Death-By-Ally
by
Tom Engelhardt
TomDispatch
Recently
by Tom Engelhardt: The
National Security Complex and You
Mission
Failure: Afghanistan
A Message Written in Blood That No One Wants to Hear
Imagine for
a moment that almost once a week for the last six months somebody
somewhere in this country had burst, well-armed, into a movie theater
showing a superhero film and fired into the audience. That would
get your attention, wouldn't it? James Holmes times 21? It
would dominate the news. We would certainly be consulting
experts, trying to make sense of the pattern, groping for explanations.
And what if the same thing had also happened almost once every two
weeks in 2011? Imagine the shock, imagine the reaction here.
Well, the equivalent
has happened in Afghanistan (minus, of course, the superhero
movies). It even has a name: green-on-blue violence. In 2012
and twice last week Afghan soldiers, policemen, or
security guards, largely in units being trained or mentored by the
U.S. or its NATO allies, have turned their guns on those mentors,
the people who are funding, supporting, and teaching them, and pulled
the trigger.
It's already
happened at least 21
times in this half-year, resulting in 30 American and European
deaths, a 50%
jump from 2011, when similar acts occurred at least 21
times with 35 coalition deaths. (The "at least" is
there because, in May, the Associated Press reported
that, while U.S. and NATO spokespeople were releasing the news of
deaths from such acts, green-on-blue incidents that resulted in
no fatalities, even if there were wounded, were sometimes not reported
at all.)
Take July.
There have already been at least four such attacks. The first,
on July 1st, reportedly involved a member of the Afghan National
Civil Order Police, a specially trained outfit, shooting
down three British soldiers at a checkpoint in Helmand Province,
deep in the Taliban heartland of the country. The
shooter was captured. Two days later, a man in "an Afghan army
uniform" turned
his machine gun on American troops just outside a NATO base
in Wardak Province, east of the Afghan capital Kabul, wounding five
before fleeing. (In initial reports, the shooter in all such
incidents is invariably described as a man "in an Army/police
uniform" as if he might be a Taliban infiltrator, and he almost
invariably turns out to be an actual Afghan policeman or soldier.)
Then, on July
22nd, a security
guard gunned
down three police trainers two former U.S. Customs and
Border Protection agents and a former United Kingdom Revenue and
Customs Officer (while another retired Border Protection agent and
an Afghan interpreter were wounded). This happened at a police training
facility near Herat in Afghanistan's generally peaceful northwest
near the Iranian border. The next day, a soldier on a military
base in Faryab Province in the north of the country turned
his gun on a group of American soldiers also evidently working
as police trainers, wounding two of them before being killed by
return fire.
Note that these
July attacks were geographically diverse: one in the Taliban south,
one east of the capital in an area that has seen a rise in Taliban
attacks, and two in areas that aren't normally considered insurgent
hotbeds. Similar attacks have been going for years, a number
of them far more high profile, including the deaths of an American
lieutenant colonel and major, each shot
in the back of the head inside the heavily guarded Afghan Interior
Ministry in Kabul; the killing
of four French soldiers (and the wounding of 16) by an Afghan non-commissioned
officer after an argument; the first killing
of an American special forces operative by a U.S.-trained Afghan
commando during a joint night raid; an elaborate
attack organized by two Afghan soldiers and a civilian teacher
at a joint outpost that killed two Americans, wounded two more,
and disabled an armored vehicle; and the 2011 shooting
of nine trainers (eight American officers and a contractor) in a
restricted section of Kabul International Airport by an Afghan air
force pilot.
In 2007-2008,
there were only four
green-on-blue attacks, resulting in four deaths. When they
started multiplying in 2010, the initial impulse of coalition spokespeople
was to blame them on Taliban infiltrators (and the Taliban did take
credit for most of them). Now, U.S. or NATO spokespeople tend
to dismiss such violence as individual pique or the result of some
personal grievance
against coalition forces rather than Taliban affiliation.
While reaffirming the coalition mission of training a vast security
force for the country, they prefer to present each case as if it
were a local oddity with little relation to any of the others
"an isolated
incident [that] has its own underlying circumstances and motives."
(Privately, the U.S. military is undoubtedly far
more worried.)
In fact, there
is a striking pattern at work that should be front-page news here.
Green-on-blue attacks have been countrywide, in areas of militant
insurgency and not; they continue to escalate, and (as far as we
can tell) are almost always committed by actual members of the Afghan
military or police who have experienced the American project in
their country in a particularly up-close and personal way.
In addition,
these attacks are, again as far as anyone can tell, in no way coordinated.
They are individual or small group acts, in some cases clearly after
significant thought and calculation, in others just as clearly impulsive.
Nonetheless, they do seem to represent a kind of collective vote,
not by ballot obviously, nor as in Lenin's
phrase about Russia's deserting peasant soldiers in World War
I with their feet, but with guns.
The number
of these events is, after all, startling, given that an Afghan who
turns his weapon on well-armed American or European allies is likely
to die. A small number of shooters have escaped and a few
have been captured alive (including one recently
sentenced to death in an Afghan court), but most are shot down.
In a situation where foreign advisors and troops are now distinctly
on guard and on edge and in some cases are shadowed by armed
compatriots ("guardian
angels") whose job it is to protect them from such events
these are essentially suicidal acts.
So it's reasonable
to assume that, for every Afghan who acts on such a violent impulse,
there must be a far larger pool of fellow members of the security
forces the coalition is building who have similar feelings, but
don't act on them (or simply vote with their feet, like the 24,590
soldiers who deserted
in the first six months of 2011 alone). Unlike James Holmes's
rampage in Aurora, such acts, extreme as they may be, are not in
the usual sense mad ones. And scattered and disparate as they
may be, they have a distinctly unitary feel to them. They
seem, that is, like a single repetitive act being committed, as
if by plan and program, across the length and breadth of the country
or perhaps a primal Afghan scream of rejection of the American
and NATO presence from an armed people who have known little but
fighting, bloodshed, and destruction for more than three decades.
If the significance
of green-on-blue violence hasn't quite sunk in yet here, consider
this: such acts in such numbers are historically unprecedented.
No example comes to mind of a colonial power, neocolonial power,
or modern superpower fighting a war with "native" allies
whose forces repeatedly find the weapons they have supplied turned
on them. There is nothing in our historical record faintly
comparable not in the eighteenth and nineteenth century Indian
wars, the Philippine Insurrection at the turn of the last century,
Korea in the early 1950s, Vietnam in the 1960s and early 1970s,
or Iraq in this century. (In Vietnam, the only somewhat analogous
set of events involved U.S. soldiers, not their South Vietnamese
counterparts, repeatedly turning their weapons on their own officers
in acts that, like "green-on-blue" violence, got a label
all their own: "fragging.")
Perhaps the
sole historical example that comes close might be the Indian
Rebellion of 1857. That, however, was a full-scale revolt,
not a series of unconnected, ever escalating individual acts.
Whatever the
singular bitterness or complaint behind any specific attack, a cumulative
message clearly lurks in them that the U.S. military and Washington
would undoubtedly prefer not to hear, and that reporters, even when
they are toting up the numbers, prefer not to consider too deeply.
To do so would be to acknowledge the full-scale failure of the ongoing
American mission in Afghanistan. After all, what could be
more devastating 12 years after the invasion of that country than
having such attacks come not from the enemies the U.S. is officially
fighting, but from the Afghans closest to us, the ones we have been
training at a cost of nearly $50
billion to take over the country as U.S. combat troops drawdown?
What
we're seeing in the most violent form imaginable is a sweeping message
from our Afghan allies, the very security forces Washington plans
to continue bolstering up long after the 2014 drawdown date for
U.S. "combat forces" passes. To the extent that
bullets can be translated into words, that message, uncompromising
and bloody-minded, would be something like: your mission's failed,
get out or die.
If the Aurora
shootings got all the attention here last week, far more Americans
are dying at the hands of Afghan allies than died in James Holmes's
hail of gunfire. And yet the message from the more deadly
of those rampages is barely in the news and few here are paying
attention.
In reality,
the American mission in Afghanistan failed years ago. It's
as if we refused to notice, but the Afghans we were training did.
Now, they are sending a message that couldn't be blunter or grimmer
from that endlessly war-torn land. Not to listen is, in fact,
to condemn more Americans to death-by-ally.
This article
originally appeared at TomDispatch.com.
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August
1, 2012
Tom
Engelhardt [send him mail]
co-founder
of 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), an alternative history of the mad Bush years. He is also
the author of The
American Way of War: How Bush’s Wars Became Obama’s and The
United States of Fear. His latest book is Terminator
Planet: The First History of Drone Warfare, 2001-2050 (with
Nick Turse).
Copyright
© 2012 Tom Engelhardt
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