Afghanistan: the wrong war at any time
By G. Dunkel
Nov 6, 2008
For months now Afghanistan has been deadlier for U.S. troops than Iraq, even
though there are 32,000 U.S. soldiers in Afghanistan and 160,000 in Iraq.
A total of 1,004 foreign soldiers have been killed in Afghanistan since
2001. Some 625 of the casualties were from the United States. Forty percent of
them occurred in the past two years. (icasualties.org)
A handful of U.S. special forces in coalition with warlords from the north
of the country overthrew the Taliban government in 2001. The Revolutionary
Association of Women in Afghanistan sums up the event this way: “The U.S.
‘war on terrorism’ removed the Taliban regime in October 2001, but
it has not removed religious fundamentalism which is the main cause of all our
miseries. In fact, by reinstalling the warlords in power in Afghanistan, the
U.S. administration is replacing one fundamentalist regime with another.”
(rawa.org)
Currently NATO supplies the troops for the UN-mandated International
Security Assistance Force. About 18,000 U.S. troops operate under ISAF
control.
Most of the casualties from violence in Afghanistan are civilians. A very
rough and incomplete count from January 2008 by the Afghanistan Independent
Human Rights Commission counted 900 civilian deaths, many of them from attacks
on wedding parties and funerals or children at play. An estimate from the
Xinhua News Agency gives civilian deaths as 1,415. (Sept. 28)
The AIHRC, which was set up by a UN General Assembly mandate and is funded
from a levy on donations flowing through the UN, asserts that 98 percent of
civilian casualties caused by coalition forces in Afghanistan are
“intentional.”
The head of the AIHRC, Lal Gul, said in a Sept. 2 report, “The actions
of the coalition forces, especially the American forces, are not only against
the human rights laws, but are considered war crimes.”
In addition to the deaths caused by the violence raging throughout the
country, Afghanistan is facing the threat of famine this winter due to three
years of failed crops. The Afghan Ministry of Agriculture, Irrigation and
Livestock estimates that the country needs two million tons of basic
food–wheat, flour and rice–in the next six months to feed people in
isolated areas.
Even if the UN’s Food and Agriculture Organization and other donor
organizations can get tons of food to Afghanistan’s major cities, they
will encounter extreme problems with moving it to the isolated communities
where most of the country’s poor live.
Not only have 40 years of war destroyed Afghanistan’s roads, but the
Afghan resistance attacks supply lines to keep materiel from reaching the U.S.
and NATO outposts that are far from the capital. These two factors have driven
up the cost of moving a truckload of food or goods from Kabul to Khandahar, the
two largest cities in Afghanistan, from $1,800 in the spring to almost 10 times
as much currently. The price increase implies a large increase in risk to the
truckers. (Der Spiegel, Oct. 17)
According to Asian Times Pakistan bureau head Syed Saleem Shahzad, the
Taliban have such accurate intelligence on U.S./NATO shipments to Afghanistan
through the Pakistani port of Karachi that the ISAF made a deal to move
nonmilitary cargo through Russia. (Le Monde Diplomatique, Oct. 2008)
Even though foreign donors–mainly the U.S. and its imperialist
European allies like Britain, Germany and France–have supplied
Afghanistan with $35 billion in “aid” since 2001, around 20 million
people out of a population of 26 million are living under the poverty line
based on official statistics. (BBC, Oct. 17)
According to the FAO, being poor in Afghanistan means living on less than
two U.S. dollars a day. Adult literacy is only 29 percent. In some regions,
less than one percent of the population is literate. One in five children dies
before the age of five.
While the living standards of the Afghan people as a whole are deteriorating
rapidly as the war intensifies between the client government of Hamid Karzai,
propped up by ISAF and the U.S., and its opposition, led by the Taliban, the
Kabul government is also attacking the conditions of women.
“We have the same ideas as the Taliban,” says parliamentarian
Qazi Naseer Ahmad. “We want sharia [Islamic] law in our country. Women
must ask permission from their husbands before they leave the home, and they
must not wear clothes that are against Islam.” (Christian Science
Monitor, April 21)
The Monitor also wrote that some members of parliament proposed legislation
in April that would ban T-shirts, loud music, women and men mingling in public,
billiards, video games, playing with pigeons and kites, and more. This proposal
would reinstate the regulations from the Taliban era that the U.S. corporate
media publicized in order to justify removing the Taliban with the 2001
invasion.
Gen. David Petraeus took the helm at Central Command Oct. 31, a step which
puts him in charge of the U.S. military in both Iraq and Afghanistan. In Iraq
he was the architect of the surge. He is expected to promote a similar
“surge” in Afghanistan, with a twist that underlines the weak U.S.
position in that country.
Petraeus is open to negotiations with the “moderate” elements of
the Taliban. He recognizes that the U.S. and its allies can’t win
militarily.
The colonial occupation of Afghanistan by the United States and its
imperialist allies has been a disaster for the Afghan people. Progressives
outside Afghanistan must demand an end to the entire occupation and not allow
an increase of U.S. and NATO troops, even one that accompanies
negotiations.