Cross-Cultural Understanding
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			Who is the enemy? By Eric Walberg ccun.org, May 26, 2008 
			Twenty years ago this week the 
			Soviet Union began its withdrawal from Afghanistan, eight and a half 
			years after it was invited by the desperate People’s Democratic 
			Party of Afghanistan (PDPA), which had degenerated into intra-party 
			squabbling and was beset by Islamic rebels massively financed by the 
			United States. The straw that broke the Soviets’ back was when the 
 
			Now, after eight years of US/NATO 
			occupation, the parallels — and differences — between the two 
			occupations are many and stark, as confirmed by the current Russian 
			ambassador to 
 
			Not only that, but the country’s new 
			patrons are making lots of new mistakes as well. “NATO soldiers and 
			officers alienate themselves from Afghans — they are not in touch in 
			an everyday manner. They communicate with them from the barrels of 
			guns in their bullet-proof Humvees.” As a career diplomat who was 
			posted to 
 
			Kabulov explains that things are 
			even harder now than they were in the 1980s. “The structures of 
			government then were very much there and our task was very much to 
			support and to win loyalty — if you will, hearts and minds — but we 
			had a working administration.” These are long gone, though, 
			ironically, in  
			At least the Soviets were invited in, if only by one 
			faction — Parcham, by far the most benign one — of the ruling PDPA. 
			The US merely issued an ultimatum to the ruling Taliban to hand over 
			their own erstwhile ally, Osama bin Laden, knowing full well no 
			devout Muslim would turn a guest over to the enemy. The offer of the 
			Taliban to send him to a neutral third country until proof of his 
			masterminding of 9/11 was made was dismissed out of hand, and US and 
			eventually NATO forces proceeded to illegally invade and depose the 
			legitimate government, launching a merciless air attack, using 
			depleted uranium “bunker busting” bombs, that makes the horrors of 
			Vietnam and the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan pale in comparison. 
			Another difference is that the 
 
			Yet another contrast is that while the Soviets were 
			providing massive aid, effectively dragging Afghanistan into the 
			20th century with universal education, equal rights for women, safe 
			drinking water — the standard communist fare — the US/NATO strategy 
			has been mostly to fight the remnants of the Taliban, with aid well 
			down the list. As for the quality of the aid, while Soviet teachers 
			and engineers earned not much more than locals, and were generally 
			selected for their idealism, Western-backed aid is channelled almost 
			exclusively through foreign NGOs, with Western professionals earning 
			the bulk of the money and living in conditions that locals can only 
			dream of, causing well-earned resentment.  
			It should be noted that from the 
			Soviet withdrawal in 1989 till the  
			Given the huge advantages over the 
			Soviet experience, and given the possibility to learn from Soviet 
			mistakes, there really is no excuse for the current tragedy 
			unfolding with no end in sight. But then, in carrying out their 
			invasion of 
 
			Is it possible the chaos and murder 
			is intentional? While the Taliban were no sweethearts, they did 
			completely disarm the nation and wipe out the production of opium. 
			Similarly, while Saddam Hussein would hardly be one’s favourite 
			uncle, he presided over a stable welfare state where its many ethnic 
			groups were at least not blowing each other up. In contrast, the 
 
			All in keeping with Israeli plans first published in 
			1982 as “A Strategy for Israel”, a plan to ensure its “security” 
			(read: expansion) with the Middle East a patchwork of small 
			ethnically-based states which it could keep in order.  
			One brilliant innovation by the 
 
			A Western official close to the investigation said 
			the secret units are known as Campaign Forces, from the time when 
			American Special Forces and CIA spies recruited Afghan troops to 
			help overthrow the Taliban during the US-led invasion in 2001. “The 
			brightest, smartest guys in these militias were kept on,” the 
			official said. “They were trained and rearmed and they are still 
			being used. The level of complacency in response to these killings 
			is staggeringly high,” he said.  
			Yet another innovation — the most frightening of all 
			— is the role of the US in allowing, perhaps even facilitating, the 
			huge increase in opium production, which, as already mentioned, was 
			wiped out by the Taliban, which will be discussed in Part II. 
			It is very hard to exaggerate the 
			extent of the abyss that is 
 
 
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