many sympathisers throughout Afghanistan. It may cause
an increase in terrorist actions against foreigners including
ISAF, UN, coalition forces and all civilian businessmen coming
to Afghanistan, he told the Washington Post in early
January.
Zorlu said the 4,300 troops under his command were constantly
interrupting potential attacks and confiscating heavy weapons
ammunition found hidden around the capital. He listed a string
of incidents, including a grenade attack on American soldiers,
the discovery of an explosives store in a girls school and an
attack on foreigners waiting outside an ISAF compound.
These sentiments were echoed by a government official, Engineer
Amin, in the border town of Ungorada. These days, Al Qaeda
is very active and they are crossing over here a lot... Our information
is that when America starts the attack on Iraq, they will make
an attack here. They will attack in big numbers, on the American
base and against anyone who works with the Americans, he
told the New York Times.
Like others, Amin brands all opposition as Al Qaeda
and Taliban. Clearly, however, there are concerns
that a US invasion of Iraq has the potential to spark wider opposition
inside Afghanistan. The latest US military operation near Spin
Boldak has the character of a preemptive strike aimed at cracking
down on anti-government militia groups before a war is launched
against Baghdad. At the same time, Washington is insisting that
Pakistan take tougher measures along the border with Afghanistan
and allow US forces to engage in hot pursuit of enemy
forces fleeing into Pakistan.
All of this makes a mockery of Washingtons claim, repeated
in President Bushs State of the Union address, to have brought
peace, democracy and well being to Afghan people. In Afghanistan,
Bush declared, we helped liberate an oppressed people, and
we will continue helping them secure their country, rebuild their
society and educate all their children.
What the US has brought over the last year is the death of
thousands of innocent Afghans, the trampling of basic democratic
rights, the installation of a puppet regime in Kabul and a pittance
in aid that scarcely begins to address the social needs of one
of the most impoverished countries in the world. Now the Bush
administration is preparing to wage war against Iraq, with potentially
even more devastating consequences for the Iraqi people, and which
will, as in Afghanistan, certainly provoke fierce opposition.
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