Monday, April 26, 2010

Dispatch 7

[I hope no one who has been reading these dispatches was alarmed when they suddenly ended. I was delayed sending this final dispatch, because of power outages and internet failures during my last few days in Afghanistan and also because I wanted to do some fact checking on this rather lengthy last dispatch, which also required some internet exchanges with my research partner Hamayon who is still in Afghanistan. Also, one of the conditions my partner Debbie set on agreeing to my trip to Afghanistan was that we meet in Paris for a vacation during my return through Europe. The second condition was that I not do any work during our vacation, so I took her advice and left my computer in its bag for the past week. So, here finally is the last dispatch now that I have safely returned to Toronto.]

Dispatch #7 Kabul Saturday 7 July 2007


I did not tell anyone that we planned to be in Kandahar this week, more because I was afraid of alarming my family than for security reasons, although security was a concern also. However, our plans have fallen through. Nonetheless, we made some good contacts in Kandahar for the future. Instead, we will travel to Ghazni later this week.

Dispatch 6

Bamiyan, Monday 2 July 2007


Hamayon made a full recovery yesterday and we were up at 3 AM this morning to catch a ride to Bamiyan.

Besides being curious to see the famous sights of Bamiyan, we are also going there with a purpose. Bamiyan is the spiritual centre of Hazarajat and Hazara culture. The Hazara, of any Afghan ethnic group, may have suffered the most under the Taliban as did the giant Buddha statues of Bamiyan the Taliban destroyed in 2001. If there is any group of people in Afghanistan who should be thankful for the defeat of the Taliban and appreciate the current occupation, it is the Hazara people. So we will be asking people in Bamiyan if this is the case.

Anyone who has travelled in the Global South is familiar with the chaotic market that occurs at a minibus staging-point where potential passengers haggle with drivers over fares. Our haggling done we settled into a minivan with several other passengers bound for Bamiyan – two Afghan men travelling alone and a family of a man, a woman and a toddler-age child.

Dispatch 5: Kabul, Thursday 28 June 2007

Like macabre sports scores, the television news last night reported the Western forces have killed 203 civilians in Afghanistan this year while the Taliban have killed 178.


It's a good day – we have both warm water and electricity in the morning for the first time since I arrived. One of the attractions of this particular hotel was that it is serviced by a large diesel generator, but it broke down almost immediately after we arrived. In the past weeks we have received unreliable electricity from the municipal service for a few hours at mid-day, when we are usually out, and in the evening from 7:30 to midnight. This schedule, plus the fact that even during these times the electricity will often shut off without warning has made it difficult to charge the batteries for my computer and cameras.

Reliable electricity is a privilege enjoyed by very few people in Afghanistan. Most neighbourhoods in Kabul receive electricity for only a few hours a day, while much of the country has no electricity whatsoever. On a positive note, we did see transmission towers being constructed during our trip north of the city last weekend.

Dispatch 4: Kabul, Sunday 24 June 2007

Hamayon and I went to Kabul University today hoping to find women there willing to talk to us on camera. We were unable to even meet any women on the street yesterday when we filmed in the market of the Old City. It is unfortunate our research partner Angela could not be here with us; she would have much better luck communicating with women. The gender segregation is hard to imagine. Even when visiting private homes, we have not met the women and girls of the family. They remain unseen in the kitchen preparing the food and cleaning, while the men socialise and the boys deliver the food.


A number of young women did agree to talk to us at Kabul University today. Like our first day at the university, we found a broad range of views among the students – a contrast with yesterday in the market where, with one exception, the men we interviewed are vehemently opposed to the Western occupation.

The small number of people we will be able to interview while we are here for a few weeks is hardly a scientific sampling. The small number of people we will be able to talk to is unlikely to be gender balanced, and particularly not gender balanced across divisions of class and education, but we do hope that we can at least open discussion of some of the issues on the minds of people in Afghanistan when we return to Canada.

Dispatch 3: Thursday 21 June 2007

Thursday 21 June 2007

Thursday is the end of the workweek. This week ended with the BBC announcing the Taliban has stated they will adopt the tactic of Al-Qaeda style suicide bombs to target ISAF in Kabul. Whether this is a propaganda statement by either side or is a genuine promise that will materialise remains to be seen. We have always been taking the precaution of not traveling during the morning and evening rush hours and avoiding obvious targets as much as possible, so this news will not affect our plans.


Hamid my friend and colleague at York emailed to inform me that Friday has always been the day of rest in Afghanistan as it is in most of the Muslim world rather than imposed by a Taliban edict. Hamid's email is a reminder I should triple check my sources even on the simplest facts.

There are so many myths about the Taliban both in the West and here that it is difficult to find the grains of truth that lie behind these myths.

Dispatch 2: Kabul, Sunday 17 June 2007

Again as we ate breakfast a bomb went off. Today it was downtown – too far away for us to hear, but one of Hamayon's cousins called to tell him. The target was a police academy bus. News reports stated that a remote controlled bomb in the bus killed thirty to thirty-five police cadets, but the word on the street was that there may have been as many as sixty killed – it is hard to know who to believe.

I immediately thought of a friendly young American man I spent several hours chatting with while stuck in line in the Dubai airport waiting for the plane to Kabul. This young American told me he was a graduate student in 2001 when he decided to enlist in the military out of a sense of patriotism after 9/11. Without elaborating the details, he stated that during a tour of duty in Afghanistan he soon realised he had made a big mistake. At the first opportunity he took his discharge and returned to graduate school, but an offer of employment from a friend who worked for the military contractor Dynacorp was too good to refuse. He found himself back in Afghanistan, but this time training police cadets. I asked him if he had any police training himself and he admitted he had none. But being young, single and smart he could make great money in Afghanistan. Such are the opportunities for mercenaries in Afghanistan.

Dispatch 1: Kabul, Thursday 14 June 2007

After departing Toronto on Monday evening, I arrived in Kabul Wednesday morning having only caught a few brief naps on planes and during a layover in Dubai. I had to laugh as I departed the plane that was full of a mix of Afghanis, American military contractors and a few journalists – as an indication of how misinformed the Western media can be, I watched two television journalists fearfully don their Kevlar flak jackets and battle helmets before departing from the plane as everyone else watched them with rather bemused wonderment. I suspect these journalists are likely to end up cowering inside a NATO base where they can be spoon-fed military briefings and will never speak to an Afghani person on the street.

My project partner Hamayon met me at the airport and we took a short ride to our hotel situated in what he describes as the poor part of Kabul where most foreigners do not venture. As much as I had prepared myself for the devastation of Kabul and I have experienced being in war devastated cities elsewhere, it was still an emotional shock to see a city in this state.

Kabul has periodically experienced artillery and rocket attacks as well as street-to-street warfare for three decades. The ICRC estimates that 80 percent of the city was destroyed by the mid 1990s and little has been rebuilt since the NATO invasion. In this part of town, damaged buildings provide the architectural backdrop for a very few fully intact buildings such as our hotel – bullet-holes and dust provide the decorative elements.

Dispatches: Introduction

What is Canada Doing in Afghanistan?
Afghanistan-Canada Research Group (ACRG)


Researchers Angela Joya, Hamayon Rastgar and Mike Skinner formed the Afghanistan-Canada Research Group to investigate Canada's role in Afghanistan. Along with film-maker Alex Lisman, we are documenting what Canada is doing in Afghanistan. Little information leaves Afghanistan without first passing through the filters of the NATO military commanders and media editors. We recognise a desperate need to make direct contact with Afghani activists, workers, students, and war refugees. So we are going to Afghanistan to listen to as many Afghani people as we can and bring their stories back to Canada. Before the next Canadian election, it is important that the people of Canada and Quebec hear directly from Afghanis about how they are affected by Canada's mission in Afghanistan.

We urgently need immediate funding. Our previous appeals for funding received generous responses from a number of organisations as far away as Vancouver, but we have failed to raise enough funds to sustain the project.

As you can imagine, travel to Afghanistan is very expensive and we cannot accomplish this project without substantial help.

Since our last appeal for funds, we have altered our plan. Hamayon will depart on 15 May for a three month tour of Afghanistan, including a month to visit with his family. Hamayon's research will take him to Kabul, Mazar, Ghazni, Herat, and Kandahar where he will arrange introductions for the other researchers and begin filming. Mike will join Hamayon in June for one month. Angela and Alex will go to Afghanistan in the fall to follow-up Hamayon and Mike's work, begin Angela's research and continue filming.

We need answers from Afghanis themselves about how they are affected by the Canadian mission in Afghanistan. The Canadian mission in Afghanistan is supposed to balance the 3Ds of development, diplomacy and defence. We want to know how this mission actually affects Afghanis. Angela will ask Afghani women how they are affected by Canadian development aid. Hamayon will ask Afghani activists, workers, students, and state officials how they are affected by Canadian diplomacy. Mike will ask Afghani war refugees how they are affected by Canadian military operations.

We will be available for speaking engagements throughout Canada, as early as August, and will make rough cut videos available as soon as possible.

We are asking for help from organisations like yours to fund this important investigation of Canada's mission in Afghanistan. We need more funds as soon as possible, to purchase plane tickets and pay for travel arrangements.

Mike Skinner

Afghan MP Malalai Joya - Canada's role in Afghanistan

Afghan Member of Parliament Malalai Joya speaks about how Canada and the world can support Afghanistan and warns against following the questionable policy and military path of the U.S. government.


Interview recorded September 2006.

U.S. Combat Veteran Chris Teske at CPA Convention

November 23, 2006 — Chris Teske, a Specialist and two-time combat veteran with the U.S. military in Afghanistan, speaks at the Canadian Peace Alliance's 2006 annual convention, to delegates and observers from across Canada and Quebec, in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada.
Chris has refused to deploy to Iraq after being released from duty, and has come to Canada to join a significant and growing number of U.S. War Resisters in Canada.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VcS2RXUIlvc

What is Canada's Role in Afghanistan? (html)

Labour Says No To War

Who Are We Defending in Afghanistan?

By Ken Georgetti, September 8, 2006

In recent months, Canadians have been the recipients of a fierce selling-job on our military’s role in Afghanistan. Prime Minister Stephen Harper has claimed our mission is both honourable and just, and I have no doubt this echoes the sentiments of our troops.

Prime Minister Harper has said Canada won’t “cut and run” in Afghanistan, and suggested other “weak-kneed” parliamentarians fall in line. Hordes of pundits have agreed, and suggested dissenters are damaging our troops’ morale and Canada’s role in the “War on Terrorism.”


Canadians have seen this movie before. It went something like: “you’re either with us, or you’re with the terrorists.” Currently, that view of foreign policy earns about 36% support of the US electorate. Surely Canadians deserve a better explanation about why we’ve committed to our largest military deployment in 50 years.

Simply put, Prime Minister, whose interests are we defending in Afghanistan?

I am told it is a democratically-elected government engaged in a war with “brutal insurgents.”

Many human rights groups have begged to differ, however, and it is time Canadians got a fuller appreciation of this story.

Human Rights Watch authored a chilling report called Blood Stained Hands: Past Atrocities in Kabul and Afghanistan’s Legacy of Impunity. The Senalis Council in Britain followed with its own study, Canada in Kandahar: No Peace to Keep. Carol Off produced a thought-provoking documentary on CBC’s The National in March 2006 entitled The Warlords Take Office.

All of these studies reveal disturbing information most Afghanis know well, and when the lives of Canadian soldiers are on the line, it’s best not to mince words.

At the moment, Canada is sending its troops to support a parliament that is already half-dominated by drug-trafficking warlords, many of whom have committed atrocities against their own people during Afghanistan’s civil war in the early 1990s.

These warlords – like Abdul Rashid Dostum, who is now Afghanistan’s Deputy Minister of Defence – killed thousands of innocent Afghanis, and now drape themselves in the language of democracy.

Making matters worse, billions of dollars in development funds pledged by nations worldwide have gone missing, while palatial homes and posh developments are under construction in Kabul, many of which are connected to warlords in parliament.

The US military strategy adopted by NATO hasn’t brought peace, reduced poverty, stopped heroin production, or helped reconstruct Afghanistan.

Over 1,600 Afghanis have died in the last four months alone. The heroin trade is fielding a bumper crop. Afghanis are mired in terrible poverty, while brothels have sprung up in abundance to service foreign contractors in Kabul.

In these conditions, it is hardly surprising that an Afghan resistance movement has emerged. These forces, which include Taliban elements, refer to Hamid Karzai as “the mayor of Kabul”, or “assistant to the American ambassador”. They are increasingly supported by Afghanis grown weary from NATO and Karzai’s broken promises.

That’s right Prime Minister. At the moment, our military isn’t fighting the forces of corruption, violence and the heroin trade. We’re supporting them, and this is never told to the thousands of Canadian soldiers sent to the battlegrounds of Kandahar.

But don’t take my word for it. Talk to Malalai Joya, the Afghan parliamentarian who has faced death threats for daring to spotlight the abuses perpetrated daily by warlords in the Karzai regime.

Prime Minster, I fully support our troops, that’s why I don’t want them engaged in a fight that only benefits a government chock full of despots and heroin-runners. I urge you again to heed the words of Malalai Joya, who had this to say about the prospects for peace in her country:

“The situation in Afghanistan and conditions for women will not change positively until the warlords have been disarmed and both the pro-US and anti-US terrorists are removed from the political scene in Afghanistan. And it is the responsibility of the Afghan people to accomplish this goal.”

Ken Georgetti is president of the Canadian Labour Congress, the largest trade union federation in Canada, representing three million workers.


What is Canada’s Role in Afghanistan?


Canada is at war in Afghanistan. Many Canadian soldiers have been killed – the highest percentage of lives lost of any of the foreign armies engaged there. Canada currently has 2,300 troops in Afghanistan and it seems that almost every day the Harper government is escalating our country’s commitment to the “mission” by providing new tanks, more troops, fighter planes, billions of dollars and an open-ended war that could last decades.

We are told that the intervention is helping the people of Afghanistan rebuild their country and prevent the return of the hated Taliban – that our soldiers are there to bring democracy, equality and economic well-being for the Afghan people.

Even more, Prime Minister Stephen Harper and his Foreign Affairs Minister Peter McKay tell us that fighting in Afghanistan is necessary to stop terrorism and that it is part of a world-wide struggle for freedom, echoing US President George W. Bush.

Leading Liberal leadership candidate Michael Ignatieff calls our involvement there a question of morality.

Yet, in spite of all of these claims, the majority of Canadians either oppose or have grave concerns about Canadian participation in the war in Afghanistan. Many working people share these concerns and are increasingly opposed to the government's policies. Lately, our unions are speaking out against the war, as well.

Ordinary Canadians have raised a number of questions about Canadian intervention in Afghanistan:

Isn’t the current government of Afghanistan concerned about democracy and equal rights?

The current Afghan government was installed as a result of the US intervention in 2001. That government is neither democratic nor stable and, protected by the American-led occupation force, rules today over an extremely unequal society.

Human Rights Watch estimates that today 60 percent of Afghanistan's legislators have links to the country’s warlords. One European diplomat reckoned that about 20 legislators have active private militias and that at least 20 more have been involved in drug smuggling.

In other words, the Afghan government is corrupt, repressive and weak. It is dependent on the occupying armies of the United States, Canada and the other NATO countries. Recently, the most senior British military commander in Afghanistan described the situation in the country as “close to anarchy”, with feuding foreign agencies and privately controlled security companies compounding problems caused by local corruption.

What is life like for the Afghan people under the Karzai government?

Afghanistan remains one of the poorest countries in the world. According to a young Afghan woman legislator, Malalai Joya, in Afghanistan:

  • 700 children and 50 to 70 women die each day for lack of adequate healthcare.
  • 1,600 to 1,900 per 100,000 women die in childbirth.
  • Life expectancy is less than 45 years.
  • 40 percent of the population is unemployed.
  • Afghanistan stands 175th out of 177 countries on the UN Human Development Index

Won’t the American, British, Canadian and NATO intervention make things better?

No. The principal goal of the intervention force is to seek out and destroy those who are fighting against the puppet Afghan government. This overwhelming focus on a military solution to the country’s problems will not bring economic development or improvement in the lives of the people.

Everyone talks about the opium industry in Afghanistan – what's the issue?

Afghanistan is the world’s largest supplier of opium, supplying 92% of the world heroin market. This remarkable statistic reflects the desperate situation facing Afghan farmers. The years of invasion, occupation and war have destroyed the country’s fruit, vegetable and industrial production and trade. Farmers are forced to cultivate opium poppies in order to survive. Instead of providing Afghans with legal ways to use opium products (opium is the key ingredient in morphine, codeine and other opiate-based pharmaceuticals) or developing alternative crops, the American occupiers have concentrated their efforts on eradicating the poppy. This has, in turn, has made it more difficult for Afghans to feed themselves.

Meanwhile, the warlords in the Karzai government play a major role in running and benefiting from the opium trade.

Isn’t there a danger of religious extremists and terrorists coming back to power, if we leave?

The Taliban government was overthrown by the American-led bombing and military intervention in 2001. But it was replaced by a puppet government, friendly to American interests. The rebels fighting the current government include some of the former Taliban and Al-Q'aida, as well as nationalistic members of different ethnic groups, religious conservatives and others who are disgusted with the continuing occupation of their country by the US and NATO forces and the continuing corruption of the government.

Today, the Karzai government includes many of the same repressive religious extremists that terrorized the Afghan people in the early 1990s. The current constitution and courts make Islamic law supreme. The Americans’ allies also threaten the lives of any potential opposition as well as those who dare to argue for equality and political rights. In other words, the current government that we are defending includes both fundamentalists and terrorists.

As journalist Eric Margolis has recently commented:

Western troops are not fighting ‘terrorism’ in Afghanistan, as Prime Minister Stephen Harper claims. They are fighting the Afghan people. Every new civilian killed, and every village bombed, breeds new enemies for the West.

Why is Canada in the war?

For all the talk about freedom and democracy, the Canadian mission in Afghanistan is primarily about supporting the United States and redefining Canada's role in the world.

Canadian troops were originally sent to Afghanistan to ease the pressure on US troops in Iraq and to curry favour with Bush in order to “make up” for Canada's refusal to participate in the Iraq invasion and the Bush's “Star Wars” anti-missile program.

Many business people and politicians argued that helping the American war effort would help offset US threats to limit investment and trade with Canada. Canadian Chief of Defence Staff Rick Hillier has also pushed for closer integration with the US military.

When all is said and done, the Canadian establishment shares a number of common interests with the American ruling elite: in protecting the interests of large corporations and banks around the world; in helping the US to use its power to guarantee that no country challenges private enterprise; and controlling important sources of raw materials.

This is the motivation for Canadian intervention in Haiti (where we helped to overthrow a democratically elected government that threatened business), our support of Israeli aggression in the Middle East and the protection of corporate rights at home.

Paul Martin's Liberal government supported this mission and Stephen Harper's Conservatives have continued it. Has anything changed?

Like many previous Canadian governments, the Martin Liberals talked publicly about pursuing independent Canadian interests through peacekeeping initiatives while they actually lent aid and support to the Americans. The big difference is that Prime Minister Stephen Harper's Conservatives have dropped the pretence of independence. They openly support George Bush and identify themselves with the US.

The Harper government, backed by right-wing elements in the military establishment, also wants Canada to drop its pretence of independence and neutrality and is working to create a foreign policy more openly aligned with American interests. This means that the Canadian military would concentrate on aggressive missions, geared towards fighting ground wars in support of US campaigns against “terrorism” – the role that the military is increasingly playing in Afghanistan.

Canada's Chief of Defence Staff Rick Hillier is a major spokesperson for this point of view, which involves massive investments in armaments and soldiers and a redirection of social resources away from humanitarian aid towards offensive weaponry. In order to succeed, this effort requires a massive propaganda campaign, designed to convince the Canadian people that there is an “enemy” – and that the enemy must be destroyed. This is why Hillier commented that the rebels in Afghanistan are “detestable murderers and scumbags” who should be killed.

But aren't Canadian forces bringing development and reconstruction, as well as fighting the Taliban?

Most of Canada's politicians and many of our media outlets would have us believe that it is possible to combine reconstruction and humanitarian aid, along with efforts to “pacify” the opposition through military action. This is not true. Issues of development, education, economic growth and social justice must be handled differently. They require fundamental changes in society. The puppet Karzai government is not about to embark on such changes and this is clearly not what the Canadian mission is all about.

Looking at the actual spending of the Canadian mission, we can see that successive Canadian governments don't even believe their own propaganda. Between 2001 and 2006 Canada spent over CDN$ 4 billion (US$3.6 billion) on its military deployments, but has spent and pledged less than US$1 billion for humanitarian and development aid.

A Canadian vet from an earlier war, interviewed in a major newspaper, put the issue clearly:

If they can't get a resolution to it, then bring them home or pull them back and put them on peacekeeping. We don't have a big enough force to be peacemakers. I don't believe you go into a man's country and shoot him to bring him democracy. It's a funny way of doing it.

We are told that the Afghan people support the US-backed government there. Is this true?

Even though TV accounts show pictures of Canadian troops giving candy to Afghan children, the Canadian army is waging an aggressive war against Afghan rebels, many of whom are fully integrated with the civilian population. This inevitably leads to the death of innocent people. As a result, many Afghans see little difference between the Canadians and the Americans there. Why would they?

After resigning his post, a former aide-de-camp to the commander of the British task force in southern Afghanistan commented that:

All those people whose homes have been destroyed and sons killed are going to turn against the British... It's a pretty clear equation if people are losing homes and poppy fields, they will go and fight. I certainly would.

After the most recent, Canadian-led NATO offensive, supposedly against the Taliban, a Globe and Mail reporter noted that:

“Many of the fighters killed – perhaps half of them, by one estimate – were not Taliban stalwarts, but local farmers who reportedly revolted against corrupt policing and tribal persecution. It appears the Taliban did not choose the Panjwai district as a battleground merely because the irrigation trenches and dry canals provided good hiding places, but because many villagers were willing to give them food, shelter – even sons for the fight – in exchange for freedom from the local authorities.”

What does this tell us about the will of the Afghan people and the reasons they are fighting?


Isn't this a UN and NATO-sponsored mission? Does that matter?

The original US bombing and invasion – Operation Enduring Freedom – was supported by the United Nations, after intense American pressure in the aftermath of the 9/11 attacks. Regardless of this endorsement, it was wrong.

The current Canadian mission is part of NATO. It too is wrong.

Canada is a member of NATO (the North Atlantic Treaty Organization), a 26-country alliance originally formed at the height of the cold war to “protect the west against a Soviet attack” and to promote American and Western European economic interests in the third world. After the fall of the Soviet Union, NATO continued to tie Western, Eastern and Central European countries, as well as Canada, to the American project of maximizing its global power. The US has used NATO to support its occupations in Afghanistan and Iraq.

There are times when the international community of nations should unite to stop a real threat to the world's peoples. In this case, the Afghan resistance is not a threat. The reality is that NATO is helping to extend American power there, acts as an extension of American power.

Should Canada be concerned about “maintaining its commitment” to NATO? Should we be lecturing other countries to increase their commitment to the war?

No! We should be questioning the very existence of NATO and prepare to get Canada out of the organization. Canada could play a leadership role here, as people in other NATO countries are raising the very same questions and concerns.

What is the likelihood of winning the war?

Stephen Harper says, “We will be there as long as it takes.” But there is no end in sight and even military strategists know this.

In a candid comment, Canadian Defence Minister O'Connor – a former arms company lobbyist – recently said, “We cannot eliminate the Taliban, not militarily anyway. We've got to get them back to some kind of acceptable level so they don't threaten other areas.” Even the American Senate Majority Leader, Bill Frist, recently admitted that the war cannot be won militarily.

In any event, what does “winning” mean? If it means keeping the present Afghan government of corrupt, fundamentalist warlords and their allies in power, do we want to win?

Are we undermining our troops by calling for them to withdraw?

No! When our country sends its military into combat, we have a moral responsibility to be absolutely sure that we are doing so for the right reasons. If the overall mission is wrong – if it is supporting oppression and results in the needless deaths of innocent people, as well as those of our soldiers, and is doomed to failure – our soldiers are needlessly risking their lives for the wrong reasons and need to be brought home.

This is the best way to support our men and women who are fighting there. It is also the way a democratic society makes decisions about military interventions.

What should we do?

Canada's “mission” in Afghanistan must end and our troops must be pulled out. We must also pressure the US and other NATO troops to do the same.

Supporters of the war claim that pulling out would allow the “terrorists and extremists” to take over the country, but as we have seen, the government itself includes both.

As well, half of Afghanistan is already controlled by rebel forces. NATO cannot stop this. Continuing the mission will only postpone the time when Afghans can begin controlling their own destiny. Our presence there needlessly increases the toll of civilian and military deaths, making it more difficult for real reconstruction and development to begin.

Withdrawal can and should be part of a negotiated settlement. But the Harper government refuses to consider negotiations. Regardless, foreign occupation forces need to be removed. The people of Afghanistan must be free to determine their future without outside interference.

The Soviets tried to impose their vision of society in Afghanistan in the 1980s and they failed. The US has also tried to impose its vision and it is failing as well. Democracy, equality and social justice can only take root from within a society because they must be the work of the people themselves. They cannot be brought from the outside, through an occupying army.

As Malalai Joya has bravely noted, “No nation can donate liberation to another nation.”

How did this war start?

This conflict has its roots in the American intervention in Afghanistan that began during the Cold War.

The US has a long history of intervention in Afghanistan, which resulted in instability, inequality, poverty, many deaths and injuries and hardship for the people of that country.

In the late 1970s, a regime came to power in Afghanistan that sought to modernize the country and bring in social reforms. It also had close ties to the Soviet Union. In response, the American government sponsored and armed a group of fundamentalist fighters, called mujahideen, to oppose the government. The US also hoped to draw the Soviets more directly into Afghanistan, seeking to tie their Cold War adversaries down in an unwinnable war. The mujahideen included some of the most brutal and corrupt warlords in the country as well as the wealthy Saudi Arabian, Osama Bin Laden. The US lavished aid and resources on these movements. The mujahideen were involved in the opium trade and persecuted Afghans who argued for democracy and social equality. In this way, the Americans built up the very same religious extremist forces that they oppose today and undermined the possibility of creating a democratic society.

The Soviets did invade in 1979 and after waging a long and brutal war their occupation armies were unable to defeat the mujahideen. When the Soviets pulled out of Afghanistan in 1990, the various warlord groups engaged in a bloody four year war among themselves for control of the country. Thousands of Afghans were killed, injured or forced to become refugees. Agriculture and trade were destroyed. These warlords closed women’s schools and attacked the real rights of women and girls that had previously existed in Afghanistan.

In 1996 a new group of religious zealots called the Taliban, defeated the other warlords, came to power and succeeded in extending their control over most of Afghanistan, by promising stability and protection from the warlords. Once in power, the Taliban deepened the ruthless and repressive control over women and enforced a strict medieval form of Islamic law. The US refused to oppose them, citing the need for stability (and protection of a proposed oil/natural gas pipeline). But with the growing influence of Bin Laden's Al-Q'aida group inside the country, the Americans began to challenge the Taliban.

The 9/11 attack in New York (by Al-Q'aida operatives), brought a swift and brutal response from the Bush Administration. “Operation Enduring Freedom” unleashed a massive bombing campaign against Afghanistan, using Cruise missiles with cluster bombs, and resulted in the deaths of between 3000 and 3400 civilians. Another 20,000 Afghans reportedly lost their lives due to disease and starvation as a result of the invasion.

This bombing campaign was unnecessary. The Taliban made a number of offers to negotiate the surrender of Bin Laden and the expulsion of Al-Q'aida fighters, but Bush refused to talk. The US was more interested in sending a message about its power, than seeking justice for the 9/11 attacks.

Ultimately, the Taliban were driven out by a group of warlords called the Northern Alliance, allied with Washington. These warlord groupings included many of the same corrupt and repressive factions that the Americans had originally bankrolled in the 1980s. In the process, the American authorities arrested hundreds of “suspected terrorists” and subject them to torture and humiliation in Guantanamo and elsewhere, in violation of the Geneva Accords.•

What about the condition of women and girls in Afghanistan today?
Isn’t this mission supposed to protect their rights?


As Afghan women’s rights activist and legislator Malalai Joya recently noted, “Contrary to the propaganda in certain Western media, Afghan women and men are not ‘liberated’ at all,” because the present government has continued many of the repressive policies towards women and girls.

Amnesty International noted in 2005 that:

“Violence against women and girls in Afghanistan is pervasive; few women are exempt from the reality or threat of violence. Afghan women and girls live with the risk of abduction and rape by armed individuals; forced marriage; being traded for settling disputes and debts; and face daily discrimination from all segments of society as well as by state officials.... Strict societal codes, invoked in the name of tradition and religion, are used as justification for denying women the ability to enjoy their fundamental rights, and have led to the imprisonment of some women, and even to killings. Should they protest by running away, the authorities may imprison them.”

— From Afghanistan: Women still under attack – a systematic failure to protect, May 30, 2005



"I think that no nation can donate liberation to another nation. Liberation should be achieved in a country by the people themselves. The ongoing developments in Afghanistan and Iraq prove this claim."

— Afghan MP Malalai Joya, at Federal NDP convention, September 2006



See also http://www.malalaijoya.com/

What is Canada's Role in Afghanistan?

Saturday, April 24, 2010

Terrorism, War and Workers

Terrorism, War and Workers



TUAW pamphlet published November, 2001