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View Full Version : Afghanistan, Another Untold Story by Michael Parenti



Panda Tse Tung
29th June 2009, 17:11
http://www.michaelparenti.org/afghanistan%20story%20untold.html

Barack Obama is on record as advocating a military escalation in Afghanistan. Before sinking any deeper into that quagmire, we might do well to learn something about recent Afghani history and the role played by the United States.

Less than a month after the 11 September 2001 attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon, US leaders began an all-out aerial assault upon Afghanistan, the country purportedly harboring Osama bin Laden and his al Qaeda terrorist organization. More than twenty years earlier, in 1980, the United States intervened to stop a Soviet “invasion” of that country. Even some leading progressive writers, who normally take a more critical view of US policy abroad, treated the US intervention against the Soviet-supported government as “a good thing.” The actual story is not such a good thing.

Some Real History

Since feudal times the landholding system in Afghanistan had remained unchanged, with more than 75 percent of the land owned by big landlords who comprised only 3 percent of the rural population. In the mid-1960s, democratic revolutionary elements coalesced to form the People’s Democratic Party (PDP). In 1973, the king was deposed, but the government that replaced him proved to be autocratic, mismanaged, and unpopular. It in turn was forced out in 1978 after a massive demonstration in front of the presidential palace, and after factions of the army intervened on the side of the demonstrators.

The military officers who took charge invited the PDP to form a new government under the leadership of Noor Mohammed Taraki, a poet and novelist. This is how a Marxist-led coalition of national democratic forces came into office. “It was a totally indigenous happening. Not even the CIA blamed the USSR for it,” writes John Ryan, a retired professor at the University of Winnipeg, who was conducting an agricultural research project in Afghanistan at about that time.

The Taraki government proceeded to legalize labor unions, and set up a minimum wage, a progressive income tax, a literacy campaign, and programs that gave ordinary people greater access to health care, housing, and public sanitation. Fledgling peasant cooperatives were started and price reductions on some key foods were imposed.

The government also continued a campaign begun by the king to emancipate women from their age-old tribal bondage. It provided public education for girls and for the children of various tribes.

A report in the San Francisco Chronicle (17 November 2001) noted that under the Taraki regime Kabul had been “a cosmopolitan city. Artists and hippies flocked to the capital. Women studied agriculture, engineering and business at the city’s university. Afghan women held government jobs—-in the 1980s, there were seven female members of parliament. Women drove cars, traveled and went on dates. Fifty percent of university students were women.”

The Taraki government moved to eradicate the cultivation of opium poppy. Until then Afghanistan had been producing more than 70 percent of the opium needed for the world’s heroin supply. The government also abolished all debts owed by farmers, and began developing a major land reform program. Ryan believes that it was a “genuinely popular government and people looked forward to the future with great hope.”

But serious opposition arose from several quarters. The feudal landlords opposed the land reform program that infringed on their holdings. And tribesmen and fundamentalist mullahs vehemently opposed the government’s dedication to gender equality and the education of women and children.

Because of its egalitarian and collectivist economic policies the Taraki government also incurred the opposition of the US national security state. Almost immediately after the PDP coalition came to power, the CIA, assisted by Saudi and Pakistani military, launched a large scale intervention into Afghanistan on the side of the ousted feudal lords, reactionary tribal chieftains, mullahs, and opium traffickers.

A top official within the Taraki government was Hafizulla Amin, believed by many to have been recruited by the CIA during the several years he spent in the United States as a student. In September 1979, Amin seized state power in an armed coup. He executed Taraki, halted the reforms, and murdered, jailed, or exiled thousands of Taraki supporters as he moved toward establishing a fundamentalist Islamic state. But within two months, he was overthrown by PDP remnants including elements within the military.

It should be noted that all this happened before the Soviet military intervention. National security adviser Zbigniew Brzezinski publicly admitted--months before Soviet troops entered the country--that the Carter administration was providing huge sums to Muslim extremists to subvert the reformist government. Part of that effort involved brutal attacks by the CIA-backed mujahideen against schools and teachers in rural areas.

In late 1979, the seriously besieged PDP government asked Moscow to send a contingent of troops to help ward off the mujahideen (Islamic guerrilla fighters) and foreign mercenaries, all recruited, financed, and well-armed by the CIA. The Soviets already had been sending aid for projects in mining, education, agriculture, and public health. Deploying troops represented a commitment of a more serious and politically dangerous sort. It took repeated requests from Kabul before Moscow agreed to intervene militarily.

Jihad and Taliban, CIA Style

The Soviet intervention was a golden opportunity for the CIA to transform the tribal resistance into a holy war, an Islamic jihad to expel the godless communists from Afghanistan. Over the years the United States and Saudi Arabia expended about $40 billion on the war in Afghanistan. The CIA and its allies recruited, supplied, and trained almost 100,000 radical mujahideen from forty Muslim countries including Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Iran, Algeria, and Afghanistan itself. Among those who answered the call was Saudi-born millionaire right-winger Osama bin Laden and his cohorts.

After a long and unsuccessful war, the Soviets evacuated the country in February 1989. It is generally thought that the PDP Marxist government collapsed immediately after the Soviet departure. Actually, it retained enough popular support to fight on for another three years, outlasting the Soviet Union itself by a year.

Upon taking over Afghanistan, the mujahideen fell to fighting among themselves. They ravaged the cities, terrorized civilian populations, looted, staged mass executions, closed schools, raped thousands of women and girls, and reduced half of Kabul to rubble. In 2001 Amnesty International reported that the mujahideen used sexual assault as “a method of intimidating vanquished populations and rewarding soldiers.’”

Ruling the country gangster-style and looking for lucrative sources of income, the tribes ordered farmers to plant opium poppy. The Pakistani ISI, a close junior partner to the CIA, set up hundreds of heroin laboratories across Afghanistan. Within two years of the CIA’s arrival, the Pakistan-Afghanistan borderland became the biggest producer of heroin in the world.

Largely created and funded by the CIA, the mujahideen mercenaries now took on a life of their own. Hundreds of them returned home to Algeria, Chechnya, Kosovo, and Kashmir to carry on terrorist attacks in Allah’s name against the purveyors of secular “corruption.”

In Afghanistan itself, by 1995 an extremist strain of Sunni Islam called the Taliban---heavily funded and advised by the ISI and the CIA and with the support of Islamic political parties in Pakistan---fought its way to power, taking over most of the country, luring many tribal chiefs into its fold with threats and bribes.

The Taliban promised to end the factional fighting and banditry that was the mujahideen trademark. Suspected murderers and spies were executed monthly in the sports stadium, and those accused of thievery had the offending hand sliced off. The Taliban condemned forms of “immorality” that included premarital sex, adultery, and homosexuality. They also outlawed all music, theater, libraries, literature, secular education, and much scientific research.

The Taliban unleashed a religious reign of terror, imposing an even stricter interpretation of Muslim law than used by most of the Kabul clergy. All men were required to wear untrimmed beards and women had to wear the burqa which covered them from head to toe, including their faces. Persons who were slow to comply were dealt swift and severe punishment by the Ministry of Virtue. A woman who fled an abusive home or charged spousal abuse would herself be severely whipped by the theocratic authorities. Women were outlawed from social life, deprived of most forms of medical care, barred from all levels of education, and any opportunity to work outside the home. Women who were deemed “immoral” were stoned to death or buried alive.

None of this was of much concern to leaders in Washington who got along famously with the Taliban. As recently as 1999, the US government was paying the entire annual salary of every single Taliban government official (SF Chronicle, 10/2/2001). Not until October 2001, when President George W. Bush had to rally public opinion behind his bombing campaign in Afghanistan did he denounce the Taliban’s oppression of women. His wife, Laura Bush, emerged overnight as a full-blown feminist to deliver a public address detailing some of the abuses committed against Afghan women.

If anything positive can be said about the Taliban, it is that they did put a stop to much of the looting, raping, and random killings that the mujahideen had practiced on a regular basis. In 2000 Taliban authorities also eradicated the cultivation of opium poppy throughout the areas under their control, an effort judged by the United Nations International Drug Control Program to have been nearly totally successful. With the Taliban overthrown and a Western-selected mujahideen government reinstalled in Kabul by December 2001, opium poppy production in Afghanistan increased dramatically.

The years of war that have followed have taken tens of thousands of Afghani lives. Along with those killed by Cruise missiles, Stealth bombers, Tomahawks, daisy cutters, and land mines are those who continue to die of hunger, cold, lack of shelter, and lack of water.

The Holy Crusade for Oil and Gas

While claiming to be fighting terrorism, US leaders have found other compelling but less advertised reasons for plunging deeper into Afghanistan. The Central Asian region is rich in oil and gas reserves. A decade before 9/11, Time magazine (18 March 1991) reported that US policy elites were contemplating a military presence in Central Asia. The discovery of vast oil and gas reserves in Kazakhstan and Turkmenistan provided the lure, while the dissolution of the USSR removed the one major barrier against pursuing an aggressive interventionist policy in that part of the world.

US oil companies acquired the rights to some 75 percent of these new reserves. A major problem was how to transport the oil and gas from the landlocked region. US officials opposed using the Russian pipeline or the most direct route across Iran to the Persian Gulf. Instead, they and the corporate oil contractors explored a number of alternative pipeline routes, across Azerbaijan and Turkey to the Mediterranean or across China to the Pacific.

The route favored by Unocal, a US based oil company, crossed Afghanistan and Pakistan to the Indian Ocean. The intensive negotiations that Unocal entered into with the Taliban regime remained unresolved by 1998, as an Argentine company placed a competing bid for the pipeline. Bush’s war against the Taliban rekindled UNOCAL’s hopes for getting a major piece of the action.
Interestingly enough, neither the Clinton nor Bush administrations ever placed Afghanistan on the official State Department list of states charged with sponsoring terrorism, despite the acknowledged presence of Osama bin Laden as a guest of the Taliban government. Such a “rogue state” designation would have made it impossible for a US oil or construction company to enter an agreement with Kabul for a pipeline to the Central Asian oil and gas fields.

In sum, well in advance of the 9/11 attacks the US government had made preparations to move against the Taliban and create a compliant regime in Kabul and a direct US military presence in Central Asia. The 9/11 attacks provided the perfect impetus, stampeding US public opinion and reluctant allies into supporting military intervention.

One might agree with John Ryan who argued that if Washington had left the Marxist Taraki government alone back in 1979, “there would have been no army of mujahideen, no Soviet intervention, no war that destroyed Afghanistan, no Osama bin Laden, and no September 11 tragedy.” But it would be asking too much for Washington to leave unmolested a progressive leftist government that was organizing the social capital around collective public needs rather than private accumulation.

US intervention in Afghanistan has proven not much different from US intervention in Cambodia, Angola, Mozambique, Ethiopia, Nicaragua, Grenada, Panama, and elsewhere. It had the same intent of preventing egalitarian social change, and the same effect of overthrowing an economically reformist government. In all these instances, the intervention brought retrograde elements into ascendance, left the economy in ruins, and pitilessly laid waste to many innocent lives.

The war against Afghanistan, a battered impoverished country, continues to be portrayed in US official circles as a gallant crusade against terrorism. If it ever was that, it also has been a means to other things: destroying a leftist revolutionary social order, gaining profitable control of one of the last vast untapped reserves of the earth’s dwindling fossil fuel supply, and planting US bases and US military power into still another region of the world.

In the face of all this Obama’s call for “change” rings hollow.

bellyscratch
29th June 2009, 20:23
try decreasing the text size and putting spaces between the paragraphs to make it more readable

Panda Tse Tung
29th June 2009, 20:29
fixed.

Random Precision
30th June 2009, 19:51
Amin seized state power in an armed coup. He executed Taraki, halted the reforms, and murdered, jailed, or exiled thousands of Taraki supporters as he moved toward establishing a fundamentalist Islamic state

I stopped reading there.

scarletghoul
30th June 2009, 19:57
why

Fiskpure
1st July 2009, 15:27
I stopped reading there.

I can't find any information backing the statement about Amin moving to create a fundamentalist state. I don't know if the wikipedia is incorrect, but it states that Amin began including religious statements in his speeches, reforming the religious policy of the country, repairing mosques, etc which ended with a Soviet KGB assassination on him.

Intelligitimate
3rd July 2009, 00:41
I stopped reading there.

It's hysterical how reactionary the ISO is. It's also ran like a business, trying to recruit more students to sell their shitty newspaper and magazine (and pay their dues), so they can fly scum like Sherry Wolf, Eric Ruder and Paul D'Amato around the country to spew the vile anti-communist screeds to petty-bourgeois white liberals dissatisfied with the Democratic Party.

Parenti > ISO trash

Panda Tse Tung
3rd July 2009, 14:26
I can't find any information backing the statement about Amin moving to create a fundamentalist state. I don't know if the wikipedia is incorrect, but it states that Amin began including religious statements in his speeches, reforming the religious policy of the country, repairing mosques, etc which ended with a Soviet KGB assassination on him.
Wikipedia is quite the weak source ;).

Random Precision
3rd July 2009, 18:38
It's hysterical how reactionary the ISO is. It's also ran like a business, trying to recruit more students to sell their shitty newspaper and magazine (and pay their dues), so they can fly scum like Sherry Wolf, Eric Ruder and Paul D'Amato around the country to spew the vile anti-communist screeds to petty-bourgeois white liberals dissatisfied with the Democratic Party.

Parenti > ISO trash

I don't even care enough to yawn. :)

Kamerat
5th July 2009, 01:47
This article completly change my view of the Soviet Union "socialist imperialist" actions in Afganistan. Before i read this i saw Soviets action in Afganistan as unnecessary occupation, i ment it would be better if the socialist government in Afganistan could handle the mujahideen them selfs. That way the USA could not say they where defending Afganistan from the USSR. I was under the impression that the sosialist government in Afganistan had less then a majority or little support from the people and they asked USSR for help to keep their power. But after reading this article, and particulary this sentence,
Almost immediately after the PDP coalition came to power, the CIA, assisted by Saudi and Pakistani military, launched a large scale intervention into Afghanistan on the side of the ousted feudal lords, reactionary tribal chieftains, mullahs, and opium traffickers.i have come to realize that Soviet Union was defending not occupying Afganistan. Just like Cuba in Angola. The USA, Pakistan and Saudi Arabia where the Imperialist attackers/occupiers.

Damn how cappie propaganda, Bond films and such can mess with your mind.

khad
5th July 2009, 01:57
I can't find any information backing the statement about Amin moving to create a fundamentalist state. I don't know if the wikipedia is incorrect, but it states that Amin began including religious statements in his speeches, reforming the religious policy of the country, repairing mosques, etc which ended with a Soviet KGB assassination on him.
That is absolute crap. Amin was killed because it was revealed (through one of his drunken officers) that he was the one who murdered Taraki. At the time Amin was in the process of destroying his own party through massive purges, in addition to carpet bombing Afghan villages because, well, he could. He was quickly destabilizing the entire country and sending it to hell. The article is a bit unfair to Amin since the man was clutch during the crackdowns against the party by the Daoud administration (probably wasn't a spy, though I could be wrong), but I do agree that once he got megalomaniacal he was rightly put down. Amin's widow claimed that her husband was loyal to the USSR until the end.

The Afghan Communist Party was composed of two main factions, Khalq and Parcham. The former was the traditional Marxist-Leninist party while the latter was more willing to work with Islam, nationalism, and anti-imperialism. The latter had more sway with the public because they were able to talk Islam while talking communism, but the former held key positions throughout the government and particularly the military. The USSR tended to favor Parcham, but more importantly it enforced a truce between the factions that actually allowed them to get things done without deadlocking (and killing) each other left and right. Parcham actually made significant progress during its time, and their last president Najibullah is today one of the most revered figures in Afghan political memory.

Incidentally, this is one comment about growing up in Afghanistan in the 80s taken from Youtube:


shut up besawad! he [Najibullah] was a great man. in kabul the ppl had everything. schools, university, modern life , work and they could pray to allah and belive in islam. communism is for a free world and religious freedom. i lived in najibs time in kabul and ma grandma my family belived in islam and lived also in a islam way. but i still love Dr. najieb. he was great. i had a nice childhood, because he made it possible! no one said to us in this time not to belive in islam. u illiterate pakistani!I do like some of the stuff Parenti says, but he glosses over the Saur Revolution as something almost spontaneous. "The army intervened on the side of the protesters"--the army intervened because it was full of PDPA people. While it's undeniable that workers were out in the streets demanding the release of jailed PDPA leaders, some credit has to be given to the quick thinking of the Afghan communists. Daoud thought he could get away with rounding up the communists, but unlike in countries such as Iraq where the communists were wiped out, the Afghan communists rallied the troops and destroyed the government that was oppressing them.


A top official within the Taraki government was Hafizulla Amin, believed by many to have been recruited by the CIA during the several years he spent in the United States as a student.Thank you for confirming official Communist assertions all along!

Now, I wonder what the pro-muja Cliffites have to say about the Soviet intervention in response to CIA warmongering.

The Afghan communists asked for military assistance eleven times before it was finally granted. USA-Pakistan was already funding reactionary forces like Massoud to destroy the Afghan state (under Daoud) well before the communists assumed power.


This article completly change my view of the Soviet Union "socialist imperialist" actions in Afganistan. Before i read this i saw Soviets action in Afganistan as unnecessary occupation, i ment it would be better if the socialist government in Afganistan could handle the mujahideen them selfs. That way the USA could not say they where defending Afganistan from the USSR. I was under the impression that the sosialist government in Afganistan had less then a majority or little support from the people and they asked USSR for help to keep their power. But after reading this article, and particulary this sentence, i have come to realize that Soviet Union was defending not occupying Afganistan. Just like Cuba in Angola. The USA, Pakistan and Saudi Arabia where the Imperialist attackers/occupiers.

Damn how cappie propaganda, Bond films and such can mess with your mind.
Massoud and Hekmatyar were openly fighting against the Afghan government since 1975, 4 years before the Soviet Army entered the country and 3 yeas before the Afghan communists came to power. The head of state at the time was Daoud Khan, a relatively independent nationalist who attempted to balance and manipulate various social forces to "modernize" his country. The Western imperialists, however, didn't care who was in charge of the government--if they weren't the reactionary king, they were the enemy.

Everyone saw Massoud and Hekmatyar's true colors once they had deposed Dr. Najib for their Pakistani masters. They spent all their time raping and murdering Afghans and signing away Afghanistan's natural resources to Pakistani capitalists for practically free.