In a 1998 interview
with Le Nouvel Observateur, Zbigniew Brzezinski, former national
security adviser to President Jimmy Carter, spoke
proudly of how, in July 1979, he had "signed the first directive
for secret aid to the opponents of the pro-Soviet regime in Kabul"
and so helped draw a Russian interventionary force into Afghanistan.
"On the day that the Soviets officially crossed the border," Brzezinski
added, "I wrote to President Carter, saying, in essence: 'We now
have the opportunity of giving to the USSR its Vietnam War.'" And
so they did with the help of the CIA, Saudi money, the Pakistani
intelligence services, and an influx of Arab jihadis, including
Osama bin Laden. In fact, their Afghan War would prove far more
disastrous for the Soviet Union than defeat in Vietnam had been
for the United States. By the time the Soviets withdrew their last
troops in February 1989, the economy of the Cold War's weaker superpower
was tottering on the brink. Less than three years later, the Soviet
Union itself was no more, even as Washington, at first unbelieving,
then celebratory, declared eternal victory.
It is far
clearer now, as American economic power visibly
crumbles, that rather than a victor and a vanquished there were
two great power losers in the Cold War. The weaker, the Soviet Union,
simply imploded first, while the U.S., enwreathed in a rhetoric
of triumphalism and self-congratulation, was far more slowly making
its way toward the exit. Seldom mentioned here, however, is a grotesque
irony: as the U.S. seems to be experiencing the beginning stages
of its imperial implosion, it is also as the Soviet Union
was in the 1980s mired in a war without end in Afghanistan
against a ragtag army of Afghan insurgents supported by foreign
jihadist volunteers.
One difference,
of course: The Soviets were, in part, brought to the edge of bankruptcy
and collapse by a war supported to the hilt, and to the tune of
billions of dollars as well as massive infusions of weaponry, by
the other superpower. The U.S. is heading for its analogous moment
without an enemy superpower in sight. If anything, a single man
Osama bin Laden might be said to have filled the former
superpower role, which, were the results less grim, would be little
short of farcical. That this has come to pass is, of course, partly
the result of the Bush administration's many imperial blunders,
including its invasion of Iraq and its urge to garrison the oil
lands of the planet from the Middle East to Central Asia. Like all
historical analogies, the Afghan one may be less than exact, but
it does stare us in the face and, eerie as it is, it's hard to account
for its absence from discussion here in the U.S.
If you want
to grasp just how deeply the United States is now entangled in its
own catastrophic Afghan War, you need only read the following report.
For obvious reasons, it's rare for TomDispatch to have on-the-spot
reporting. So consider this an exceptional exception. Anand Gopal
is a superb young journalist who writes regularly for the Christian
Science Monitor. Here, he considers the failed U.S. surge in
Afghanistan yes, there was one back in 2007 as well
as the costs for Afghan
civilians and the increasingly powerful Taliban insurgency that
has emerged from it. His report could not be more vivid or more
sobering for a country readying itself, under a new president, to
pour yet more troops into Afghanistan. ~ Tom
Afghanistan
under the Bombs
By Anand
Gopal
A bit past
midnight on a balmy night in late August, Hedayatullah awoke to
a deafening blast. He stumbled out of bed and heard angry voices
drawing closer. Suddenly, his bedroom doors banged open and dozens
of silhouetted figures burst in, some shouting in a strange language.
The intruders
blindfolded Hedayatullah and, screaming with fury, forced him
to the ground. An Afghan voice told him not to move or speak,
or he would be killed. He listened for sounds from the next room,
where his brother Noorullah slept with his family. He could hear
his nephew, eight months old, crying hysterically. Then came the
sound of an automatic rifle, after which his nephew fell silent.
The rest
of the family 18 people in all, including aunts, uncles,
and cousins was herded outside into the darkness. The Afghan
voice explained to Hedayatullah's terrified mother, "We are the
Afghan National Army, here to accompany the American military.
The Americans have killed one of your sons and his two children.
They also shot his wife and they're taking her to the hospital."
"Why?" Hedayatullah's
mother stammered.
"There is
no why," the soldier replied. When she heard this, she started
screaming, slamming her fists into her chest in anguish. The Afghan
soldiers left her and loaded Hedayatullah and his cousin into
the back of a military van, after which they drove off with an
American convoy into the black of night.
The next
day, the Afghan forces released Hedayatullah and his cousin, calling
the whole raid a mistake. However, Noorullah's wife, months pregnant,
never came home: She died on the way to the hospital.
Surging
in Afghanistan
When, decades
from now, historians compile the record of this Afghan war, they
will date the Afghan version of the surge the now trendy
injection of large numbers of troops to resuscitate a flagging
war effort to sometime in early 2007. Then, a growing insurgency
was causing visible problems for U.S. and NATO forces in certain
pockets in the southern parts of the country, long a Taliban stronghold.
In response, military planners dramatically beefed up the international
presence, raising the number of troops over the following 18 months
by 20,000, a 45% jump.
During this
period, however, the violence also jumped by 50%. This
shouldn't be surprising. More troops meant more targets for Taliban
fighters and suicide bombers. In response, the international forces
retaliated with massive aerial bombing campaigns and large-scale
house raids. The number of civilians killed in the process skyrocketed.
In the fifteen months of this surge, more civilians have been
killed than in the previous four years combined.
During the
same period, the country descended into a state of utter dereliction
no jobs, very little reconstruction, and ever less security.
In turn, the rising civilian death toll and the decaying economy
proved a profitable recipe for the Taliban, who recruited significant
numbers of new fighters. They also won the sympathy of Afghans
who saw them as the lesser of two evils. Once confined to the
deep Afghan south, today the insurgents operate openly right at
the doorstep of Kabul, the capital.
This last
surge, little noted by the media, failed miserably, but Washington
is now planning another one, even as Afghanistan slips away. More
boots on the ground, though, will do little to address the real
causes of this country's unfolding tragedy.
Revenge
and the Taliban
One day,
as Zubair was walking home, he noticed that the carpet factory
near his house in the southern province of Ghazni was silent.
That's strange, he thought, because he could usually hear the
din of spinning looms as he approached. As he rounded the corner,
he saw a crowd of people, villagers and factory workers, gathered
around his destroyed house. An American bomb had flattened it
into a pancake of cement blocks and pulverized bricks. He ran
toward the scene. It was only when he shoved his way through the
crowd and up to the wreckage that he actually saw it his
mother's severed head lying amid mangled furniture.
He didn't
scream. Instead, the sight induced a sort of catatonia; he picked
up the head, cradled it in his arms, and started walking aimlessly.
He carried on like this for days, until tribal elders pried the
head from his hands and convinced him to deal with his loss more
constructively. He decided he would get revenge by becoming a
suicide bomber and inflicting a loss on some American family as
painful as the one he had just suffered.
When one
decides to become a suicide bomber, it is pretty easy to find
the Taliban. In Zubair's case he just asked a relative to direct
him to the nearest Talib; every village in the country's south
and east has at least a few. He found them and he trained
yes, suicide bombing requires training for some time and
then he was fitted with the latest model suicide vest. One morning,
he made his way, as directed, towards an office building where
Americans advisors were training their Afghan counterparts, but
before he could detonate his vest, a pair of sharp-eyed intelligence
officers spotted him and wrestled him to the ground. Zubair now
spends his days in an Afghan prison.
A poll of
42 Taliban fighters by the Canadian Globe and Mail newspaper
earlier this year revealed that 12 had seen family members killed
in air strikes, and six joined the insurgency after such attacks.
Far more who don't join offer their support.
Under
the Bombs
In the muddied
outskirts of Kabul, an impromptu neighborhood has been sprouting,
full of civilians fleeing the regular Allied aerial bombardments
in the Afghan countryside. Sherafadeen Sadozay, a poor farmer
from the south, spoke for many there when he told me that he had
once had no opinion of the United States. Then, one day, a payload
from an American sortie split his house in two, eviscerating his
wife and three children. Now, he says, he'd rather have the Taliban
back in power than nervously eye the skies every day.
Even when
the bombs don't fall, it's quite dangerous to be an Afghan. Journalist
Jawed Ahmad was on assignment for Canadian Television in the southern
city of Kandahar when American troops stopped him. In his possession,
they found contact numbers to the cell phones of various Taliban
fighters something every good journalist in the country
has and threw him into prison, not to be heard from for
almost a year. During interrogation, Ahmad says that American
jailors kicked him, smashed his head into a table, and at one
point prevented him from sleeping for nine days. They kept him
standing on a snowy runway for six hours without shoes. Twice
he fainted and twice the soldiers forced him to stand up again.
After 11 months of detention, military authorities gave him a
letter stating that he was not a threat to the U.S. and released
him.
Starving
in Kabul
If you're
walking his street, there isn't a single day when you won't see
Zayainullah. For as long as he can remember, the 11-year-old has
perched on the sidewalk at one of Kabul's busiest intersections.
Zayainullah has only one arm; the Taliban blew the other one away
when he was a child. He uses this arm to beg for handouts, quietly
in the mornings, more desperately as the day goes on. Both his parents
are dead so he lives with his aunt, a widow. Given the mores of
modern-day Afghanistan, she can't work because a woman needs a man's
sanction to leave the house. So she puts young Zayainullah on the
street as her sole breadwinner. If he comes home empty-handed she
beats him, sometimes until he can no longer move.
He sits
there, shirtless, with a heaving, rounded belly distended
from severe malnutrition as scores of other beggars and
pedestrians stream by him. No one really notices him though, because
poverty has become endemic in this country.
Afghanistan
is now one of the poorest countries on the planet. It takes its
place among desperate, destitute nations like Burkina Faso and
Somalia whenever any international organization bothers to measure.
The official unemployment rate, last calculated in 2005, was 40%
percent. According to recent estimates, it may today reach as
high as 80% in some parts of the country.
Approximately
45% of the population is now unable to purchase enough food to
guarantee bare minimum health levels, according to the Brookings
Institution. This winter, Afghan officials claim that hunger may
kill up to 80% of the population in some northern provinces caught
in a vicious drought. Reports are emerging of parents selling
their children simply to make ends meet. In one district of the
southern province of Ghazni last spring things got so bad that
villagers started eating grass. Locals say that after a harsh
winter and almost no food, they had no choice.
Kabul itself
lies in tatters. Roads have gone unpaved since 2001. Massive craters
from decades of war blot the capital city. Poor Afghans live in
crumbling warrens with no electricity and often without safe drinking
water. Kabul, a city designed for about 800,000 people, now holds
more than four million, mostly squeezed into informal settlements
and squatters' shacks.
Washington
spends about $100 million a day on this war close to $36
billion a year but only five cents of every dollar actually
goes towards aid. From this paltry sum, the Agency Coordinating
Body for Afghan Relief found that "a staggering 40 percent has
returned to donor countries in corporate profits and salaries."
The economy is so underdeveloped that opium production accounts
for more than half of the country's gross domestic product.
What little
money does go for reconstruction is handed over to U.S. multinationals
who then subcontract out to Afghan partners and cut corners every
step of the way. As a result, the U.N. ranks the country as the
fifth least-developed in the world a one-position drop
from 2004.
The government
and coalition forces may not bring jobs to Afghanistan, but the
Taliban does. The insurgents pay for fighters in some cases,
up to $200 a month, a windfall in a country where 42% of the population
earns less than $14 a month. When a textile factory in Kandahar
laid off 2,000 workers in September, most of them joined the Taliban.
And that district in Ghazni where locals were reduced to eating
grass? It is now a Taliban stronghold.
Biking
in Kabul
A spate
of suicide bombings and high-profile attacks in recent years have
turned Kabul into a sort of garrison state, with roadblocks and
checkpoints clogging many of the city's main arteries. The traffic
is, at times, unbearable, so I bought a new motorbike, an Iranian
import that can adroitly weave through traffic. I was puttering
along one day recently when a police commander stopped me.
"That's
a nice bike," he said.
"Thank you,"
I replied.
"Is it new?"
"Yes."
"I'd like
to have it. Get off."
I stared
at him in disbelief, not quite grasping at first that he was deadly
serious. Then I began threatening him, saying I'd call a certain
influential friend if he laid a finger on the bike. That finally
hit home and he stepped back, waving me on.
Journalists
may have influential friends, but ordinary Afghans are usually
not so lucky. Locals tend to fear the neighborhood police as much
as the many criminals who prowl Kabul's streets. The notoriously
corrupt police force is just one face of a government that much
of the population has come to loathe.
Police are
known to rob passengers at checkpoints. Many of the country's
leading members of parliament and cabinet officials sport long,
bloody records of human rights abuses. Rapists and serious criminals
regularly bribe their way out of prison. Warlords and militia
commanders run wild in the north, regularly raping young girls
and snatching the land of villagers with impunity. Earlier this
year newspapers revealed that President Hamid Karzai pardoned
a pair of such militiamen accused of bayonet-raping a young woman.
What Karzai
does hardly matters, though. After all, his government barely
functions. Most of the country is carved up into fiefdoms run
by small-time commanders. A U.S. intelligence report in the spring
of 2008 estimated that the central government then controlled
just 30% of the country, and many say even that is now an optimistic
assessment.
Drive a
few miles outside Kabul and the roads are controlled by bandits,
off-duty cops, or anyone else with a gun and an eye for a quick
buck. The Karzai government's popularity has plummeted to such
levels that, believe it or not, many Afghans in Kabul wax nostalgic
for the days of Dr. Mohammad Najibullah, the country's last Communist
dictator. "That government was cruel and indifferent, but at least
they gave us something," an Afghan friend typically told me. The
Karzai government provides almost no social services, expending
all its efforts just trying to keep itself together.
Shadow
Government
Power abhors
a vacuum, and so, in those areas where central government rule
has crumbled, the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan the Taliban
government is rising in its place. In Wardak, a province
bordering Kabul Province, the Taliban has a stable foothold, complete
with a shadow government of mayors and police chiefs. In Logar,
another of Kabul's neighboring provinces, some "government-controlled"
areas consist of the home of the district head, the NATO installation
down the road and nothing else.
With the
rise of the Taliban in these areas comes their notorious brand
of justice. Shadow courts now dispense Taliban-style draconian
judgments and punishments in many districts and ever more locals
are turning to them to settle disputes, either out of fear or
because they are far more efficient than the corrupt government
courts. The Taliban recently chopped off the ears of a schoolteacher
in Zabul province for working for the government. They gunned
down a popular drummer in Ghazni simply for playing music in public.
Even the infamous public executions are back. The Taliban recently
invited journalists to watch the execution of a pair of women
on prostitution charges.
The Taliban
are as uninterested in social services and human rights as the
Karzai government or the international forces, but they know how
to turn a world of poverty, insecurity, and death from laser-guided
missiles to their advantage. This is how the Islamic Emirate spreads,
like so many weeds at first, poking out of areas where the government
has failed. As the central government spins towards irrelevancy,
the whole south and east of Afghanistan is becoming a thicket
of Taliban before our very eyes.
A War
to be Lost
One night
the Taliban raided a police check post near my Kabul home, killing
three policemen. The following morning, when a police contingent
arrived on the scene to investigate, a bomb that the rebels had
cleverly hidden at the site exploded and killed two more of them.
I arrived shortly afterwards to find pieces of charred flesh littering
the ground and a mangled, burnt out police van sitting overturned
on a pile of rubble.
The
raid didn't make much news at the time, but it was actually the
deepest the insurgents had penetrated the capital since they were
overthrown seven years ago. They have dispatched many individual
suicide bombers into the capital and rocketed it as well from time
to time, but never had they marched in as an attacking force on
foot. When I told an Afghan colleague that I couldn't believe the
Taliban were coming into Kabul this way, he responded: "Coming?
They've been here. They were just waiting for the government and
the U.S. to fail."
Failure
is a notion now preoccupying the Western leadership of this war,
which is why they are scrambling for yet another "surge" solution.
Of course,
the Taliban won't be capturing Kabul anytime soon; the international
forces are much too powerful to topple militarily. But the Americans
can't defeat the Taliban either; the guerrillas are too deeply rooted
in a country scarred by no jobs, no security, and no hope. The result
is a war of attrition, with the Americans planning to pour yet more
fuel on the flames by throwing in more soldiers next year.
This is a
war to be won by constructing roads, creating jobs, cleaning up
the government, and giving Afghans something they've had preciously
little of in the last 30 years: hope. However, hope is fading fast
here, and that's a fact Washington can ill afford to ignore; for
once the Afghans lose all hope, the Americans will have lost this
war.
October
10, 2008
Tom
Engelhardt [send him mail]
who
runs the Nation Institute's TomDispatch.com, is the co-founder of
the American Empire
Project. His book, The
End of Victory Culture, has recently been updated in a newly
issued edition. He edited, and his work appears in, the first best
of TomDispatch book, The
World According to TomDispatch: America in the New Age of Empire
(Verso), which is being published this month. A brief video in
which Engelhardt discusses American mega-bases in Iraq can be viewed
by clicking
here. Anand Gopal writes frequently about Afghanistan,
Pakistan, and the "War on Terror." He is a correspondent for the
Christian Science Monitor, based in Afghanistan. For more of his
information and dispatches from the region, visit anandgopal.com.