May 06, 2021 "Information
Clearing House" - -
"Asia
Times"
- " One cannot but feel mildly
amused at the theatrical spectacle of the US
troop pullout from Afghanistan, its completion
day now postponed for maximum PR impact to 9/11,
2021.
Nearly two decades and a staggering US$2 trillion
after this Forever War was launched by a now
immensely indebted empire, the debacle can certainly
be interpreted as a warped version of Mission
Accomplished.
“They make a desert and call it peace,” said
Tacitus – but in all of the vastness of the Pentagon
there sits not a single flack who could imagine
getting away with baldfacedly spinning the Afghan
wasteland as peaceful.
Even the UN bureaucratic machinery has not been
able to properly account for Afghan civilian deaths;
at best they settled for 100,000 in only ten years.
Add to that toll countless “collateral” deaths
provoked by the massive social and economic
consequences of the war.
Training and weaponizing the – largely
inefficient – 300,000-plus Afghan Army cost $87
billion. “Economic aid and reconstruction” cost $54
billion: literally invisible hospitals and schools
dot the Afghan landscape. A local chapter of the
“war on drugs” cost $10 billion – at least with
(inverted) tangible results: Afghanistan now
generates 80% of the world’s opium.
All these embarrassing facts disappear under the
shadow play of 2,500 “official” departing troops.
What really matters is who’s staying: by no means
just a few out of some 17,000 “contractors,” over
6,000 of whom are American citizens.
“Contractor” is a lovely euphemism for a bunch of
mercenaries who, perfectly in tune with a shadow
privatization drive, will now mingle with Special
Forces teams and covert intel ops to conduct a still
lethal variation of hybrid war.
Of course this development won’t replicate those
David Bowie-style
Golden Years in the immediate post-9/11 era. Ten
years ago, following the Obama-Petraeus surge, no
fewer than 90,000 contractors were dancing to the
Hindu Kush groove, lavishly compensated by the
Pentagon and dabbling in everything from
construction, transportation and maintenance to
“enhanced interrogation services.”
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Collectively, this
shadow army, a triumph of private enterprise
many times cheaper than the state-sponsored model,
bagged
at least $104 billion since 2002, and nearly $9
billion since 2016.
Now we’re supposed to trust CENTCOM commander
General Kenneth McKenzie, who swears that “the U.S.
contractors will come out as we come out.”
Apparently the Pentagon press secretary
was not briefed: “So on the contractors, we
don’t know exactly.”
Some contractors are already in trouble, like
Fluor Corporation, which is involved in maintenance
and camp construction for no fewer than 70 Pentagon
forward operating bases in northern Afghanistan.
Incidentally, no Pentagon PR is explaining whether
these FOBs will completely vanish.
Fluor was benefitting from something called
LOGCAP – Logistics Civil Augmentation IV Program – a
scheme set by the Pentagon at the start of
Obama-Biden 1.0 to “outsource logistical military
support.” Its initial five-year deal was worth a
cool $7 billion. Now Fluor is being sued
for fraud.
Enhancing stability forever
The current government in Kabul is led by a
virtual nonentity, Ashraf Ghani. Like his
sartorially glamorous predecessor Hamid Karzai,
Ghani is a US creature, lording it over a rambling
military force financed by Washington to the tune of
$4 billion a year.
So of course Ghani is entitled to spin a rosy
outlook for an
Afghan peace process on the pages of Foreign
Affairs.
It gets curioser and curioser when we add the
incandescent issue that may have provoked the
Forever War in the first place: al-Qaeda.
A
“former security coordinator for Osama bin Laden”
is now peddling the idea that al-Qaeda may be back
in the Hindu Kush. Yet, according to Afghan
diplomats, there is no evidence that the Taliban
will allow old-school al-Qaeda – the Osama/al-Zawahiri
incarnation – to thrive again.
That’s despite the fact that Washington, for all
practical purposes, has ditched the Doha Agreement
signed in February 2020, which stipulated that the
troop pullout should have happened this past
Saturday, May 1.
Of course, we can always count on the Pentagon to
“enhance security and stability” in
Afghanistan. In this Pentagon report we learn that
“AQIS [al-Qaeda in the Indian Subcontinent]
routinely supports and works with low-level Taliban
members in its efforts to undermine the Afghan
government, and maintains an enduring interest in
attacking US forces and Western targets.”
Well, what the Pentagon does not tell us is how
old-school al-Qaeda, pre-AQIS, metastasized into a
galaxy of “moderate rebels” now ensconced in Idlib,
Syria. And how contingents of Salafi-jihadis were
able to access mysterious transportation corridors
to bolster the ranks of ISIS-Khorasan in
Afghanistan.
The CIA heroin ratline
All you need to know, reported on the ground,
about the crucial first years of the imperial
adventure in Afghanistan is to be found in the Asia
Times e-book
Forever Wars, part 1.
Two decades later, the politico-intel combo
behind Biden is now spinning that the end of this
particular Forever War is an imperative, integrated
to the latest
US National Security Strategy.
Shadow play once again reigns. Withdrawal
conditionals include the incompetence and corruption
of the Afghan military and security forces; that
notorious Taliban-al-Qaeda re-engagement; the fight
for women’s rights; and acknowledging the supreme
taboo: this ain’t no withdrawal because a
substantial Special Forces contingent will stay in
place.
In a nutshell: for the US deep state, leaving
Afghanistan is anathema.
The real heart of the matter in Afghanistan
concerns drugs and geopolitics – and their toxic
intersection.
Everyone with transit in the Dubai-Kandahar axis
and its ramifications knows that the global-spanned
opium and heroin business is a matter very close to
the CIA’s heart. Secure air transport is offered by
bases in Afghanistan and neighboring Kyrgyzstan.
William Engdahl has offered a
concise breakdown of how it works. In the
immediate post-9/11 days, in Afghanistan, the main
player in the opium trade was none other than Ahmed
Wali Karzai, presidential brother and a CIA asset. I
interviewed him in Quetta, Balochistan’s capital, in
October 2001 (the interview can be found in
Forever Wars). He obviously did not talk about
opium.
Ahmed Karzai was snuffed out in a Mafia-style hit
at home, in Helmand, in 2011. Helmand happens to be
Afghanistan’s Opium Central. In 2017, following on
previous investigations by Seymour Hersh and Alfred
McCoy, among others, I detailed the workings of the CIA
heroin ratline in Afghanistan.
New Great Game 3.0 is on
Whatever happens next will involve layers and
layers of shadow play. CENTCOM’s McKenzie, at a
closed-door hearing at the US House Armed Services
Committee, basically said they are still “figuring
out” what to do next.
That will certainly involve, in McKenzie’s own
assessment, “counter-terrorism operations within the
region”; “expeditionary basing” (linguistic
diversion to imply there won’t be any permanent
bases, at least in thesis); and “assistance” to
Afghan National Defense and Security Forces (no
details on what this “assistance” will consist of).
Now compare it with the view by major Eurasian
powers: Russia, China, Pakistan and Iran, three of
them members of the Shanghai Cooperation
Organization (SCO), with Iran as an observer and
soon full member.
Their number one priority is to prevent any
mutating Afghan jihadi virus to contaminate Central
Asia. A massive 50,000 troop-strong
Russia-Tajikistan military exercise in late April
had exactly that in mind.
Ministers of defense of the Collective Security
Treaty Organization (CSTO) met in Dushanbe with the
objective of further fortifying the porous
Tajik-Afghan border.
And then there’s the Turkmen-Afghan border, from
which the opium/heroin trail reaches the Caspian Sea
and diversifies via Russia, Kazakhstan and
Azerbaijan. Moscow, even more than the CSTO, is
particularly worried by this stretch of the trail.
The Russians are very much aware that even more
than different opium/heroin routes springing up, the
top danger is a new influx of Salafi-jihadis into
the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS).
Even if analyzing it from completely different
perspectives, Americans and Russians seem to be
equally focused on what Salafi-jihadists – and their
handlers – may come up with in post-9/11, 2021
Afghanistan.
So let’s go back to Doha, where something really
intriguing is afoot.
On April 30, a so-called extended troika –
Russia, the United States, China and Pakistan –
issued a
joint statement in Doha on their discussions
regarding a negotiated settlement in Afghanistan.
The extended troika met with the Kabul
government, the Taliban and host Qatar. At least
they agreed there should be “no military solution.”
It gets curioser and curioser again: Turkey,
backed by Qatar and the UN, is getting ready to host
a conference to further bridge the gap between the
Kabul government and the Taliban. Realpolitik cynics
will have a ball wondering what Erdogan is scheming
at.
The extended troika, at least rhetorically, is in
favor of an “independent, sovereign, unified,
peaceful, democratic, neutral and self-sufficient
Afghanistan.” Talk about a lofty undertaking. It
remains to be seen how Afghanistan’s “neutrality”
can be guaranteed in such a nest of New Great Game
serpents.
Beijing and Moscow will be under no illusions
that the newly privatized, Special Forces
Afghan-American experiment will eschew using
Salafi-jihadis, radicalized Uighurs or other instant
assets to destabilize what in effect should be the
incorporation of Afghanistan to the China-Pakistan
Economic Corridor (CPEC), the Shanghai Cooperation
Organization (where it’s already an observer) and
the larger Eurasia integration project.
An extra-intriguing piece of the puzzle is that a
very pragmatic Russia – unlike its historical ally
India – is not against including the Taliban in an
overall Afghan settlement. New Delhi will have to go
along. As for Islamabad, the only thing that
matters, as always, is to have a friendly government
in Kabul. That good old “strategic depth” obsession.
What the major players – Russia and China – see
in the framework of a minimally stabilized
Afghanistan is yet one more step to consolidate the
evolution of the New Silk Roads in parallel with the
Greater Eurasia partnership. That’s exactly the
message Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov
delivered during his recent visit to Pakistan.
Now compare it with the – never explicit –
strategic deep state aim: to keep some sort of
military-intel “forward operating base” in the
absolutely crucial node between Central and South
Asia and close, oh so close, to national security
“threats” Russia and China.
The New Great Game 3.0 is just beginning at the
graveyard of empires.
Pepe Escobar is
correspondent-at-large at
Asia Times.
His latest book is
2030. Follow him on
Facebook.-
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