Afghanistan is not the United States' longest war.
That tragic distinction belongs to the American
Indian Wars.
By Nicolas J.S. DaviesFebruary 17, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" - The
world is waiting anxiously to see whether the U.S.
and Afghan governments and the Taliban will agree to
a one-week
truce that could set the stage for a "permanent
and comprehensive" ceasefire and the withdrawal of
U.S. and other foreign occupation forces from
Afghanistan. Could the talks be for real this time,
or will they turn out to be just another political smokescreen for
President Trump's addiction to mass
murder and celebrity
whack-a-mole?
If the ceasefire really happens, nobody will be
happier than the Afghans fighting and dying on the
front lines of a war that one described to a BBC
reporter as "not really our fight." Afghan
government troops and police who are suffering the
worst casualties on the front lines of this war told
the BBC they are not fighting out of hatred for the
Taliban or loyalty to the U.S.-backed government,
but out of poverty, desperation and
self-preservation. In this respect, they are caught
in the same excruciating predicament as millions of
other people across the greater Middle East wherever
the United States has turned people's homes and
communities into American "battlefields."
In Afghanistan, U.S.-trained special operations
forces conduct “hunt
and kill” night raids and offensive
operations in Taliban-held territory, backed
by devastating U.S. airpower that kills largely uncounted
numbers of resistance fighters and civilians.
The U.S. dropped a post-2001 record 7,423
bombs and missiles on Afghanistan in 2019.
But as BBC reporter Nanamou Steffensen
explained (listen
here, from 11:40 to 16:50), it
is lightly-armed rank-and-file Afghan soldiers and
police at checkpoints and small defensive
outposts across the country, not the U.S.-backed
elite special operations forces, who suffer the
most appalling level of casualties. President Ghani revealed in
January 2019 that over 45,000 Afghan troops had been
killed since he took office in September 2014,
and by all accounts 2019 was even
deadlier.
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Steffensen traveled around Afghanistan talking to
Afghan soldiers and police at the checkpoints and
small outposts that are the vulnerable front line of
the U.S. war against the Taliban. The troops Steffensen
spoke to told her they only enlisted in the army or
police because they couldn’t find any other work,
and that they received only one month’s training in
the use of an AK-47 and an RPG before being sent to
the front lines. Most are dressed only in t-shirts
and slippers or traditional Afghan clothing,
although a few sport bits and pieces of body armor.
They live in constant fear, “expecting to be overrun
at any moment.” One policeman told Steffensen, “They
don’t care about us. That’s why so many of us die.
It’s up to us to fight or get killed, that’s all.”
In an astonishingly cynical interview,
Afghanistan's national police chief, General Khoshal
Sadat, confirmed the troops’ views of the low value
placed on their lives by the corrupt U.S.-backed
government. General Sadat is a graduate of military
colleges in the U.K. and U.S. who was court-martialed under
President Karzai in 2014 for illegally detaining
people and betraying his country to the U.S. and
U.K. President Ghani promoted
him to head the national police in 2019. Steffensen
asked Sadat about the effect of high casualties on
morale and recruitment. “When you look at
recruitment,” Sadat told her, “I always think about
the Afghan families and how many children they have.
The good thing is there is never a shortage of
fighting-age males who will be able to join the
force.”
In the final interview in Steffensen’s report, a
policeman at a checkpoint for vehicles approaching
Wardak town from Taliban-held territory questioned
the very purpose of the war. He told her, “We
Muslims are all brothers. We don’t have a problem
with each other.” “Then why are you fighting?” she
asked him. He hesitated, laughed nervously and shook
his head in a resigned manner. “You know why. I know
why. It’s not really our fight,” he said.
So why are we all fighting?
The attitudes of the Afghan troops Steffensen
interviewed are shared by people fighting
on both sides of America’s wars. Across the “arc of
instability” that now stretches five thousand
miles from Afghanistan to Mali and beyond, U.S.
“regime change” and “counterterrorism” wars have
turned millions of people's homes and
communities into American “battlefields.” Like the
Afghan recruits Steffensen spoke to, desperate
people have joined armed groups
on all sides, but for reasons that have little to do
with ideology, religion or the sinister motivations
assumed by Western politicians and pundits.
U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice discontinued the
State Department’s annual report on global terrorism
in 2005, after it revealed that the
first three years of the U.S.’s militarized “War on
Terror” had predictably resulted in a global
explosion of terrorism and armed resistance,
the exact opposite of its stated goals. Rice’s
response to the report's revelations was to try
to suppress public awareness of the most
obvious result of the U.S.’s lawless and
destabilizing wars.
Fifteen years later, the U.S. and its
ever-proliferating enemies remain trapped in a cycle
of violence and chaos in which acts of barbarism
by one side only fuel new expansions and escalations
of violence by the other side, with no end in
sight. Researchers have
explored how the chaotic violence and chaos of
America’s wars transform formerly neutral civilians
in country after country into armed combatants.
Consistently across many different war zones, they
have found that the main reason people join armed
groups is to protect themselves, their family or
their community, and that
fighters therefore gravitate to the strongest armed
groups to gain the most protection, with little
regard for ideology.
In 2015, the Center for Civilians in Conflict
(CIVIC), interviewed 250 combatants from
Bosnia, Palestine (Gaza), Libya and Somalia, and
published the results in a
report titled The People’s Perspectives:
Civilians in Armed Conflict. The researchers found
that, “The most common motivation for involvement,
described by interviewees in all four case studies,
was the protection of self or family.”
In 2017, the UN Development Program (UNDP) conducted
a similar survey of 500 people who joined Al-Qaeda,
Boko Haram, Al-Shabaab and other armed groups in
Africa. The UNDP’s
report was titled Journey To Extremism in
Africa: Drivers, Incentives and the Tipping-Point
for Recruitment. Its findings confirmed those of
other studies, and the combatants’ responses on the
precise “tipping-point” for recruitment were
especially enlightening.
“A striking 71%,” the report found, “pointed to
‘government action’, including ‘killing of a family
member or friend’ or ‘arrest of a family member or
friend’, as the incident that prompted them to
join.” The UNDP concluded, “State security-actor
conduct is revealed as a prominent accelerant of
recruitment, rather than the reverse.”
The U.S. government is so corrupted by powerful
military-industrial interests that it clearly has no
interest in learning from these studies, any more
than from its own long experience of illegal
and catastrophic war-making. To routinely declare
that "all options are on the table," including the
use of military force, is a violation of the UN
Charter, which prohibits the threat as well as
the use of force against other nations precisely
because such vague, open-ended threats so
predictably lead to war.
But the more clearly the American
public understands the falsehood and the moral,
legal and political bankruptcy of the justifications
for our country's disastrous wars, the more clearly
we can challenge the absurd claims
of warmongering politicians whose policies offer the
world only more death, destruction and
chaos. Trump's blundering, murderous Iran
policy is only the latest example, and, despite
its catastrophic results, U.S. militarism remains tragically
bipartisan, with a few honorable exceptions.
When the U.S. stops killing people and bombing
their homes, and the world starts helping people to
support and protect themselves and their families
without joining U.S.-backed armed forces or the
armed groups they are fighting, then and only then
will the raging conflicts that U.S. militarism has
ignited across the world begin to subside.
Afghanistan is not the United States' longest
war. That tragic distinction belongs to the American
Indian Wars, which lasted from the founding of
the country until the last Apache warriors were
captured in 1924. But the U.S. war in Afghanistan is
the longest of the anachronistic and predictably
unwinnable neoimperial wars the U.S. has fought
since 1945.
As an Afghan taxi driver in Vancouver told me in
2009, "We defeated the Persian Empire in the 18th
century. We defeated the British in the 19th
century. We defeated the Soviet Union in the 20th
century. Now, with NATO, we are fighting 28
countries, but we will defeat them too." I never
doubted him for a minute. But why would America's
leaders, in their delusions of empire and obsession
with budget-busting weapons technology, ever listen
to an Afghan taxi driver?
Nicolas J S Davies is the
author of Blood On Our Hands: the American
Invasion and Destruction of Iraq.
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