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A Response to
Hillary Clinton's Assertion that All Nations Should Play a Part in the
Afghanistan Mission
By John Chuckman
ccun.org, December 27, 2009
Hillary Clinton, in a just-published piece on
the Afghanistan mission (see note at bottom), offers us nothing helpful or
enlightening, only boiler-plate American slogans, the kind of stuff you’d
hear from some provincial Congressman giving a Fourth of July speech in a
place like Muncie, Indiana. Indeed, her use of the
question-begging word “mission” in the title to describe what has been the
pointless conquest and occupation of a people signals the vacuity of the
words that follow. “The violent extremism that threatens the
people and governments of Afghanistan and Pakistan also undermines the
stability of the wider region and threatens the security of our friends,
allies and interests around the world.” No government in
Afghanistan or Pakistan was threatened until the U.S. became involved.
Yes, they are poor regions with much backward fundamentalism, but those
governments knew how to handle the difficulties of their own affairs
before the U.S. bombed and machine-gunned its way in. No matter
what the U.S. does, short of exterminating an entire class of people (for
the Taleban is not an invading guerilla force but a substantial portion of
the population), the fundamentalism is not going to go away in our
lifetimes. It would take decades of very healthy economic growth
to bring these places forward, and so far America’s only contribution has
been to kill tens of thousands of people and destroy a great deal of the
meager physical assets in these places. I would remind Ms. Clinton
that it was only as recently as the 1930s, and into the 1940s, that
families in the American South, likely considering themselves good
Christians all, would attend picnics to watch the lynching of some black
men. I am not exaggerating: such events were common even in Franklin
Roosevelt’s day, and he never spoke out against them, despite prodding
from Eleanor, for fear of losing his political support in the South.
Yet that grotesque horror has come to an end. How did it happen? The
answer is decades of strong economic growth bringing jobs, wealth, and
fresh air to America’s once-fetid South. How much larger is the
problem in a land that lives, to a considerable extent, in the 17th
century? Immensely larger. How is the security of the world
threatened by these people? It’s not and never has been. The very fact
that NATO countries have made such almost laughably small contributions is
the strongest possible evidence that Ms. Clinton is not believed by any of
them. Imagine a genuine world threat in which the many countries
of NATO each sent the troop equivalent of the police force of very
modest-sized cities? They have only indeed sent those owing to
constant American browbeating, cajoling, and, in some cases, threats: the
U.S. colossus can summon a great deal of economic and political force in
getting its way. Which fact brings us to the question of why the
U.S. did not use those great non-lethal powers in Afghanistan after 9/11.
It simply demanded the extradition of people without supplying a
shred of proof to the Afghan government, the Afghan request being the
normal procedure for extradition anywhere. Then the U.S. invaded
while lining up a façade of support from the U.N. and NATO, everyone at
that time being under both pressure from the U.S. and only naturally
feeling sympathy over 9/11 . What was America’s purpose? No person
in the American government today, not Clinton and not even Obama, can give
you a lucid and reasonable answer, because the truth was that there was
nothing lucid or reasonable about the invasion. The purpose was blinding
white-hot rage for revenge. Once the U.S.got there, beyond its
early cheap victory over 17th century people, it did not know what to do,
and it still does not know what to do. Its victory consisted of displacing
the Taleban with warlords of the Northern Alliance, supported by a level
of horrific bombing perhaps not seen since America’s holocaust in Vietnam.
Eight years later, there is no democracy in Afghanistan,
elections being pretty much a sham. The burka is still worn by most of the
women in Afghanistan: after all, many members of the Northern Alliance are
just as backward and vicious as the Taleban. General Dostum, for example,
is a certified mass murderer, a man whose ghastly, brutal excesses were
winked at by Bush and Rumsfeld, if indeed not quietly encouraged.
I heard an interview recently with the only woman elected to the Afghan
legislature - since tossed out by the warlords – who says that nothing
really has changed and, indeed, some things are even worse than they were
under the Taleban. I have heard from other sources that schools
for girls are closed almost as soon as they are opened because no money
flows to pay salaries and because of the threats from local authorities.
The openings of such institutions are often little more than Potemkin
village photo-ops. The Bush people used women’s rights as a propaganda
tool to gain domestic support for their invasion, and, like all good
propaganda, it worked because it was based on truth. The truth is
that Afghanistan is not even a country in the sense that we understand it.
It is a remote, impoverished land of about 30 million where tribes live
hardscrabble lives with almost no economic progress, steeped in
superstitions having the same force they did in 17th century Spain with
its Holy Inquisition. Even its border with Pakistan is artificial, never
properly defined with the same tribes living on both sides. You
simply cannot change these realities, and certainly not with bombs.
The world is full of awful places. They burn brides in India, force child
marriages, and treat young widows who were married to old men in horrible
fashion. The great irony is that the Taleban need never have been
an enemy. No Taleban invaded anyone. No Taleban was involved in 9/11. That
atrocity was committed by a group largely of Saudis. Importantly, they
virtually all held valid American visas and were almost certainly part of
secret CIA training program that failed terribly. By the way, to
this day, there is not one shred of valid evidence that Osama bin Laden
did anything like the U.S. claims he did. Yes, he was a guest of the
Taleban, but then he also was a past CIA operative, something that only
enhanced his status for many in the region. Does that mean the CIA is
responsible? The entire Afghanistan invasion
and occupation is an unqualified disaster. One can only hope that
Obama intends to use the next year or two to come to a reasonable modus
Vivendi with the Taleban and then to withdraw.
________________________________ Note: Ms. Clinton’s piece may be
read at:
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/asia/afghanistan/6722751/Hillary-Clinton-All-nations-must-play-a-part-in-Afghanistan-mission.html
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