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Not So Happy Holidays for AfghanistanPosted on Nov 26, 2007By Marie Cocco WASHINGTON—Winter approaches, and as many as 400,000 Afghans face starvation. The trouble is not an insufficient supply of food. There is no way to get food to those who need it. Attacks on aid workers and the hijacking of food convoys—the United Nations’ main feeding program says it has lost about 100,000 tons of food to attacks by insurgents and criminals so far this year—have made it all but impossible to transport supplies along the main road connecting vast stretches of the country between Kandahar in the south and Herat in the west. Nothing exposes a hollow promise like the prospect of mass starvation. By now, six years after the United States and its Western allies launched military operations to avenge the terrorist attacks of 9/11 and free Afghanistan from the grip of the Taliban, humanitarian workers surely should not be forced to give up on feeding the desperate. But this is only one measure of our catastrophic failure. While the Bush administration crows about the apparent pacification of some neighborhoods in Iraq as proof that its surge of military forces there is working, Afghanistan hurtles toward chaos. You might call what is now unfolding there the Iraqification of Afghanistan. Advertisement Foreign militants are joining up with this reconstituted Taliban, just as they once were lured to Afghanistan by Osama bin Laden and the holy warriors of al-Qaida—just as they have been drawn to Iraq. “Foreign fighters from, amongst others, Pakistan, Uzbekistan, Chechnya and China are once again using Afghanistan as a battleground for their interpretation of global jihad,” says the Senlis Council’s latest report, released last week. In sanctuaries just over the border in Pakistan, the militants have developed “quite openly” a terrorist infrastructure that includes recruiters, safe houses and suicide bombers who prepare to infiltrate Afghanistan. There is the “import of tactics perfected in Iraq.” These include suicide bombs and roadside bombs aimed at civilians as well as national and international forces. Senlis offers a cold tally: From 2001 through 2004, Afghanistan suffered five suicide attacks. In 2005, there were 17. By 2006, the number had climbed to 123. Already this year, there have been 131 suicide bombings. In a worst-case scenario for the future, the research group envisions “a wholesale import of terrorist tactics and methodologies from Iraq. Seemingly inexhaustible supplies of martyrs permeate the country, indiscriminately attacking public spaces, military forces and the institutions of state.” In our own political discussion, the problem of Afghanistan is often reduced to two claims against the Bush administration. One involves the failure to capture bin Laden when he was cornered at Tora Bora. The other centers on the distraction of Iraq, and the diversion of resources to that conflict. Both complaints are legitimate. Both are now sadly beside the point. We are failing in Afghanistan—the very country where failure was not supposed to be an option. Besides the military’s inability to pacify the country and subdue the Taliban, Western development and reconstruction money has been scarce. The opium poppy crop is again a mainstay of the Afghan economy, and there is deep disagreement among allies over what to do about it. Yet, as the U.S. presidential campaign careens toward an early winnowing with a front-loaded schedule of primaries, barely a word is uttered about the approaching disaster in Afghanistan. Democrats squabble over the five-year-old vote to authorize military action in Iraq, and about which of them will draw down the most troops. Republicans attempt to best one another with their bellicose posturing about Iran, falling into line with this latest Bush administration fixation. The prospect of war consuming the entire Middle East seems not to trouble them. Our government stood accused in the years leading to 9/11 of ignoring or at least failing to respond adequately to the gathering danger in the remote mountains of Afghanistan. That history could repeat itself so soon is a chilling indictment. Marie Cocco’s e-mail address is mariecocco(at)washpost.com. © 2007, Washington Post Writers Group CommentsAre you a Truthdig member yet? Login now, or register with Truthdig. Add Your Comment |
By PatrickHenry, November 27, 2007 at 6:28 pm Link to this comment
Afganistan is a great culture and I as an American am ashamed we are still over there fucking it up.
Mission accomplished, bad guys dead or dying. Time to let them have back their country.
Report thisBy 1drees, November 27, 2007 at 8:19 am Link to this comment
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Thomas Billis : I might be the one to inform you that Forces in Afghanistan are there for something moe valuable & profitable than measely OIL, its called DRUGS & there is BUMPER crop this year thanx to the permissions of the BRITS despite the protests of KARZAI, so Afghanistan is actually another very [profitable venture but the business is kind of shady but the merchandise does reach the WEST. REEARCH TH TOPIC YOURSELF BRO!
Report thisBy 1drees, November 27, 2007 at 5:00 am Link to this comment
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well the chances are if these Afghans do manage not to get themselves shot dead and relabelled as taliban then they’ll survive, the #1 killer in afghanistan is not lack of food but excess of military hardware and that too in careless hands.
Report thisBy thomas billis, November 27, 2007 at 12:04 am Link to this comment
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We have moved into areas that require the wisdom of Solomon and we have Zippy the chimp in the White House making decisions.The sad thing is that in scanning the candidates of either party there does not seem to be a Solomon among them either.My solution is to to withdraw from Iraq and relocate our troops in Afghanistan in a two pronged effort1]to bring the country under the control of the Karzai government2]capture Osama Bin Laden and cripple Al Qaida where they really are.This will not happen because Iraq has oil and Afghanistan does not.Until we deal with the central problem of oil we will not do the things that are in the best interests of our country.
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