Aftermath for Afghanistan
central asia |
imperialism / war |
feature
Thursday March 10, 2005 23:22
by Terry Clancy

Since the 1970's Afghanistan has been shredded by bloody conflict between rival gangs of rulers and the regional and global imperialisms which subsidise them. The infrastructure of the society ruined, lives and bodies maimed, millions forced over the border into miserable refugee camps and hundreds of thousands of people cut down by hunger or high explosive.
Since the 1970's Afghanistan has been shredded by bloody conflict between rival gangs of rulers and the regional and global imperialisms which subsidise them. The infrastructure of the society ruined, lives and bodies maimed, millions forced over the border into miserable refugee camps and hundreds of thousands of people cut down by hunger or high explosive.
Aftermath for Afghanistan
Since the 1970's Afghanistan has been shredded by bloody conflict
between rival gangs of rulers and the regional and global
imperialisms which subsidise them. The infrastructure of the society
ruined, lives and bodies maimed, millions forced over the border into
miserable refugee camps and hundreds of thousands of people cut down
by hunger or high explosive.
The most surprising thing about the fall of the Taliban was the
extent to which many people found it surprising. There was a close
link between Taliban military successes and the considerable support
they received from the ruling elite of Pakistan. Starved of that,
even without American bombing they would have crumbled albeit
somewhat later.
As it was no tin pot rag bag force could withstand the mailed fist
of a superpower. There's nothing novel about that either, the machine
guns and artillery of the late 19th. centaury empires rarely met
defeat from the spears of the natives and this is just the modern day
equivalent. (1)
One eyewitness relates "Vast craters dotted their defensive
lines, while the village of Karabah which housed their headquarters
looked like it had been blow-torched from above. Mud buildings are
flattened and trees reduced to eerie twisted stumps, the result of
repeated B-52 strikes on one day, when I saw bombers come in every
five minutes to blast the same area with their sticks of bombs."
(2)
Imperialist Rivalry
Over the years the Afghan wars have been fuelled by the USSR on
the one hand and the U.S.A. on the other and then with Iran, India
and Russia backing up the Northern Alliance while Pakistan did the
same for the Taliban. The conflicting interests of rival
imperialisms are still at play in Afghanistan.
With marines on the ground and B52's in the sky the American
influence is apparent and in a development without precedent the U.S.
now has bases in what was formerly territory of the 'Soviet' Union,
to the north of Afghanistan.
The new Afghan government consists of two halves, one the Northern
Alliance, and the other the Rome group, which is to say formerly
exiled monarchist figures close to Zahir Shah, the deposed King. The
monarchist faction is dependant on U.S. support, as unlike any of the
splinters forming the Northern Alliance, it doesn't have an Army and
didn't play any real role in the overthrow of the Taliban. The King,
despite, or perhaps because, he hasn't been involved in the country
for thirty years, is a genuinely popular figure.
Of late the U.S. military have been openly supporting various
sides in warlord disputes. Herat in the east is the fiefdom of Ismael
Khan, a Mujaheddin warlord deposed by the Taliban and recently
reinstalled with a considerable Iranian subsidy. Gulbuddin Hikmetyar
another Mujaheddin warlord, who has been promising jihad on the
infidels since the September is being kept on a leash in Iran itself.
He has recently offered to leave Iran if that would help ease
tensions between it's government and that of the U.S., but given that
his intended destination is Afghanistan perhaps the world could do
without his help.
While the Hazari militias of the Hizb-i Wahdat have had a long
relationship with Iran, this must be somewhat strained at the moment
as allegations are surfacing that Khan is supply Iranian arms to
General Dostum, their rival for control of Mazar-e-Sharif.
Recently allegations have surfaced that Khan's forces have been
the victims of American cruise missile strikes and a lot of the
American military effort in the country at the moment would seem to
have more of a purpose if it's intent was reminding the various other
factions what happens to people who displease the global cop.
Furthermore there have been low level guerrilla attacks on American
and British forces. Who is responsible for them? (this included
attacks in Kabul &endash; not a Taliban stronghold).
Whatever the case is there is certainly the potential for further
conflict, not just because of imperialist rivalries but because:
"these sold-out warlords will have no scruples in once again
putting themselves up for sale at a cheap price to old and new
proxy-seeking powers, and consequently will once again invite the
interference of their foreign masters if their sordid parochial and
personal ambitions and interests are fundamentally compromised"
(3)
Under the Northern Alliance
At the moment 'Northern Alliance' rule is taking a form along
similar lines to the situation between '92 and '96 &endash; prior to
the Taliban, when the country was last in the hands of the factions
which now make up the Alliance. A pattern of endemic banditry,
persecutions, and barons shaping up for turf wars. A change from one
despotism to a hundred despotisms. But thus far with nothing like the
extent of the bloody carnage inflicted in the four years of in
fighting before the rise of the monolithic and uncompromising Taliban
forced the rival mini kingdoms to unite.
In other words with out the Taliban to unite them and the war to
occupy them they seem to be returning to their old ways. They are
particularly singling out as victims, Pashtuns, the ethnic group from
which the Taliban come.
Barely one month after the establishment of the power sharing
executive in an article headed "We felt safer under the
Taliban" the Hindustan Times read "Murders, robberies
and hijackings in the capital, factional clashes in the north and
south of the country, instability in Kandahar and banditry on roads
linking main centres are beginning to erode the optimism that greeted
the inauguration of the interim administration on December 22."
(5)
Something of an arms race is under way with rival forces drawing
new recruits from desperate refugees. The principal infighting has
been around Mazar-e-Sharif. A three way struggle with General Dostum,
a former military commander of the pre-'92 "Soviet" backed regime in
one corner, the Hizb-i Wahdat militia, formerly close to Iran in
another and then supporters of the former President Rabbani, all
jostling for control.
Refugee camps have been divided up along ethnic lines, with
persecutions and expulsions of whoever is the minority. Similar
squabbles over the division of the victor's spoils have taken place
in other cities. So much has changed that merchants are even talking
of a dramatic increase in the sale of burkas, the total veiling
enforced not just by the Taliban's Saudi Arabian funded religious
police but also by the dead weight of tradition.
From out side of the good versus evil view presented by the
propaganda of the war party this is not surprising. Although they
presented the downfall of the Taliban as a liberation, in reality the
splinter groups making up the Northern Alliance were always much the
same as the Taliban.
It must be remembered that the "warriors of God" began
their rebellion in the 1970's, before the arrival of any Red Army
tanks, over various un-Islamic activities such as women being without
veil in public and education for girls. In 1990 representatives of
all the main Mujaheddin factions (united!) issued a fatwa banning
women and girls from an education, similar fatwas were issued
enforcing the hijab or banning women from working by different
elements of the movement then characterised as 'freedom fighters' by
the governments of the West.
Even the Taliban's aversion to Buddha statues was no innovation
&endash; such artefacts had previously been blown up by Mujaheddin.
They had fought bloody feuds for control of the heroin trade during
the anti-Russian war, and when they finally overthrew the
'communists' they carved a bloody path of mass murder, rape and
looting, turning the entire country into a shooting gallery.
Destroying the secular urban society brick by brick.
Such is the heritage of most of the components of the Northern
Alliance, the rest were the foot soldiers of the Kremlin backed
puppet regime. A regime whose practises included burning alive entire
villages. The Taliban did not land from outer space, but were
sculpted from a stone which was one part age old authoritarian
religious tradition and one part the arming of Islamist radicals with
millions of dollars worth of weaponry by the U.S., Pakistan, etc.,
with the intent that they take over the country.
In short neither Islam nor Uncle Sam can wash their hands of the
Taliban.
As the Revolutionary Association of Afghan Women put it: "In
our opinion, the Taliban and other jehadi fundamentalist cliques of
Rabbani, Sayyaf, Masoud, Khalili, Hekmatyar and their like are
brothers in arms. They are all of the same hue, because: All of them
have a Klashnikov in one hand and the Quran in the other to kill,
intimidate, detain and mutilate our people arbitrarily." (6)
The Victims
As no one is counting on the ground, even if such a thing were
possible, estimates of civilian deaths vary widely. One Washington
Post article, arguing that 'it was worth it' claimed that the
figure could be in the 8,000 to 12,000 range. This figure does not
include deaths caused by a disruption of food aid supplies. This was
after some research done on the matter, by American academic
Professor Marc W. Herold, established the estimate of 3,767 for
the first two months of the bombing.(7) As he points out this
represents in proportion to population the equivalent of 38,000
deaths in the United States. Since then the bombing has continued,
despite the ousting from power of the Taliban.
The killings on S11 are held up as justification of the bombing of
Afghanistan, a logic we can only agree with if we conclude the lives
of Americans are of greater value than the lives of Afghans, or
perhaps a two or three to one ratio of value. You cannot argue that
one is right and the other is wrong, either it is wrong to slaughter
people in the 'wrong place at the wrong time' in revenge for their
rulers slaughtering other people in the 'wrong place at the wrong
time' or it is not.
Rather than being a 'failed state' the situation in Afghanistan is
the product of two decades of successful competition between states,
a competition which continues in the region today. Rather than being
a solution to any of these problems the Imperialist intervention is
part of the problem.
Terry Clancy lives in Ireland and writes for the Free Earth website
(
http://www.struggle.ws/freeearth.html).
He is a member of the Anarchist Federation
(
http://www.afed.org.uk)
For space reasons this article had to be heavily edited, the full
version of the article is on the web at
http://struggle.ws/freeeaarth.html
Footnotes
- (1) Of course the prospects of a guerrilla force, with outside
support, would be different entirely. But this was not the case in
this conflict and thus any analogies with say, Afghanistan in the
1980's would not be applicable.
- (2) The Spectator 17 November 2001.
- (3) Revolutionary Association of Afghan Women website
http://rawa.fancymarketing.net/dec10-01e.htm
- (5) Hindustan Times, January 25, 2002
- (6) http://www.rawa.org/diffrence.htm
- (7)http://www.cursor.org/stories/civilian_deaths.htm