It’s too bad Barack Obama didn’t consult with Malalai Joya
before giving his Nobel acceptance speech on Thursday. The ex-Afghan
Parliamentarian could have helped the president to see that the ongoing US
occupation is damaging to both American and Afghan interests.
Afghanistan is not the “Just War” that Obama defends so
passionately in his speech. It’s part of a larger US geopolitical strategy
which Joya outlines in her new book, “A Woman Among the Warlords: The
extraordinary story of an Afghan who dared to raise her voice.”
US policymakers have decided to establish a beachhead in
Central Asia to monitor the growth of China, surround Russia, control vital
resources from the Caspian Basin, and provide security for US mega-corporations
who see Asia as the “market of the future.” It’s the Great Game all over again.
“Victory” in Afghanistan means that a handful of weapons manufacturers, oil
magnates, and military contractors will get very rich. It has nothing to do
with al-Qaida, “democracy promotion” or US national security. That’s all just
public relations pablum.
“A Woman Among the Warlords” is an explosive narrative that
takes a scalpel to many of the illusions surrounding the US invasion of
Afghanistan. For example, most Americans have never heard about the “Warlord
Strategy,” a term that is commonplace among Afghans. That’s because it doesn’t
mesh with the media’s story about Afghan “liberation.” The truth is, US
war-planners, led by Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, settled on a plan to
hand over entire regions of Afghanistan to the warlords even before the first
shot was fired. The whole “liberation”-meme was just a ruse to elicit support
for the war. How many Americans would support sending more troops if they knew
that the original justification of the war was a bunch of baloney?
Here’s how Joya sums it up in her own words: “The people of
Afghanistan are fed up with the occupation of their country and with the
corrupt, Mafia-state of Hamid Karzai and the warlords and drug lords backed by
NATO. . . . It is clear now that the real motive of the U.S. and its allies,
hidden behind the so-called “war on terror,” was to convert Afghanistan into a
military base in Central Asia and the capital of the world’s opium drug trade.
Ordinary Afghan people are being used in this chess game, and western
taxpayers’ money and the blood of soldiers is being wasted on this agenda that
will only further destabilize the region. . . . Afghan and American lives are
being needlessly lost.”
Joya is focused and uncompromising; a one-woman wrecking
crew. She’s also an electrifying speaker who can bring an audience to their
feet when she rails against the war. People can sense her intensity, her
honesty, and her unwavering commitment to justice. Unlike Obama, she isn’t
disposed to lofty-sounding platitudes that only serve to perpetuate war and
suffering. Joya’s goal is peace; an end to 30 years of war, an end to US
occupation and religious fanaticism. Regrettably, Obama’s military escalation
ensures that the conflict will drag on for years to come, bringing misery to
even more people.
Malalai Joya: “As I write these words, Afghanistan is
getting progressively worse. We are caught between two enemies: the Taliban on
one side and US/NATO forces and their warlord hirelings on the other. . . . Obama’s
military build up will only bring more suffering and death to innocent
civilians. . . . I hope that the lessons in this book will reach President
Obama and his policymakers in Washington, and warn them that the people of
Afghanistan reject their brutal occupation and their support of the warlords
and druglords.” (“A Woman Among the Warlords,” p5)
“A Woman Among the Warlords” gives readers a glimpse of the
vast destruction brought on by the US invasion. Joya repeatedly denounces
Rumsfeld’s strategy which replaced the fanatical Taliban with war criminals and
human rights abusers. She also takes aim at the media which gave cover to the
warlords by referring to them as the “Northern Alliance” or, the equally
misleading, ”United Islamic Front for the Salvation of Afghanistan.” As Joya
points out, attitudes about the conflict have largely been shaped by
disinformation, omissions and propaganda. Obama’s Noble speech proves that
those same lies will now be delivered by a more competent spokesman.
Malalai Joya: “While the United States bombed from the sky,
the CIA and special forces had already arrived in the northern provinces of
Afghanistan to hand out millions of dollars in cash and weapons to Northern
Alliance commanders. They were the same extremists whose militias had pillaged
Afghanistan during the civil war: Dostum, Sayyaf, Khalili, Rhabbani, Fahim,
General Arif, Dr. Abdullah, Haji Qadir, Ustad Atta, Mohammad, Daoud, and Hazrat
Ali among others. . . . Fahim, another ruthless man with a dark past. The
western media tried at the time to portray these warlords as ‘anti-Taliban
resistance forces and liberators of Afghanistan,’ but in fact Afghan people
believed they were no better than the Taliban.” (Ibid, pg 52)
As the Taliban fled across the Pakistan border amid heavy
aerial bombardment, the warlords seized entire provinces reestablishing their
iron-fisted rule over the local population. No attempt was ever made to
establish democracy. Even today, many of the warlords are still on the US
payroll, a point which Obama somehow failed to mention in his “Peace Prize”
speech.
From the New York Times November 19, 2001: “The galaxy of
warlords who tore Afghanistan apart in the early 1990s and who were vanquished
by the Taliban because of their corruption and perfidy are back on their
thrones, poised to exercise power in the ways they always have.”
Joya provides biographical sketches of many of the warlords,
including Abdul Rasul Sayyaf, a rabid fundamentalist “who massacred thousands
in Kabul during the 1990s.” In one Kabul purge, he ordered his soldiers, “Don’t
leave anyone alive -- kill them all.” Sayyaf was “the person who invited
international terrorist Osama bin Laden to Afghanistan during the 1980s. He
also trained and mentored Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, the man whom the US claims
was the mastermind of the 9-11 attacks.” (p 67)
How many people would continue to support the war if
they knew they were protecting friends of bin Laden and Khalid Sheikh Mohammed?
Malalai Joya again: “Most people in the west have been led
to believe that intolerance, brutality, and severe oppression of women in
Afgahnistan began with the Taliban regime. But this is a lie, more dust in the
eyes of the world from the warlords who dominate the American-backed, so-called
democratic government of Hamid Karzai. In truth, some of the worst atrocities
in our recent past were committed during the civil war by the men who are now
in power.”
During the blackest days of the Afghan civil war in 1992, a
group of warlords seized Kabul razing much of it to the ground. “The militias
of Dostum, Sayyaf, Massoud, Mazari, and Hekmatyar pillaged the city, robbing
families and slaughtering and raping women. Eventually, anywhere from 65,000 to
80,000 innocent people were killed in Kabul alone, though there are no official
figures for the staggering death toll. According to the United Nations, more
than 90 percent of the city was destroyed. (Eventually) “the country was split
up into fiefdoms, ruled by the whims of rival thugs and warlords.” (Ibid p26)
These are the monsters the US continues to support in
Afghanistan today.
JOYA’S SOLUTION: “Withdraw All Foreign Troops”
Malalai Joya: “Some people say that when the troops
withdraw, a civil war will break out. Often this prospect is raised by people
who ignore the vicious conflict and humanitarian disaster that is already
occurring in Afghanistan. The longer the foreign troops stay in Afghanistan,
the worse the eventual civil war will be for the Afghan people. The terrible
civil war that followed the Soviet withdrawal certainly could never justify . .
. the destruction and death caused by that decade-long occupation.” (p 217) . .
.”Today we live under the shadow of the gun with the most corrupt and unpopular
government in the world.” (p 211)
The war that one reads about in the media, is not the real
war. It’s a fiction created to justify occupation. “A Woman Among the Warlords”
shreds many of the myths surrounding the war and reveals the truth behind the
hype; that the United States deliberately handed over Afghanistan to a group of
genocidal maniacs. The same policy persists to today, which is why it’s time to
bring the troops now.
Mike
Whitney lives in Washington state. He can be reached at fergiewhitney@msn.com.