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?????????????????????????????????????????????????Monday, August 20, 2018
Afghanistan: The War That Shames America

Roads are now so dangerous for the occupiers that most movement must be by air. Taliban is estimated to permanently control almost 50% of Afghanistan. That number would rise to 100% were it not for omnipresent US air power. Taliban rules the night.
( August 18, 2018, Toronto, Sri Lanka Guardian) After 17 bloody years, the longest war in US history continues without relent or purpose in Afghanistan.
There, a valiant, fiercely-independent people, the Pashtun (Pathan)
mountain tribes, have battled the full might of the US Empire to a
stalemate that has so far cost American taxpayers $4 trillion, and 2,371
dead and 20,320 wounded soldiers. No one knows how many Afghans have
died. The number is kept secret.
Pashtun tribesmen in the Taliban alliance and their allies are fighting
to oust all foreign troops from Afghanistan and evict the
western-imposed and backed puppet regime in Kabul that pretends to be
the nation’s legitimate government. Withdraw foreign troops and the
Kabul regime would last for only days.
The whole thing smells of the Vietnam War. Lessons so painfully learned
by America in that conflict have been completely forgotten and the same
mistakes repeated. The lies and happy talk from politicians, generals
and media continue apace.
This week, Taliban forces occupied the important strategic city of
Ghazni on the road from Peshawar to Kabul. It took three days and
massive air attacks by US B-1 heavy bombers, Apache helicopter gun
ships, A-10 ground attack aircraft, and massed warplanes from US bases
in Afghanistan, Pakistan, Qatar and the 5th US Fleet to finally drive
back the Taliban assault. Taliban also overran key military targets in
Kabul and the countryside, killing hundreds of government troops in a
sort of Afghan Tet offensive.
Afghan regime police and army units put up feeble resistance or ran
away. Parts of Ghazni were left in ruins. It was a huge embarrassment to
the US imperial generals and their Afghan satraps who had claimed ‘the
corner in Afghanistan has finally been turned.’
Efforts by the Trump administration to bomb Taliban into submission have
clearly failed. US commanders fear using American ground troops in
battle lest they suffer serious casualties. Meanwhile, the US is running
low on bombs.
Roads are now so dangerous for the occupiers that most movement must be
by air. Taliban is estimated to permanently control almost 50% of
Afghanistan. That number would rise to 100% were it not for omnipresent
US air power. Taliban rules the night.
Taliban are not and never were ‘terrorists’ as Washington’s war
propaganda falsely claimed. I was there at the creation of the movement –
a group of Afghan religious students armed by Pakistan whose goal was
to stop post-civil war banditry, the mass rape of women, and to fight
the Afghan Communists.
When Taliban gained power, it eliminated 95% of the rampant Afghanistan
opium-heroin trade. After the US invaded, allied to the old Afghan
Communists and northern Tajik tribes, opium-heroin production soared to
record levels. Today, US-occupied Afghanistan is the world’s largest
producer of opium, morphine and heroin.
US occupation authorities claim drug production is run by Taliban. This
is another big lie. The Afghan warlords who support the regime of
President Ashraf Ghani entirely control the production and export of
drugs. The army and secret police get a big cut. How else would trucks
packed with drugs get across the border into Pakistan and Central Asia?
The United States has inadvertently become one of the world’s leading
drug dealers. This is one of the most shameful legacies of the Afghan
War. But just one. Watching the world’s greatest power bomb and ravage
little Afghanistan, a nation so poor that some of its people can’t
afford sandals, is a huge dishonor for Americans.
Even so, the Pashtun defeated the invading armies of Alexander the
Great, Genghis Khan, Tamerlane, the Mogul Emperors and the mighty
British Raj. The US looks to be next in the Graveyard of Empires.
Nobody in Washington can enunciate a good reason for continuing the
colonial war in Afghanistan. One hears talk of minerals, women’s rights
and democracy as a pretext for keeping US forces in Afghanistan. All
nonsense. A possible real reason is to deny influence over Afghanistan,
though the Chinese are too smart to grab this poisoned cup. They have
more than enough with their rebellious Uighur Muslims.
Interestingly, the so-called ‘terrorist training camps’ supposedly found
in Afghanistan in 2001 were actually guerilla training camps run by
Pakistani intelligence to train Kashmiri rebels and CIA-run camps for
exiled Uighur fighters from China.
The canard that the US had to invade Afghanistan to get at Osama bin
Laden, alleged author of the 9/11 attacks, is untrue. The attacks were
made by Saudis and mounted from Hamburg and Madrid, not Afghanistan. I’m
not even sure bin Laden was behind the attacks.
My late friend and journalist Arnaud de Borchgrave shared my doubts and
insisted that the Taliban leader Mullah Omar offered to turn bin Laden
over to a court in a Muslim nation to prove his guilt or innocence.
President George Bush, caught sleeping on guard duty and humiliated, had
to find an easy target for revenge – and that was Afghanistan.
Copyright Eric S. Margolis 2018
