|
America’s Longest War Gets Worse
by
Eric Margolis
by Eric Margolis
Recently
by Eric Margolis: Obama,
You’re No Ike
After nine
years of war in Afghanistan, costing over $100 billion in taxpayer
money and 700 American lives, the full truth about this murky conflict
remains elusive.
The government
and media have colluded to paint the picture of a noble, patriotic,
heroic, flag-waving American crusade in Afghanistan that is, alas,
very far from reality. As the 19th century cynic Ambrose
Bierce pointedly observed of patriots – "the dupe of statesmen;
the tool of conquerors."
And now we
are being told by senior administration officials that al-Qaida’s
new base and center of activity is…wait for it…in Yemen!
If that’s the
case, why are 150,000 US and dragooned NATO troops still in Afghanistan?
CIA chief Leon Panetta recently admitted there were no more than
50 al-Qaida personnel in Afghanistan.
What, then,
are American and NATO troops doing there? The oil and gas of the
nearby Caspian Basin and a desire to exclude China from the resource-rich
region seems a likely answer.
Three interesting
reports about Afghanistan emerged in Washington last week.
First, a political
whitewash issued by the Obama White House claiming the war was going
well and some US troops might be withdrawn next year. This ‘don’t
worry be happy’ summary was trumpeted by the pro-war New York
Times, Wall Street Journal, and other members of the
government-friendly US media.
US generals
spoke of "progress" in Afghanistan, whatever that means,
as US forces conducted a brutal campaign around Kandahar to crush
resistance to the occupation and punish communities that supported
Taliban.
Second, the
Red Cross issued a grim report showing that Afghans were suffering
widespread malnutrition and serious health problems after nearly
a decade of Western occupation. So much for US-led nation-building.
Third, there
were leaks about a new National Intelligence Estimate (NIE), the
combined findings of all 16 US intelligence agencies. This key intelligence
report is explosive and may not be fully revealed.
The NIE reportedly
asserts that the Afghan War, now costing over $13 billion monthly,
is at best stalemated; at worse, Western occupation forces are on
the defensive and their vulnerable supply lines increasingly threatened.
Taliban is expanding its sphere of control, particularly in northern
Afghanistan.
Afghan president
Hamid Karzai, who was installed into power by CIA, put it bluntly
last year, saying the US-led war was "ineffective apart from
causing civilian casualties."
The new NIE
may also restate a 2007 report that found Iran had no nuclear weapons
program. The pro-war party in Washington is desperately trying to
prevent its release or get the report altered.
Frustrated
American generals and politicians, facing a failing war and the
prospect of ruined careers, are blaming Pakistan for the war they
cannot win.
There is not
an iota of concern in Washington for Pakistan’s national interests,
well-being, sovereignty, or the explosive problems in its Pashtun
and Baluchi tribal regions. Washington wants Pakistan to follow
orders, pure and simple. That’s why the US is paying Islamabad $2
billion per annum. Sepoys of the Raj are supposed to obey.
There seems
almost no understanding in Washington that the US put a gun to Pakistan’s
head in 2001 and has since been forcing it to follow policies inimical
to Pakistan’s national interest and popular will.
It’s amusing
watching Washington blast poor old Hamid Karzai in Kabul for corruption
while the US is furiously bribing many top officials and generals
in Pakistan and Afghanistan. Not to mention US collaboration with
Afghanistan’s top heroin kingpins and communist war criminals. Pretty
sordid stuff that will one day come out and cause a furor, just
as CIA’s involvement in the Laotian and Central American drug trade
did.
Last week came
news that US air, land, and mercenary forces would penetrate ever
deeper into Pakistan. WikiLeaks show that Pakistan’s feeble, mendacious,
US-sustained government is quietly backing deeper US military involvement
and targeted killings of Pakistanis.
The Pentagon
is gripped by the misconception that "safe havens" in
Pakistan are fueling resistance to western occupation. During the
Vietnam War, the Pentagon was similarly convinced that eradicating
communist safe havens in Cambodia and Laos were the key to victory.
They were not. Invading them spread the war while weakening the
US military position.
The so-called
Pakistani safe havens are really all part of Pashtun tribal homelands
that were sundered by the British imperialists in the 19th
Century. Pashtun don’t recognize today’s Afghan-Pakistan artificial
border. Taliban is not an invading army; it is mostly composed of
local farmers and herdsmen who straddle the border.
Most Americans
know less than nothing about Afghanistan or South Asia and have
absolutely no comprehension of its complexities, size, or politics.
The few that do, like experts in the State Department and CIA, are
not listened to.
CIA, whose
role is to supply the president with unbiased information, has become
deeply politicized and biased. Thank President Ronald Reagan for
this. The yes-men he installed at CIA told him and subsequent presidents
what they wanted to hear.
This process
culminated during the Bush administration when the CIA’s sycophantic
Director, George Tenet, validated all the lies about Iraq to please
the president and vice president – culminating in Tenet’s shameful
‘slam-dunk’ assurances that Iraq had weapons of mass destruction.
Today, CIA
has become an active participant in the Afghan War, with its own
little army of mercenaries and renegades, and an air force of Predator
and Reaper drones.
The over-militarization
of US foreign policy continues. What next? Will the Department of
Agriculture get its own little army and air force? The State Department
is already edging into a combat role in Iraq.
CIA’s reporting
on the war has become seriously tainted by institutional bias and
career concerns.
Wars are wonderful
for career advancement. But you can’t fight a war and remain objective.
As a result, Obama is getting a lot of bad information from people
with axes to grind. He certainly is not listening to the people
who know.
President Obama
declared last week that the US would continue fighting al-Qaida
in Afghanistan. He is clearly not telling Americans the truth.
Instead, we
got a ludicrous scare campaign from the Obama administration about
nuclear threats to US cities that was as dishonest and shameless
as the mushroom cloud alarms of Condoleezza Rice. President Obama’s
advisors on Afghanistan should be hiding in their cellars, not us.
The
war’s brutality and destruction are growing. US forces around Kandahar
are blowing up or bulldozing houses, assassinating suspected Taliban
sympathizers and using mass reprisals against the civilian population.
Death squads are hard at work murdering those suspected of backing
Taliban and opposing western occupation.
Similar "pacification"
tactics were used to break the resistance of the Iraqi city of Fallujah,
a third of which was razed by US Marines. The Soviets employed similar
tactics during their ten-year occupation of Afghanistan.
The same tactics
were developed by Israel during its occupation of the West Bank,
including giant security walls chopping up the landscape, blowing
up houses, and night raids against suspects.
Meanwhile,
the Pentagon is in something of a panic over America’s longest war.
How can a bunch of lightly-armed mountain tribesmen in turbans fighting
only part-time battle the world’s most powerful armed forces to
a standstill?
December
21, 2010
Eric
Margolis [send
him mail] is the author of War
at the Top of the World and the new book, American
Raj: Liberation or Domination?: Resolving the Conflict Between the
West and the Muslim World. See his
website.
Copyright
© 2010 Eric Margolis
The
Best of Eric Margolis
|