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Alarm in Washington over deepening disaster in Afghanistan
By James Cogan
30 August 2006
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The New York Times vented the concern in US ruling circles
over the deteriorating state of affairs in Afghanistan with a
lengthy article on August 23 and an editorial the following day,
entitled Losing Afghanistan. Close to five years since
the country was invaded and occupied in the name of the war
on terror, the newspaper made the bleak assessment that
there is no victory in the war for Afghanistan, due in significant
measure to the Bush administrations reckless haste to move
on to Iraq and shortsighted stinting on economic reconstruction.
The primary target of the editorials wrath, however,
was not Bush and his administration, but rather the US puppet
government in Kabul headed by President Hamid Karzai. It criticised
Karzai, who won a contrived election in October 2004, for failing
to bring security, economic revival or effective governance
and thereby leaving his government vulnerable to complaints
about blatant corruption, the pervasive power of warlords and
drug lords, and escalating military pressure from a revived and
resupplied Taliban.
The open condemnation of Karzai may indicate US moves to oust
him. In her August 23 article, Times correspondent Carlotta
Gall reported that, Afghans and diplomats are speculating
about who might replace him. Opposition politician Abdul
Latif Pedram stated: There has never been so much corruption
in the country. We have a mafia economy and a drug economy.
Yet, Karzais failures are those of the US-led occupation
of the country. Karzai, an exile who lacked any significant social
base in Afghanistan, was installed as president in 2002 immediately
after the US invasion. His regime has always been completely dependent
on Washingtoneconomically, politically and militarily. Outside
the capital, its influence rests on an unreliable patchwork of
regional warlords, tribal leaders and militia commanders. Any
replacement would confront the same intractable political and
social problems.
The US-led forces are fighting against an entrenched and expanding
guerilla war. The Voice of America (VOA) reported last week: Throughout
the country, every type of attack is on the risefrom roadside
bombs and suicide attacks, to massive raids on government outposts
involving up to several hundred well-armed insurgents. While
some of the guerillas are members of the Taliban Islamic movement,
there are indications that local tribal leaders or drug lords
are conducting the armed resistance in many areas.
Afghan officials told VOA that there could now be as many as
40,000 guerillas fighting against the occupation forces and the
Afghan army. Extensive US and Pakistani military operations have
failed to prevent insurgent groups using the mountainous regions
along the Afghan-Pakistan border as a safe haven to rest, resupply,
train and recruit. Large areas of the predominantly ethnic Pashtun
provinces of southern and eastern Afghanistan are outside the
Kabul governments authority and regularly fall under the
sway of Taliban forces.
The NATO force tasked since July 31 with imposing occupation
control over the southern provinces is meeting with bitter opposition.
NATO commander, Lieutenant General David Richards, told the BBC
this month that the 4,000 British troops in Helmand province were
engaged in a type of persistent, low-level dirty fighting
that the British military had not confronted since the Korean
War or World War II. The 2,300 Canadian troops in Kandahar province
have lost eight dead and dozens wounded this month alone.
So far, 27 American and allied troops have been killed in August,
the highest monthly figure this year in Afghanistan and one of
the highest since the occupation began. The number of deaths could
climb even further in September. The 1,400 Dutch and 400 Australian
troops currently moving into Uruzgan province are expected to
suffer casualties, while the actions of the occupation forces
are further inflaming hostility toward the foreign forces.
In the most recent incidents, eight people, including a 10-year-old
boy, were gunned down during a US raid on a house that allegedly
belonged to an Al Qaeda adherent. Karzais government has
ordered an investigation into Afghan police claims that those
killed were innocent locals. On Saturday, Canadian troops killed
and wounded Afghan police who were approaching a checkpoint. Just
45 minutes later, they opened fire on two other police riding
a motorcycle. The police have rejected the Canadian claims that
they were not wearing uniforms.
Outrage over routine searches, detention and killing of civilians
has contributed to the growth of the insurgency and the revival
of the Taliban. This had been compounded by bitterness over the
continuing economic and social disaster produced by the US-led
occupation. Despite promises of billions of dollars in aid, unemployment
and poverty remain endemic and essential services dysfunctional.
Three million people depend on food aid to avoid starvation.
In the capital Kabul, many residents regularly face electricity
blackouts for days at a time. At best, they receive five hours
per day. Work has barely begun on plans to construct new power
plants and transmit electricity from Central Asia. Wealthier layers,
however, many of whom work for the occupation forces, receive
continuous power.
The Washington Post reported early this month: Residents
of Karte Nau, one of the citys poorest and darkest districts,
live with a double insult. A row of new power poles and lines
runs across their neighbourhood, for which some families have
paid up to $250 for a connection, but none has received electricity
yet. When they peer down from their huts at night, they see a
row of ornate new mansions beside the main boulevard, lit up like
a holiday party.
In the rural areas of southern Afghanistan, next to nothing
has been done to alleviate the misery of people who have endured
decades of war. Lacking any alternative, tens of thousands of
small farmers have turned back to growing opium, encouraged by
local warlords who reemerged after the US ousted the Taliban regime.
As much as 90 percent of the worlds heroin supply now originates
in Afghanistan.
The drug trade takes place with the complicity of Afghan officials,
troops and police working with the US forces, who are notorious
for their corruption and brutality. Marvin Weinbaum, a former
analyst on Afghanistan for the US State Department, told Agence
France Presse last week: Many believe that there is drug
involvement right up to provincial officials, governors and even
to cabinet members, but Karzai has no stomach to confront this
problem because his own political survival may be threatened.
Opium is believed to be generating significant resources for
Taliban fighters and other anti-US militias, who levy taxes in
exchange for not disrupting the trade. Southern Afghanistan is
estimated to have more than 180,000 hectares planted with opium
poppies, producing over 4,000 tonnes of opium worth an estimated
$US2.7 billion. Taliban fighters are reportedly using drug money
to purchase better equipment and weapons.
Within this context, the conclusion of the New York Times
editorial on August 24 has chilling implications. It declared:
Americans are coming to see the war in Iraq as something
apart from the war against 9/11-style terrorismand a distraction
from it. The war in Afghanistan has always been an essential part
of that larger struggle. That makes it a war that America cannot
afford to lose.
If winning the war in Afghanistan is defined as
establishing occupation authority over the entire country, it
necessarily implies a massive escalation of the violence against
the Afghan people.
See Also:
Death toll rises as NATO expands operations
in Afghanistan
[8 August 2006]
UK sends more troops to southern
Afghanistan as fighting escalates
[18 July 2006]
US-led offensive in southern
Afghanistan kills hundreds
[3 July 2006]
Mass rioting reveals depth
of Afghan opposition to US occupation
[31 May 2006]
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