The
Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan back with a bang
The US 'loss' of Afghanistan is a repositioning and
the new mission is not a 'war on terror,' but Russia
and China
By Pepe Escobar
Wait until the war is
over
And we’re both a little
older
The unknown soldier
Breakfast where the news is
read
Television children fed
Unborn living, living, dead
Bullet strikes the helmet’s
head
And it’s all over
For the unknown soldier
The Doors, “The
Unknown Soldier”
August 16, 2021"Information
Clearing House" - "Asia
Times"
In the end, the
Saigon moment happened faster than any Western
intel “expert” expected. This is one for the annals:
four frantic days that wrapped up the most
astonishing guerrilla blitzkrieg of recent times.
Afghan-style: lots of persuasion, lots of tribal
deals, zero columns of tanks, minimal loss of blood.
August 12 set the scene, with the nearly
simultaneous capture of Ghazni, Kandahar and Herat.
On August 13, the Taliban were only 50 kilometers
from Kabul. August 14 started with the siege of
Maidan Shahr, the gateway to Kabul.
Ismail Khan, the legendary elder Lion of Herat,
struck a self-preservation deal and was sent by the
Taliban as a top-flight messenger to Kabul:
President Ashraf Ghani should step out, or else.
Still on Saturday, the Taliban took Jalalabad –
and isolated Kabul from the east, all the way to the
Afgan-Pakistan border in Torkham, gateway to the
Khyber Pass. By Saturday night, Marshal Dostum was
fleeing with a bunch of military to Uzbekistan via
the Friendship Bridge in Termez; only a few were
allowed in. The Taliban duly took over Dostum’s Tony
Montana-style palace.
By early morning on August 15, all that was left
for the Kabul administration was the Panjshir valley
– high in the mountains, a naturally protected
fortress – and scattered Hazaras: there’s nothing
there in those beautiful central lands, except
Bamiyan.
Exactly 20 years ago, I was in Bazarak getting
ready to
interview the Lion of the Panjshir, commander
Masoud, who was preparing a counter-offensive
against … the Taliban. History repeating, with a
twist. This time I was sent visual proof that the
Taliban – following the classic guerrilla sleeping
cell playbook – were already in the Panjshir.
And then mid-morning on Sunday brought the
stunning visual re-enactment of the Saigon moment,
for all the world to see: a Chinook helicopter
hovering over the roof of the American embassy in
Kabul.
The war is over’
Still on Sunday, Taliban spokesman Mohammad Naeem
proclaimed: “The war is over in Afghanistan,” adding
that the shape of the new government would soon be
announced.
Facts on the ground are way more convoluted.
Feverish negotiations have been going on since
Sunday afternoon. The Taliban were ready to announce
the official proclamation of the Islamic Emirate of
Afghanistan in its 2.0 version (1.0 was from 1996 to
2001). The official announcement would be made
inside the presidential palace.
Yet what’s left of Team Ghani was refusing to
transfer power to a coordinating council that will
de facto set up the transition. What the Taliban
want is a seamless transition: they are now the
Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan. Case closed.
By Monday, a sign of compromise came from Taliban
spokesman Suhail Shaheen. The new government will
include non-Taliban officials. He was referring to
an upcoming “transition administration,” most
probably co-directed by Taliban political leader
Mullah Baradar and Ali Ahmad Jalali, a former
minister of internal affairs who was also, in the
past, an employee of Voice of America.
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In the end, there was no Battle for Kabul.
Thousands of Taliban were already inside
Kabul – once again the classic sleeper-cell
playbook. The bulk of their forces remained in the
outskirts. An official Taliban proclamation ordered
them not to enter the city, which should be captured
without a fight, to prevent civilian casualties.
The Taliban did advance from the west, but
“advancing,” in context, meant connecting to the
sleeper cells in Kabul, which by then were fully
active. Tactically, Kabul was encircled in an
“anaconda” move, as defined by a Taliban commander:
squeezed from north, south and west and, with the
capture of Jalalabad, cut off from the east.
At some point last week, high-level intel must
have whispered to the Taliban command that the
Americans would be coming to “evacuate.” It could
have been Pakistan intelligence, even Turkish
intelligence, with Erdogan playing his
characteristic NATO double game.
The American rescue cavalry not only came late,
but was caught in a bind as they could not possibly
bomb their own assets inside Kabul. The horrible
timing was compounded when the Bagram military base
– the NATO Valhalla in Afghanistan for nearly 20
years – was finally captured by the Taliban.
That led the US and NATO to literally beg
the Taliban to let them evacuate everything in sight
from Kabul – by air, in haste, at the Taliban’s
mercy. A geopolitical development that evokes
suspension of disbelief.
Ghani versus Baradar
Ghani’s hasty escape is the stuff of “a tale told
by an idiot, signifying nothing” – without the
Shakespearean pathos. The heart of the whole matter
was a last-minute meeting on Sunday morning between
former President Hamid Karzai and Ghani’s perennial
rival Abdullah Abdullah.
They discussed in detail who they were going to
send to negotiate with the Taliban – who by then not
only were fully prepared for a possible battle for
Kabul, but had announced their immovable red line
weeks ago – they want the end of the current NATO
government.
Commenting on Ghani’s escape, Abdullah Abdullah
did not mince his words: “God will hold him
accountable.” Ghani, an anthropologist with a
doctorate from Columbia, is one of those classic
cases of Global South exiles to the West who
“forget” everything that matters about their
original lands.
Ghani is a Pashtun who acted like an arrogant New
Yorker. Or worse, an entitled Pashtun, as he was
often demonizing the Taliban, who are overwhelmingly
Pashtun, not to mention Tajiks, Uzbeks and Hazaras,
including their tribal elders.
It’s as if Ghani and his Westernized team had
never learned from a top source such as the late,
great Norwegian social anthropologist Fredrik Barth
(check out a sample of his Pashtun studies
here).
Geopolitically, what matters now is how the
Taliban have written a whole new script, showing the
lands of Islam, as well as the Global South, how to
defeat the self-referential, seemingly invincible
US/NATO empire.
The Taliban did it with Islamic faith, infinite
patience and force of will fueling roughly 78,000
fighters – 60,000 of them active – many with minimal
military training, no backing of any state – unlike
Vietnam, which had China and the USSR – no hundreds
of billions of dollars from NATO, no trained army,
no air force and no state-of-the-art technology.
They relied only on Kalashnikovs,
rocket-propelled grenades and Toyota pick-ups –
before they captured American hardware these past
few days, including drones and helicopters.
Taliban leader Mullah Baradar has been extremely
cautious. On Monday he said: “It is too early to say
how we will take over governance.” First of all, the
Taliban wants “to see foreign forces leave before
restructuring begins.”
Abdul Ghani Baradar is a very interesting
character. He was born and raised in Kandahar.
That’s where the Taliban started in 1994, seizing
the city almost without a fight and then, equipped
with tanks, heavy weapons and a lot of cash to bribe
local commanders, capturing Kabul nearly 25 years
ago, on September 27, 1996.
Earlier, Mullah Baradar fought in the 1980s jihad
against the USSR, and maybe – not confirmed –
side-by-side with Mullah Omar, with whom he
co-founded the Taliban.
After the American bombing and occupation
post-9/11, Mullah Baradar and a small group of
Taliban sent a proposal to then-President Hamid
Karzai on a potential deal that would allow the
Taliban to recognize the new regime. Karzai, under
Washington pressure, rejected it.
Baradar was actually arrested in Pakistan in 2010
– and kept in custody. Believe it or not, American
intervention led to his freedom in 2018. He
then relocated to Qatar. And that’s where he was
appointed head of the Taliban’s political office and
oversaw the signing last year of the American
withdrawal deal.
Baradar will be the new ruler in Kabul – but it’s
important to note he’s under the authority of the
Taliban Supreme Leader since 2016, Haibatullah
Akhundzada. It’s the Supreme Leader – actually a
spiritual guide – who will be lording over the new
incarnation of the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan.
Beware of a peasant guerrilla army
The collapse of the Afghan National Army (ANA)
was inevitable. They were “educated” the American
military way: massive technology, massive airpower,
next to zero local ground intel.
The Taliban is all about deals with tribal elders
and extended family connections – and a peasant
guerrilla approach, parallel to the communists in
Vietnam. They were biding their time for years, just
building connections – and those sleeper cells.
Afghan troops who had not received a salary for
months were paid not to fight them. And the fact
they did not attack American troops since February
2020 earned them a lot of extra respect: a matter of
honor, essential in the Pashtunwali code.
It’s impossible to understand the Taliban – and
most of all, the Pashtun universe – without
understanding Pashtunwali. As well as the concepts
of honor, hospitality and inevitable revenge for any
wrongdoing, the concept of freedom implies no
Pashtun is inclined to be ordered by a central state
authority – in this case, Kabul. And no way will
they ever surrender their guns.
In a nutshell, that’s the “secret” of the
lightning-fast blitzkrieg with minimal loss of
blood, inbuilt in the overarching geopolitical
earthquake. After Vietnam, this is the second Global
South protagonist showing the whole world how an
empire can be defeated by a peasant guerrilla army.
And all that accomplished with a budget that may
not exceed $1.5 billion a year – coming from local
taxes, profits from opium exports (no internal
distribution allowed) and real estate speculation.
In vast swaths of Afghanistan, the Taliban were
already, de facto, running local security, local
courts and even food distribution.
Taliban 2021 is an entirely different animal
compared with Taliban 2001. Not only are they
battle-hardened, they had plenty of time to perfect
their diplomatic skills, which were recently more
than visible in Doha and in high-level visits to
Tehran, Moscow and Tianjin.
They know very well that any connection with
al-Qaeda remnants, ISIS/Daesh, ISIS-Khorasan and
ETIM is counter-productive – as their Shanghai
Cooperation Organization interlocutors made very
clear.
Internal unity, anyway, will be extremely hard to
achieve. The Afghan tribal maze is a jigsaw puzzle,
nearly impossible to crack. What the Taliban may
realistically achieve is a loose confederation of
tribes and ethnic groups under a Taliban emir,
coupled with very careful management of social
relations.
Initial impressions point to increased maturity.
The Taliban are granting amnesty to employees of the
NATO occupation and won’t interfere with businesses
activities. There will be no revenge campaign. Kabul
is back in business. There is allegedly no mass
hysteria in the capital: that’s been the exclusive
domain of Anglo-American mainstream media. The
Russian and Chinese embassies remain open for
business.
Zamir Kabulov, the Kremlin special representative
for Afghanistan, has confirmed that the situation in
Kabul, surprisingly, is “absolutely calm” – even as
he reiterated: “We are not in a rush as far as
recognition [of the Taliban] is concerned. We will
wait and watch how the regime will behave.”
The New Axis of Evil
Tony Blinken may blabber that “we were in
Afghanistan for one overriding purpose – to deal
with the folks who attacked us on 9/11.
Every serious analyst knows that the “overriding”
geopolitical purpose of the bombing and occupation
of Afghanistan nearly 20 years ago was to establish
an essential Empire of Bases foothold in the
strategic intersection of Central and South Asia,
subsequently coupled with occupying Iraq in
Southwest Asia.
Now the “loss” of Afghanistan should be
interpreted as a repositioning. It fits the new
geopolitical configuration, where the Pentagon’s top
mission is not the “war on terror” anymore, but to
simultaneously try to isolate Russia and harass
China by all means on the expansion of the New Silk
Roads.
Occupying smaller nations has ceased to be a
priority. The Empire of Chaos can always foment
chaos – and supervise assorted bombing raids – from
its CENTCOM base in Qatar.
Iran is about to join the Shanghai Cooperation
Organization as a full member – another
game-changer. Even before resetting the Islamic
Emirate, the Taliban have carefully cultivated good
relations with key Eurasia players – Russia, China,
Pakistan, Iran and the Central Asian ‘stans. The
‘stans are under full Russian protection. Beijing is
already planning hefty rare earth business with the
Taliban.
On the Atlanticist front, the spectacle of
non-stop self-recrimination will consume the Beltway
for ages. Two decades, $2 trillion, a forever war
debacle of chaos, death and destruction, a still
shattered Afghanistan, an exit literally in the dead
of night – for what? The only “winners” have been
the Lords of the Weapons Racket.
Yet every American plotline needs a fall guy.
NATO has just been cosmically humiliated in the
graveyard of empires by a bunch of goat herders –
and not by close encounters with Mr
Khinzal. What’s left? Propaganda.
So meet the new fall guy: the New Axis of Evil.
The axis is Taliban-Pakistan-China. The New Great
Game in Eurasia has just been reloaded.
Pepe Escobar
is correspondent-at-large at
Asia Times.
His latest book is
2030. Follow him on
Facebook.
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