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: Afghanistan
The New York Times and Washingtons new prison
in Afghanistan
By Alex Lantier
20 May 2008
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On May 17 the New York Times reported on plans for a
new, US-run prison complex at Bagram air base north of the Afghan
capital, Kabul. The prison complex would occupy 40 acres on the
base, house up to 1,100 prisoners, and cost more than $60 million
to build. The complex will replace an existing prison, the Bagram
Theater Internment Facility.
Military officials told the press they were concerned about
the health effects on US troops stationed at the current Bagram
facility, which is heavily contaminated with toxic heavy metals.
They are unwilling to turn dangerous detainees over
to the Afghan puppet government, however, and are planning on
building a new prison, under direct US control.
The Times described the existing Bagram prison as overcrowded,
with inadequate restroom and exercise facilities, and acknowledged
that American guards had beaten several detainees to death there.
Comparing conditions there to those at Guantánamo Bay,
the US-run concentration camp in Cuba which has become notorious
for its torture and arbitrary punishment of detainees, it reported:
Military personnel who know both Bagram and Guantánamo
describe the Afghan site [...] as far more Spartan. Bagram prisoners
have fewer privileges, less ability to contest their detention
and no access to lawyers.
Starting with these horrible facts, the Times then took
on a grotesquely Orwellian task: presenting the construction of
the new prison as an exercise in humanitarianism.
Citing US military officials who told the Times the
new prison would be would be more modern and humane,
it continued: Classrooms will be built for vocational training
and religious discussion, and there will be more space for recreation
and family visits, officials said. [...] The structures will have
more natural light, and each will have its own recreation area.
It quoted a senior Pentagon official for detention policy,
Sandra L. Hodgkinson: The driving factor behind this is
to ensure that in all instances we are giving the highest standards
of treatment and care.
One rubs ones eyes in disbelief. US treatment of prisoners
in Afghanistan has been distinguished, in fact, by its murderous
brutality, from the very beginning of the US-led occupation.
According to evidence presented by Irish filmmaker Jamie Doran
and the German TV program Panorama, thousands of Taliban
troops who had surrendered to US-backed warlord Abdurrashid Dostum
in November 2001 were transported in suffocating containers, then
shot and buried in mass graves in northern Afghanistan, under
the supervision of US Special Forces. US airpower bombed Taliban
prisoners-of-war who had revolted against the terms of their CIA
interrogation at the Qala-i-Janghi fortress. Upon finding American
John Walker Lindh wounded but alive in the ruins of the fortress,
US forces left his wounds untreated in an effort to extract confessions
from him.
In breach of the Geneva Conventions, the US government admits
to holding 10 children prisoner at Bagram air base.
Bagram is notorious as a destination for CIA-run flights carrying
prisoners to Afghanistan to be tortured. In 2003, US military
officials at Bagram air base told the human rights group Amnesty
International they used forced standing and sleep deprivation
as interrogation techniques, and a 2005 internal US Army report
found that prisoners were shackled to doors and ceilings for long
periods of time, a procedure the Army classified as criminal assault.
Why does the New York Times, the authoritative voice
of what passes for American liberalism, present the opening of
a prison in such an environment as a triumph of humanitarianism?
The nauseating superposition of humanitarian language over
the machinery of torture and repression reflects an ultimately
irresolvable contradiction of liberalism: its striving to reconcile
the masses democratic instincts with the strategic interests
of the ruling class. This contradiction has become particularly
acute as the crisis of the Washingtons war policy in the
Middle East intensifies, especially in the run-up to the US presidential
elections this November.
For the US bourgeoisie, a particularly pressing electoral task
is presenting the liberal Democratic Partyaltogether falselyas
a viable alternative to the Bush administration. The contradiction
between this task and the defense of the US bourgeoisies
dominant world position is, however, increasingly difficult to
hide.
The US ruling elite has essential strategic interests in Afghanistan.
Afghanistan and neighboring regions are a potential nexus of oil
pipelines and trade routes connecting Iran and the broader Middle
East to Central Asia, Russia, China, and the Indian subcontinent.
For US capitalism, crucial questions of influence over commercial
and geopolitical rivals are to be decided by maintaining a firm
grip over the regionor, at least, by preventing any competitor
from doing so.
This glowing account of a new US prison emerges amid definite
signs of plans to shift US strategy, towards growing emphasis
on the war in Afghanistan. The Times itself noted that
US officials were foreseeing waves of new prisoners from
the escalating fight against Al Qaeda and the Taliban. This
comes on the heels of the May 3 announcement of the deployment
of at least 7,000 more US troops to Afghanistan, bringing US troop
strength there over 40,000. A UN report released last week also
revealed that CIA death squads are now active in Afghanistan.
The Bush administrations strategy of focusing on Iraq
and leaving Afghanistan to smaller US detachments augmented by
forces provided by NATO allies has repeatedly been put in question.
One of the more prominent voices to do so was the New York
Times, which in August of 2007 wrote an editorial titled The
Good War, Still to be Won, arguing for an escalation of
the war in Afghanistan.
NATO officials are particularly concerned that the new Pakistani
government, hesitant to risk an all-out confrontation with pro-Taliban
militants in its fractious border areas with Afghanistan, is not
taking on anti-US fighters who attack NATO forces and then find
refuge in Pakistan. For instance, on May 15 NATO spokesman James
Appathurai told reporters in Brussels that deals being struck
between the Pakistani government and extremist groups in the tribal
areas may be allowing them, the extremists, to have safe havens,
rest, reconstitute and then move across the border.
It is significant that these reports are emerging as it seems
increasingly likely the Democratic Party will nominate as its
2008 presidential candidate Senator Barack Obama, who has been
a long-time and vocal advocate of a harder line on Pakistan and
Afghanistan.
During his keynote address at the 2004 Democratic Presidential
Convention, Obama floated the idea of missile strikes against
Pakistan. In January 2007, Obama proposed the Iraq War De-Escalation
Act of 2007 in Congress, a bill which would have reversed the
Iraq troop surge and redeployed US troops to Afghanistan and other
locations. In his August 1, 2007 foreign policy speech, Obama
proposed getting out of Iraq and on to the right battlefield
in Afghanistan and Pakistan.
More recently, at a May 11 campaign meeting in Cape Girardeau,
Missouri, Obama complained that We dont have enough
capacity right now to deal with the war in Afghanistan.
See Also:
CIA death squads killing with "impunity"
in Afghanistan
[19 May 2008]
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