'The Taliban Are Terrorists'
by
Eric Margolis
by Eric Margolis
As Canadian
casualties mount in Afghanistan, its important to correct
three major falsehoods being promoted by the ill-informed, flag-waving
media.
1. Taliban
are terrorists. In 1989, at the end of Soviet occupation,
Afghanistan fell into anarchy, civil war, and crime. Rape was endemic.
A village prayer leader, Mullah Omar, armed a group of religious
students (talibs). He set about fighting banditry, rape and drug
dealing, imposing order based on traditional tribal and religious
law.
Taliban were
not 9/11-style terrorists, but a religious, anti-Communist movement
drawn from the Pushtun tribe.
Most of the
Talibans energies went to fighting Afghan Communists. Iran,
India and Russia openly backed the Communists rechristened,
Northern Alliance.
Most of the
so-called terrorist camps in Afghanistan were in fact
bases used by Muslim volunteers who had come to fight Communists
there and in Central Asia.
The Taliban
shut down production of opium and heroin. But its backwards leaders
proved themselves to be harsh and incompetent. Female education
was temporarily banned because Communists had infiltrated the nation
in the 1970s through the school system. The Taliban oppressed
minority Hazaras, and blew up Buddhist idols.
But Washington
gave millions in aid to the Taliban until four months before 9/11.
The U.S. once considered using them and Osama bin Ladens 300
al-Qaida followers to stir revolt in Chinas western Muslim
regions, and in Russian-dominated Central Asia. The U.S. cut off
aid after the Taliban refused to give a key strategic pipeline deal
to a U.S. oil firm.
The Talibans
leaders knew nothing of 9/11, a plot actually hatched in Germany.
When the U.S. demanded bin Laden be handed over, the Taliban refused:
He was a guest and national hero, wounded six times in the anti-Soviet
struggle. The Taliban offered to send bin Laden to an international
tribunal once the U.S. presented evidence of his involvement. Washington
refused and invaded, blaming the Taliban for 9/11.
Unable to withstand
U.S. power, Mullah Omar ordered his men to blend back into the Pushtun
population and wage low-grade guerrilla war against the invaders.
Other movements, like Hizbi-Islami, joined in battling foreign occupation.
Canada unwisely chose to pick a fight with fierce tribesmen whose
only desire is to end foreign occupation and be left alone.
2. Canada
is defending democracy in Afghanistan. This is
pure propaganda. The U.S. installed the puppet Karzai regime in
Kabul, then held an election even more rigged than the ones run
by the Soviets. The U.S. spends hundreds of millions to bribe Afghan
warlords, most of whom are up to their turbans in drug dealing.
Since the Talibans overthrow, opium production is up 90%.
The U.S.-NATO ruled narco-state Afghanistan now produces most of
the worlds heroin. Karazis regime would collapse the
moment foreign troops leave.
Besides drug
lords, the U.S., Canada and NATO are also in league with resurgent
Communists who, with the Soviets, killed 1.5 million Afghans
and tortured tens of thousands. The Uzbeks now U.S. and Canadian
allies are more vicious and brutal than Taliban, and deeply
involved in drug trading.
3.
Canada is defending womens rights. Laughable nonsense.
The Taliban, demonized by western propaganda, mistreated its females
no worse than other Afghans. Women are mistreated across South Asia.
In India, brides are burned and people hanged for marrying below
their caste. An estimated 10 million female fetuses were aborted
in India since 1985, according to the leading medical journal Lancet.
Canadian
troops are not social workers and wont change local customs.
Only naïve fools think they could. American and Canadian journalists
who rushed to Afghanistan see none of this because they stay safely
embedded with occupation forces. They get the usual
cooks tour and cheery assessments, and are fed PR handouts.
Cheerleading for war and flag-waving may sell papers, but it is
not responsible journalism.
April
3, 2006
Eric
Margolis [send
him mail], contributing foreign editor for Sun National Media
Canada, is the author of War
at the Top of the World. See his
website.
Copyright
© 2006 Eric Margolis
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