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Afghanistan unliberated.


George Bush likes to view himself as the Great Liberator, and he has said many times that he's freed fifty million people: the combined populations of Iraq and Afghanistan. But Iraq is going to hell, with 100 civilian deaths a day due to the civil war--oh, I'm sorry, I mean the sectarian violence Sectarian violence or sectarian strife is violence inspired by sectarianism, that is, between different sects of one particular mode of thought, not necessarily religious (e.g. . Afghanistan is headed down the same road.

"The government and its international partners remained incapable of providing security to the people of Afghanistan," says Amnesty International Amnesty International (AI,) human-rights organization founded in 1961 by Englishman Peter Benenson; it campaigns internationally against the detention of prisoners of conscience, for the fair trial of political prisoners, to abolish the death penalty and torture of  in its annual report. "Absence of rule of law, and a barely functional criminal justice system, left many victims of human rights violations, especially women, without redress. Over 1,000 civilians were killed in attacks by U.S. and Coalition forces and by armed groups. U.S. forces continued to carry out arbitrary arrests and indefinite detentions."

Much of the country is in disarray. Corruption runs wild. Warlords Warlords may refer to:
  • The plural of Warlord, a name for a figure who has military authority but not legal authority over a subnational region.
  • Warlords (arcade game) is also an arcade video game.
, including some of the same individuals who brutalized the populace before the Taliban took over, now exercise power in many provinces. There are even warlords in the cabinet of Hamid Karzai Hamid Karzai (Persian and Pashto: حامد کرزي) (b. December 24, 1957) is the current President of Afghanistan, since December 7, 2004. He became the dominant political figure after the removal of the Taliban regime. .

And, five years after its defeat, the Taliban has regrouped in the south, carrying out ever more brazen attacks on U.S. and NATO forces See: force(s). .

Suicide bombings are dramatically on the rise. "There have been forty suicide bombings during the past nine months, compared to five in the preceding five years," Ahmed Rashid Ahmed Rashid (b. 1948 in Rawalpindi) is a Pakistani journalist and best-selling author. Rashid attended Malvern College, England, Government College Lahore, and Cambridge University. , author of Taliban and Jihad, noted in the June 22 issue of The New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
 Review of Books.

On September 8, the Taliban conducted a suicide car bombing outside the U.S. embassy in Kabul. That attack killed at least sixteen people, including two U.S. soldiers. Two days later, a suicide bomber Noun 1. suicide bomber - a terrorist who blows himself up in order to kill or injure other people
act of terrorism, terrorism, terrorist act - the calculated use of violence (or the threat of violence) against civilians in order to attain goals that are political
 killed a provincial governor who was a Karzai friend.

For the people of Afghanistan, life remains grim. The United Nations Development Program ranks Afghanistan near the very bottom: 173 out of 178 countries in terms of health, life expectancy Life Expectancy

1. The age until which a person is expected to live.

2. The remaining number of years an individual is expected to live, based on IRS issued life expectancy tables.
, and other indicators.

Especially for girls and women, conditions are deteriorating. "Violence against women and girls remains rampant," Human Rights Watch reports. "Women and girls continue to confront tight restrictions on their mobility, and many are not free to travel without a male relative and a burqa."

Their education is also under assault.

"Brutal attacks by armed opposition groups on Afghan teachers, students, and their schools have occurred throughout much of Afghanistan in recent months," Human Rights Watch reports, with at least seventeen assassinations of teachers or other education officials in the last two years. One school a day is now under attack, the group says.

As a result, only 35 percent of gifts attend elementary or middle school, and only 10 percent go on from there, according to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 Human Rights Watch. In five provinces, 90 percent of girls don't attend any school.

At one community mosque, a letter was posted warning girls "to be careful about their safety. If we put acid on their faces or they are murdered, then the blame will be on the parents," the letter said, a mother in Kandahar told Human Rights Watch. Because of the threats, she withdrew her girls from school.

Meanwhile, opium production has reached record levels, up 50 percent in the last year. Now Afghanistan supplies an amazing 92 percent of the world's opium supply.

For this, the Bush Administration has no one to blame but itself. The blunders Donald Rumsfeld has made in Afghanistan--leaving aside Iraq--should have been enough to cashier him long ago. First, he let Osama bin Laden Osama bin Laden: see bin Laden, Osama.  escape from the caves of Tora Bora Tora Bora (Pashto: تورا بورا, “black dust” ), known Locally as Spīn Ghar, is a cave complex situated in the White Mountains (Safed Koh) of eastern Afghanistan (), in the Pachir Wa Agam District of Nangarhar province, . Then, he refused to deploy a sufficient number of troops to restore order throughout Afghanistan. (Sound familiar?) And finally, he was oblivious to the rise of the opium trade.

"Senior Bush Administration officials had displayed a complete lack of interest in the Afghan opium problem ever since 9/11," writes James Risen in State of War. "In fact, the White House and Pentagon went out of their way to avoid taking on the Afghan drug lords from the very outset of U.S. military operations This is a list of missions, operations, and projects. Missions in support of other missions are not listed independently. World War I
''See also List of military engagements of World War I
  • Albion (1917)
 in Afghanistan."

They refused to bomb drug labs. When they stumbled on opium crops and heroin production, they were ordered to ignore them, Risen reports. And they chose not to take on the warlords involved in the drug trade because they didn't want to alienate anyone who might help them hunt down bin Laden. Rumsfeld himself even met with Afghan military commanders who were known as "the godfathers of drug trafficking," Risen writes, quoting Barnett Rubin, a U.S. scholar on Afghanistan. Rubin continued: "The message has been clear: Help fight the Taliban, and no one will interfere with your trafficking."

Now the Taliban itself is deeply involved in the opium trade, and the warlords have proven ineffective in taking on the Taliban. Some of them are even working together.

The blase bla·sé  
adj.
1. Uninterested because of frequent exposure or indulgence.

2. Unconcerned; nonchalant: had a blasé attitude about housecleaning.

3. Very sophisticated.
 attitude of the Pentagon comes through most clearly in a comment by Douglas Feith, then under secretary of defense for policy The Undersecretary of Defense for Policy is the title of a high-level civilian official in the United States Department of Defense. The Undersecretary of Defense for Policy is the principal staff assistant and advisor to both the Secretary of Defense and the Deputy Secretary of , shortly after the Taliban fell from power. "He said we won the war, other people need to be responsible for Afghanistan now," a former National Security Council official told Risen.

But the U.S.-installed government could not get the job done alone. "Afghanistan should be able to rely on its own security within a year," Interim Interior Minister Younis Qanooni said--back in February 2002!

Behind the failure in Afghanistan lies the Iraq obsession. How is it, then, that Afghanistan is near collapse once again?" asks Ahmed Rashid. "To put it briefly, what has gone wrong has been the invasion of Iraq."

The Bush Administration was in such a hurry to get to Iraq that it shortchanged the effort to control Afghanistan, diverted special agents and other resources to Iraq, and loosened the noose on Al Qaeda.

"At the moment when Al Qaeda was most vulnerable, the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area.  relented," Risen writes.

When senior members of Bush's war cabinet "voiced concerns about the ability of Al Qaeda-style terrorists to recruit and gain support on a widespread basis in the Islamic world," Bush shut them up with a facile response, Risen reports. One official told him: "The President dismissed them, saying victory in Iraq would take care of that."

Sam Zarifi is the Asia research director for Human Rights Watch. "We have squandered squan·der  
tr.v. squan·dered, squan·der·ing, squan·ders
1. To spend wastefully or extravagantly; dissipate. See Synonyms at waste.

2.
 a huge amount of political goodwill and military advantage and financial kindness," he says. "We didn't implement enough security at a time when it was obvious that it was needed, and that allowed all the bad guys to come in and do what they always do."

The decision-makers in the Bush Administration "were never really committed to Afghanistan," Zarifi says. "Iraq distracted the United States from the central battlefield in the war on terror This article is about U.S. actions, and those of other states, after September 11, 2001. For other conflicts, see Terrorism.

The War on Terror (also known as the War on Terrorism
, which is here in Afghanistan."

On March 1, Bush made a surprise visit to Kabul to heap praise on Karzai. "We're impressed by the progress that your country is making, Mr. President," Bush told him. "A lot of it has to do with your leadership."

A few months later, Karzai gave his approval to the reinstitution of the Taliban's old Department for the Promotion of Virtue and Prevention of Vice. That agency was notorious for beating women whose socks were too colorful and men whose beards were too short. Now, if parliament approves, it will be coming back.

Liberation is not what it used to be.
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Title Annotation:Comment
Author:Rothschild, Matthew
Publication:The Progressive
Article Type:Column
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Oct 1, 2006
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