Chaos
in Kabul
by
Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
by Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
Before eyes
turned to the investigation of the US murders of civilians in Haditha,
Iraq, or the US murders of civilians in Ishaqi, Iraq, and new outrage
broke out over the military murder of two women, one of them pregnant,
in Mosul, Iraq, there was news pouring out from another outpost
of the US empire.
Only last week,
Kabul, Afghanistan, was on fire with mass outrage. Today curfews
and martial law reign, barely keeping a temporary lid on a situation
that cannot last. The 23,000 foreign troops there are outnumbered
and under fire.
The riots in
Kabul are an ominous sign for the US empire. Watch the videos on
television. These people are ever more bold. They aren't guerillas
operating in private. They are not military people. They are regular
citizens rising up against an empire and using every means at their
disposal to drive the invader out.
They throw
rocks, sticks, and are glad to kill anyone who is tainted with the
slightest hint of collaboration, even humanitarian workers and merchants.
They walk in daylight, almost hoping for the status of martyrdom.
They defy police, military, guns, and tanks. They have a focused
demand: the US must leave their country immediately.
The riots came
in response to a ghastly event that the US media usually calls a
"traffic accident." A tank rolled down a hill in Kabul and crashed
into a big line of cars. You can imagine if an SUV owned by a suburbanite
did that in Manhattan: the media would be talking about the deaths.
But in this case, we were given little by the media but firm assurance
that it was all easily explained.
More than a
hundred people were injured. Something like a dozen were killed
(people are still arguing over numbers). The US military dismissed
it as a mechanical failure. We're so sorry that you are upset! But
aid workers who were there said that it was caused by a military
convoy that was driving fast and recklessly, hitting cars on the
side of the road even before the pileup.
During the
rioting, twenty more people were shot. Video footage shows US troops
firing machine guns over the heads of hundreds of rioters. US soldiers
claimed that they were firing in self-defense. But the issue came
to a head when three of the dead were clearly civilians just minding
their own business. That's when the chief of police in Kabul, a
guy the US is supposed to control completely, came forward to say
that the US fired into the crowd just as a means of control.
This is only
the latest carnage. Since May 17, 2006, 372 Afghanis have been killed
by what is called the US-led coalition, which, again, means by the
US.
Meanwhile,
guerilla fighters killed two dozen Afghan police in the employ of
the US-controlled state. Guerillas are firing rockets at cars and
killing politicians. No place is this vast, strange country safe
for anyone suspected of collaboration with the occupiers. Suicide
bombers are on the increase.
This is not
a stable situation. There is no way that the US can control this
country. For years, people said that the US does not and will not
face a situation like the Soviet Union did in this country in the
1980s. But increasingly, it is hard to tell the difference, except
that the US might show even more stupidity by hanging around even
longer.
You know what
government hates the most? Resistance. This is true in all times
and in all places. They try to crush it no matter what, as if the
life of the state depended on it, which it does. Still, resistance
can sometimes be too much for a state, which, after all, constitutes
a minority of the population with only one advantage: it has the
biggest guns.
Other than
that, there is no good reason to obey any state if it is making
society worse rather than better. In fact, any state that calls
forth mass resistance should be overthrown as a matter of justice,
since the alternative is to turn all of society into a giant prison
camp.
We are supposed
to be against making countries into prisons. But that is precisely
the direction things are going in Afghanistan.
This is a remarkable
state of affairs given the recent history. The US overthrew the
Taliban regime because it had shown sympathy to Osama Bin Laden,
even though there was no evidence that the Taliban was involved
in 9-11 and no final evidence that Osama was actually the criminal
mastermind behind 9-11 (we only know that he wanted the Islamic
world to give him credit for the hijacking).
So
the US went in, the Taliban scattered, and the US declared victory.
In the meantime, the country has completely devolved into tribal-controlled
regions, drug production has soared (hey, folks gotta make a living!),
the Taliban is on the march, and the US is loathed and hated in
every corner of the country.
Talk about
US intentions going awry! And do we dare bring up the fact that
the US supported the Taliban's formation in the 1980s to oppose
the Soviet occupation? That's right, back then we called them freedom
fighters.
When
will the US leave? Not soon. In fact, I would predict that the US
will prove even less willing to admit defeat than the Soviets or
the British, who met the same fate in this wild, far-flung, bloodied
land.
Once again,
war has proven to be good for absolutely
nothing.
June
2, 2006
Llewellyn
H. Rockwell, Jr. [send him
mail] is president of the Ludwig
von Mises Institute in Auburn, Alabama, editor of LewRockwell.com
and author of Speaking
of Liberty.
Copyright
© 2006 LewRockwell.com
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