Afghanistan-‘Small’Western Propaganda Lies, Huge
Impact
By Andre
Vltchek
April 02,
2017 "Information
Clearing House"
- Ask anyone on the streets of Kabul about the
revolutions that in recent years transformed
huge parts of Latin America, and the chances are
you’ll encounter a blank stare. Perhaps
mentioning Cuba could evoke at least some
recognition, but definitely not Venezuela,
Ecuador or Bolivia. I know because I tried on
several occasions, and I failed.
Ask in the
marvelous historic city of Herat, with its huge
minarets and Italian military contingent, about
Western imperialism, or about NATO and its
murderous campaigns all over the world, and
chances are that your question won’t even be
understood.
“Chances
are that those Afghan people who can speak
English or other Western languages, are now
actually working for the Westerners; either for
their military, or for their ‘defense’
contractors… or for the embassies, the United
Nations, or perhaps some NGO”, explained an
Asian reporter who is based in Afghanistan for
more than two decades. “These people are not
going to rock the boat, dwelling on crimes
committed by the West, here and all over the
world.”
That
appears to be the case.
After more
than 15 years of brutal Western occupation,
Afghanistan appears to be thoroughly ruined. Not
only in terms of its infrastructure and
standards of living, and not only when it comes
to all basic indicators like life expectancy
(15th lowest in the world, according to the WHO,
2015) or education: all those things I expected.
But
perhaps even more significantly, the country is
destroyed morally and intellectually.
The only
resistance the West is facing here, comes from
extremist groups and movements such as the
Taliban and Daesh (ISIS). All intellectual and
artistic struggles against the occupation have
been destroyed, contained, bought, or frightened
into near absolute silence.
In fact,
the occupation’ is not even called ‘occupation’,
anymore. Pragmatic, opportunistic definitions
are increasingly taking over those once
mainstream narratives. As I was informed by a
wealthy family on an outing in the Panjshir
Valley:
“We
are fully dependent on the presence of NATO
troops in our country. Only foreigners are
offering us well-paid and stable jobs. If
they leave, we’d have to follow them; to
emigrate to the United States or Europe.”
This is
far from the once proud and brave Afghanistan,
which managed to defeat British invaders, after
that delivering a mortal blow to the Soviet
Union.
While in
the country, I tried to investigate and to
analyze; how on earth did Afghanistan end up on
its knees? What force, what strategy was applied
to break what appeared to be shatterproof?
It was
clear that the West has managed to unleash and
to uphold a very complex and tremendously
successful indoctrination campaign, enslaving
the nation by applying various ‘weapons’, which
it has used in all corners of the world.
One of
those ‘weapons’ is, of course, ‘education’. For
instance the American University of Kabul is
literally regurgitating thousands of young sons
and daughters of the elites, who are set on
staying, after the proper dose of indoctrination
and colorful diplomas, permanently loyal to the
West. The nation’s curriculum, I was told, has
been defined during long meetings at the US
Embassy and at the offices of the World Bank.
There is
virtually an absolute control of information and
media. As in all countries occupied by the West,
as well as in all client states, the so-called
social media plays a vital role, setting
tendencies and directing discussion patterns.
There is
rigorous grooming of oppressive local
governments, military and police, the
institutions that are then always ready to
suppress any open criticism of the Western
occupation, or even the word ‘occupation’
itself.
Then,
naturally, as in all neo-colonies, there is that
deadly interdependency between the elites and
the West.
An
academic Prof Jawid Amin from the Academy of
Social Sciences of Afghanistan explained to me,
bitterly, during our short encounter in Kabul:
“We
don’t have anyone openly critical of the US
or the West here, because it is simply not
allowed by the government. I personally
don’t like the Americans, but I can’t tell
you anything else… Even I work for the
government. My brother and sister, as well
as other relatives, are living in the United
States. About critical arts: nothing could
be exhibited here without permission from
the government and since Karzai, the
government is controlled by the West…”
*
To
discredit the former Soviet Union as well as the
present-day Russia, and to smear China by all
available indoctrination means, is one of the
main goals of the Western propagandists and
their local lackeys.
It is
because, if unchecked, both China and Russia
could steal the hearts and minds of the local
people.
China’s
impressive plan for virtually all Central Asian
countries, called OBOR (“One Belt One Road”),
was never allowed to be fully presented for
discussion to the local population. It is
particularly absurd, even grotesque, considering
that China considers Afghanistan to be an
extremely important potential partner in the
region.
The OBOR
puts great accent on supporting local cultures,
on true independence of the countries of Central
Asia and beyond, and on the massive development
of infrastructure, from telecommunication super
highways, to real highways, railroads and
airports, as well as ‘social infrastructure’,
which would include schools, hospitals, public
housing and sport facilities.
Implementing OBOR would create millions of new
jobs for the local people, something crucial in
a country like Afghanistan, where even in the
capital Kabul (according to many calculations)
the unemployment rate has reached about 50%, and
over 80% in many provincial capitals and the
countryside.
For the
West, smearing China is essential. It has been
building huge hospital wings, instead of
watchtowers, which means it has been providing
the wrong example to Afghan people, raising
wrong expectations.
The best
example of the toxic anti-Chinese propaganda has
been Mes Aynak. This ancient archeological site
contains many priceless cultural treasures, some
over 5.000 years old.
It is also
located in the area of arguably the greatest
copper deposits in the region.
Several
years ago, a Chinese state-owned company (MCC)
signed a MOU with the Afghan government. The
company paid for the mining rights, but until
now has not extracted one single kilogram of
copper, despite pressure from the Afghan
Ministry of Mines and Petroleum, which has been
pushing for an immediate start to the excavation
work. Why? Because the Chinese government gave
orders to MCC to wait, so the archeological
treasures could be safely excavated and
preserved for the sake of Afghanistan and the
world.
I was
explained by various international experts based
in Kabul, that the Chinese President Xi Jinping
declared at the Preliminary Session of the UN
General Conference in New York, in November
2016, that his idea of OBOR is in fact a New
Silk Road, and that it is based on the economic
cooperation and on the promotion of the cultural
preservation in the countries of the former Silk
Road. Again, Afghanistan is clearly one of the
most significant countries.
The Afghan
Ministry of Mines and Petroleum has for years
been locked in a dispute with the hopelessly
inept and disorganized (according to several of
my sources who prefer to remain anonymous)
Ministry of Information and Culture.
Corruption
also appears to be a serious issue.
Until now,
MCC has absolutely not done anything, except for
some preliminary geological surveys conducted in
2008 and 2009. The company is losing a
substantial amount of money, annually, but the
orders from Beijing are clear: first the
preservation of cultural treasures, and only
then, economic interests.
A similar
approach would of course be unthinkable from any
Western mining company, many of which are
murdering and displacing the local population,
in such places as Papua or South America. That
is why the professional propaganda has to be
applied, and all good intentions dragged through
dirt. This sort of ideological warfare is
actually one of the mightiest weapons of Western
imperialism, implemented in virtually all
corners of the globe.
In March
2017, the Head of the Culture Unit of UNESCO,
Mr. Masanori Nagaoka, told me clearly and
frankly:
“The
Chinese company (MCC) has not yet commenced
any copper exploitation activity at the site
… It is because they respect the Afghan
government’s wish to preserve the cultural
artifacts of Mes Aynak.”
UNESCO is
now deeply involved in the process of saving all
the valuable finds of the site.
I was
shown several up to date photographs, proving
that no work has yet begun, and that at Mes
Aynak, absolutely no damage has been done to the
cultural heritage of Afghanistan.
However,
the more evidence there is proving that nothing
sinister has happened, the more toxic the
eruption of propaganda against China and its
presence in Afghanistan, virtually all coming
from Western and West-sponsored outlets. Entire
‘documentary films’ have been produced and
broadcast, recounting the non-existent ‘crimes’
which have been, or ‘could soon be’, committed
by China against Afghan culture.
The most
notorious is a documentary film by Brent E.
Huffman, which was broadcast, among others, by
Al-Jazeera. To quote from its own site, the film
is addressing “A race against time to save a
5,000-year-old archaeological site in
Afghanistan threatened by a Chinese state-owned
copper mine.”
Ms. Hiromi
Yasui, a Kyodo News reporter who is based in
Afghanistan since 1993, confirmed what I already
heard from several independent sources:
“At
Mes Aynak, there is no digging whatsoever…
The Ministry of Mines and Petroleum wants
work to commence soon. Therefore, there is a
clash between them and the Ministry of
Information and Culture. Lots of money
disappeared, too… there is corruption…
Regarding China, whenever there is a
slightest chance that it could be doing
something wrong, an anti-Chinese propaganda
gets immediately activated.”
Now
several legendary Chinese institutions of
learning, including Renmin University and
Northwest University in Xi’an, are getting
involved, trying to help with the preservation
of the site. This news is, however, hardly ever
heard in Afghanistan and abroad.
“The
propaganda against China or Soviet Union now
Russia, is of course nothing new”, explained a
renowned Afghan intellectual, Dr. Omara Khan
Masoudi, who used to be, among many other
things, the former head of the National Museum:
“During the Cold War, the propaganda was
truly extreme. Even such publications like
‘Le Monde’; they were writing that some of
our greatest treasures were looted and
siphoned to Moscow… We knew it was a lie,
because we had hidden the treasures
ourselves, in the premises of the
Presidential Palace, and in the Ministries.
And what was our answer to the Western
propaganda? We created a small, one-day
exhibition of our Afghan treasures, just
50-60 of the most important pieces,
displayed for 2-3 hours, demonstrating that
they are all still on the territory of our
country”.
*
While
other countries are trying to build and
preserve, the United States and the west could
hardly show any coherent strategy for how to
help the country they have been persistently
ruining for decades and centuries. Despite the
huge sums of money spent, almost nothing
tangible was constructed here since 2001. That
is, if the monstrous air force bases like the
one at Bagram do not particularly impress you,
or those bizarrely tall concrete walls that
could be seen everywhere, or the endless
surveillance cameras, towers and drones, as well
as the military centers at every corner, stuffed
with grotesquely overpaid foreign ‘contractors’.
Andrew J.
Bacevich wrote for the New York Times on 14
March 2017, trying to define (in the “Opinion”
column) the chaos and perplexity of the ‘longest
American war’:
“Despite appropriating over three-quarters
of a trillion dollars on Afghanistan since
2001, Afghan security forces continue to be
plagued by the problem of inflated rolls,
with local commanders pocketing
American-supplied funds to pay for
nonexistent soldiers…”
“Large-scale corruption persists, with
Afghanistan third from the bottom in
international rankings… Adjusted for
inflation, American spending to reconstruct
Afghanistan now exceeds the total expended
to rebuild all of Western Europe under the
Marshall Plan; yet to have any hope of
surviving, the Afghan government will for
the foreseeable future remain almost
completely dependent on outside support.”
“And
things are getting worse. Although the
United States has invested $70 billion in
rebuilding Afghan security forces, only 63
percent of the country’s districts are under
government control, with significant
territory lost to the Taliban over the past
year. Though the United States has spent
$8.5 billion to battle narcotics in
Afghanistan, opium production there has
reached an all-time high.”
After
this, Andrew J. Bacevich makes a dramatic
conclusion:
”For
this, over the past 15 years, nearly 2,400
American soldiers have died, and 20,000 more
have been wounded.”
Oh, that
bad, terrible Afghanistan – money guzzling,
ungrateful and corrupt monster-state!
Of course
anyone who has recently visited the country, and
who is in possession of at least some ability of
thinking objectively, must be rolling on the
floor, dying from laughter, after consuming such
reports.
Where is
‘over a three-quarters of a trillion dollars’
visible ‘on the ground’? Ask the internally
displaced people who are pouring into Kabul from
all corners of the country, escaping misery,
joblessness and fighting. They have nothing;
absolutely nothing!
Let’s do
some simple math: three quarters of a trillion
is 750 billion. Dollars. Afghanistan has almost
32 million inhabitants (estimate, 2014). Divide
750 billion by 32 million and you get 23,437
dollars and 50 cents, per capita per 15 years.
Even a tiny Afghan family of two adults and two
children could then count on $93,750! Which
would be $6,250 per basic tiny family unit per
year, for 15 consecutive years. Lucky, lucky
country, Afghanistan!
Just a
reminder, that with those mountains of money,
since 2001, the United States didn’t build a
single mile of a railroad, no large public
hospital or a public housing block.
So where
did the money go? Could it be possible that the
West itself has wasted it on its greatest
addiction – a perpetual conflict and chaos?
Could it be that the Afghan people are simply
being used, even sacrificed – that their nation
is sinking into deeper and deeper poverty, their
culture changing or disappearing altogether,
their hope for recovery and better life now
almost gone – just so that this tremendous
‘recycling action’ of three-quarters of a
trillion dollars could go on and on?
The
Afghanistan war, ‘the longest in the US
history’, is yet another ‘secret war’ of the
Empire. Everyone knows that it exists, but no
one seems to understand what it is all about.
In the
meantime, 2,400 American ‘boys and girls’ have
already died. If anything, this seems to be the
only preoccupation in the West.
I’m
wondering how many have Afghans died? How many
millions have been forced to become refugees,
how many millions are now internally displaced?
Do they matter; do they count? Nobody seems to
talk about them. How many lives were lost,
really; how many were broken, thoroughly ruined?
In the
meantime, many Western reports and documentary
films are more preoccupied with such issues as a
Chinese mining company and the worries that ‘one
day it may actually start digging’.
Andre Vltchek is a philosopher, novelist,
filmmaker and investigative journalist. He has
covered wars and conflicts in dozens of
countries. Three of his latest books are
revolutionary novel
“Aurora”
and two bestselling works of political
non-fiction: “Exposing
Lies Of The Empire”
and “Fighting
Against Western Imperialism”.
View his other books
here.
Andre is making films for teleSUR and Al-Mayadeen.
Watch
Rwanda
Gambit,
his groundbreaking documentary about Rwanda and
DRCongo. After having lived in Latin America,
Africa and Oceania, Vltchek presently resides in
East Asia and the Middle East, and continues to
work around the world. He can be reached through
his website
and his
Twitter.
The
views expressed in this article are solely those
of the author and do not necessarily reflect the
opinions of Information Clearing House.