American Bases in Afghanistan…Tantamount to Foreign Occupation and Governance
In wartime, truth is so precious that she should be attended by a bodyguard of lies…Winston Churchill
Of late, we learn that U.S. President Barack Obama has reneged on a promise to withdraw American forces from Afghanistan by 2014. With dwindling support for the war among the American citizenry, the timetable for total withdrawal has been inexplicably advanced to 2024.
Though there is some support amongst minority (Northern Alliance) anti-Pashtun Afghan factions, opportunists who view the U.S. Military presence as a force-multiplier to aid with their war to eliminate the Taliban, just as had the collaborative Northern Alliance, a minority-faction who saw the Soviet 40thArmy of Occupation as their force-multiplier to reduce or eliminate their indigenous enemies…the majority Pashtun population. An overwhelming majority of the Afghan people however, see this move as amounting to permanent or enduring occupation.
The down sides to advancing the withdrawal date are multifaceted: The announcement has predictably derailed any possibility of a negotiated peace with the Afghan Resistance. A continued American presence in theatre will inarguably presage a continuation of deadly drone strikes, night-raids, indiscriminate bombing of rural villages, increased radiation poisoning, environmental pollution, increased drug proliferation, executive/presidential-directed political assassination, and the loss of self-rule or sovereignty.
Empty words: publicized and hailed by the U.S. as respectful of civilian casualties, America’s quest for empire has amounted to increasing numbers of civilian casualties… those caught up in America’s deadly technology and insatiable quest for dominating the world’s resources.
Much has been written about America’s motivation or strategy to remain in Afghanistan: syndicated journalist and noted author Eric S. Margolis got it exactly right in his most recent book: The American Raj, Liberation or Domination, resolving the Conflict between the Muslim world and the West, (2008) drawing on comparisons in strategy and policy between designs and quest of empire in the U.S. to the far-flung British Raj of the 18th and 19th centuries, a state bent on world domination. But what is cogent and clear, is the desire or strategy to encircle Iran, long a resident on America’s target list of nations, maintain a close presence or vigilance to Pakistan’s nuclear arsenal, encircle economic rival China, and the ever-present commercial opportunities enhanced by proximity to the Caspian Basin and Central Asian energy and resource rich mineral fields, highly-sought resources currently under Russian controlled development.
Strategically, launching strikes against Iran would be greatly enhanced by a proximate U.S. military presence in Afghanistan. For the Afghan people, the use of its territory for military-staging purposes would be catastrophic. Iran would certainly retaliate against its neighbor…increasing the possibility of additional decades of debilitating war on its soil. It can be argued that an American omnipresence might preclude any hostile moves by Afghanistan’s troublesome and belligerent neighbors. But given America’s current embrace of militarism, many feel their continued presence increases not lessens that possibility. Furthermore, quarreling or troublesome neighbors can be dealt with in other les-intrusive or devastating ways…short of invasion and permanent occupation.
The promise of freedom and of a representative government has been usurped by the promotion of ethnic rivalry as an American strategy to control the Pashtun majority…a device used by nineteenth century British overlords in their attempt to acquire Afghanistan as part of their far-flung empire. Drawing on that experience, the Soviet Union relied on identical “divide-and-conquer” strategies, recruiting minorities (Shura-i-Nizar) with promise of riches, power and security and thereby learning absolutely nothing from the annals of history.
As history dictates, it has been the Pashtun majority (62.76%) that had risen against foreign invaders and thereby earning for Afghanistan, the reputation as the “Graveyard of Empires.”
The Afghan people will not be denied their rightful destiny. As history avers, they will not acquiesce to foreign induced minority rule, nor will they accept permanent occupation from without.
Afghanistan, a nation that has not ever posed a threat to its neighbors, is resource-rich and therefore has much to offer the world. But it must be approached and treated as a full partner, not as a colonial subject. It is deserving of a truly representative government, not one composed of political lackeys imposed by Washington, Moscow, Delhi, Tehran, Islamabad, Beijing, London and or Paris.
The plan to occupy Afghanistan under one or more guises such as maintaining a user-friendly, foreign installed government, ‘regional security concerns’, or in diplomatic-jargon, the highly vaunted, euphemistically- titled, Enduring Strategic Partnership Agreement between the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan and the United States of America that thus far President Karzai has not moved to sign, and or the moral bankruptcy and illegality of the neo-imperialist’s “war on terror”… demands a no vote, proscribing any agreement that extends the presence of a foreign military. Were Afghanistan through this or other agreements, to align itself both politically and militarily with a nation (U.S.) that in 237-years of its existence has used its military 240 times, it could find itself unceremoniously embroiled in wars not of choice… but those embarked upon by an aggressive, imperialist- U.S.
In the realms of a militaristic-oriented American foreign policy establishment of this day, society should resist and heed the cautious, profound wisdom of former U.S. President John F. Kennedy who said: War will exist until that distant day when the conscientious objector enjoys the same reputation and prestige that the warrior does today.
Bruce G. Richardson
Afterword:
See valuable research-notes and references below:
The Nuremberg Trial Prosecutor had this comment when queried on America’s so-called ‘War on Terror’
The U.S. has discarded pretensions to international legality and decency, and embarked on a course of raw imperialism run amok, by William Rockler, Nuremberg Tribunal Prosecutor (2008).
U.S. propaganda: Insurgent-Style Attacks blamed on Taliban to mask civilian deaths to distract the general public’s awareness of civilian deaths, by Jason Ditz, 1/27/14.
The U.S. used Military Force 240 times in 237 years 1798-2012, by Yuri Skidanov, 1/20/14 and Either at War, preparing for a new attack, looking for victims from the Period 1798-2012.
Anti-War.com,’ America’s Empire of Bases’ by David Vine, 7/24/12, Communications by Members of the Afghan Diaspora about Events in Afghanistan to US Leaders, the UN and World Leaders September 21, 1979-October 7, 2013 by Dr. M. Siddieq Noorzoy, 2013.
American Raj: Liberation or Domination, Resolving the Conflict between the West and the Muslim World by Eric S. Margolis, 2008. Afghanistan, Political Frailty and External Interference, by Dr. Nabi Misdaq, 2006. America’s War on Terrorism, Second Edition, by Michael Chossudovsky, 2005 and: A Search for Truth by Bruce G. Richardson, 2008.
In June, 2012, Uzbekistan had taken the decision to not allow the U.S. to retain military bases in their country. In addition, Uzbekistan suspended its membership in the Moscow-led collective ‘Security Treaty Organization,’ better known by its Russian acronym ODKB which is a collective of ex-Soviet states organized as a counterbalance to NATO.
According to Senator Rand Paul,’ the U.S. is deployed in 900 overseas bases in 130 countries’. Source: Tampa Bay Times. Afghanistan must remain forever-vigilant and guard against external and internal influence generated by the U.S., Russia, and their political-proxies from the Northern Alliance to become country no. 131.
Source of the 62-73% population figure shown for the ethnic majority Pashtuns was derived from a six-year survey and research project conducted over a six-year period (1991-1996) by the WAK Foundation for Afghanistan (WFA).