Friday, July 16, 2021

The Caliphate of Afghanistan

"After two decades of the brutality of Americans and their puppets, this gate and the Spin Boldak district were captured by the Taliban."
"The strong resistance of the Mujahedeen and its people forced the enemy to leave this area. As you can see, that's the Islamic Emirate flag, the flag that thousands of Mujahedeen shed their blood to raise."
Taliban terrorist 'fighter'

"The reports of killing, ill-treatment, persecution and discrimination are wide-spread and disturbing, creating fear and insecurity."
"The best way to end harm to civilians is for peace talks to be reinvigorated in order for a negotiated settlement to be reached."
UN Mission in Afghanistan
People stand in front of a vehicle as an Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan and a Pakistan's flag flutter in front of the friendship gate of Afghanistan and Pakistan at the Wesh-Chaman border crossing, Spin Boldak, Afghanistan July 14, 2021, in this screen grab obtained from a video. TALIBAN HANDOUT via REUTERS THIS IMAGE HAS BEEN SUPPLIED BY A THIRD PARTY.
People stand in front of a vehicle as an Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan and a Pakistan flag flutter in front of the friendship gate of Afghanistan and Pakistan at the Wesh-Chaman border crossing, Spin Boldak, Afghanistan July 14, 2021
 
After all this time and wasted effort, lives and treasury that delusional authorities in the United States and the United Nations continue to speak of 'negotiations' between the Taliban and the government of Afghanistan reveals not their belief that such discussions can bear any measure of reasonable fruit for conciliation and shared governance in a moderate governing body, but the level of shameless cynicism brought to bear by those who know full well that no reasonable 'peace talks' could ever be shared with the Taliban.

They measure success in terms of complete and total 'victory' over any and all opposition to their inalienable right as rigidly fundamentalist Islamists to fully control the country, brooking interference from no foreign agency, much less the legitimate, democratically elected government of Afghanistan which they view with deadly contempt as puppets of the West, disloyal to Islam and deserving of death. The kind of death they are prepared to deliver with no hesitation whatever.

Violent Islam ideation has taken the place of any possible residual fragmentary emotions of compassion. The moment an Afghan national police officer or a member of the Afghan military surrenders to their superior numbers and savagery, the Taliban waste no time in executing them in cold blood. The niceties of conventions of conflict among civilized nations have no value to them. Anything resembling humanitarian values has the stench of Western values to them.

Their capture of greater swaths of Afghanistan's geography continues apace; the dwindling presence of foreign troops now completely disinterested in the future of Afghanistan following the disappointment of their campaign to shore up moderate Afghan governments devoted to the concept of a modern, democratic state in the interests of advancing the future of the country, represents a long-faded dream. The future of Afghanistan is in the hands of those determined to destroy that dream.

And they will. No longer will girls receive an education or women engage in business activities. Music and dance, celebrations and happiness outlawed once again, all offensive to their brand of Islam. Women must be fully covered in stifling black, medical care facilities will disintegrate, a dystopian future awaits. A major border crossing with Pakistan has been seized by the Taliban, their flag flying high, displacing that of Afghanistan itself.

Since the Afghan Taliban was encouraged and nourished and sheltered and supplied with weapons by the Pakistani intelligence service, there would be great satisfaction between the two; Pakistan and the Taliban. That crossing in the Spin Boldak district, south of Afghanistan's main city of Kandahar, a Taliban stronghold, is one of the country's busiest commercial entry points, an artery between the two countries where 900 trucks a day traverse from Pakistan's sea ports into Afghanistan's southwest region.
 
Other major border crossings have been seized in other provinces, north and west, allowing the Taliban to collect revenues, thanks to border post controls. "Wesh, which has great importance in Afghan trade with Pakistan and other countries has been captured by the Taliban", a Pakistani security official observed from his deployment at the border area. 
 
The U.S. is preparing to begin evacuating some 2,500 Afghan civilians who wee employed as interpreters for the U.S. government which has resulted in their lives being in danger with the ascendance of the Taliban. President Ashraf Ghani met with civilians in the northern province of Balkh, assuring them that "the Taliban's backbone will be broken", with government forces retaking areas lost to the terrorists. 
 
In the western province of Herat, Taliban fired mortars at the Salma Dam, a hydroelectric and irrigation project vital to the district, leaving officials at the National Water Affairs Regulation Authority to appeal to the Taliban to consider the dam a "national treasure [that] is the common property of all and should not be damaged in military conflict"
 
The Taliban forced members of a small ethnic minority to the choice of converting to Islam or leaving their homes in the northern province of Badakhshan. "These are minority Kerghiz who lived there for centuries. They are now [across the border] in Tajikistan awaiting their fate", said Vice-President Amrullah Saleh.  

The Taliban reject the accusaitons that they are abusive of human rights. Women will not be mistreated when the Taliban return to power, they declare. Women and girls in Afghanistan fail to be convinced, voicing their alarm at the rapid advance of the Sunni Islamists. Their fear and alarm shared by members of ethnic and sectarian minorities persecuted severely by the Taliban.

Taliban
Supporters of the Taliban carry the Taliban's signature white flags in the Afghan-Pakistan border town of Chaman, Pakistan, Wednesday, July 14, 2021. (AP Photo/Tariq Achkzai)

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Monday, July 05, 2021

Winning the Battles, Losing the War

"As soon as the first [IED] explosion kicked off we all had a gut feeling it was a bad one. Some of them were walking wounded. Some [British soldiers on a dawn patrol in Helmand Province, Afghanistan, July 2009] were helping each other walk back and others were literally in bits."
"I don't want to say they've all died for nothing. We've lost a lot of people for a cause but when we totally pull out it will revert to exactly what it was like before."
"Ultimately when the fighting stops you have a duty to rebuild and it doesn't feel like we have done that."
"It's hard to put into words, but my life will never be the same."
British Rifleman Peter Sherlock, C Company, 2nd Battalion, the Rifles, Sangin District, Afghanistan

"We consider this withdrawal a positive step."
"Afghans can get closer to stability and peace with the full withdrawal of foreign forces."
Zabihullah Mujahid, Taliban spokesman

"The Americans must leave Afghanistan and there would be peace in this country."
"We are in a difficult situation. Most people have fled their districts and some districts have fallen."
"Seven districts in Paktia province have fallen and are now under Taliban control."
Javed Arman, Kabul resident
Afghan soldiers stand guard at the gate of Bagram Airfield, 2 July
Afghan soldiers guarded Bagram on Friday  Reuters
 
A senior U.S. security official on condition of anonymity stated "All American soldiers and members of NATO forces have left the Bagram Air Base". And the international community if it has any interest in the future of Afghanistan, should be aware that the last foreign troops to leave will as good as flick the switch to total darkness. After 20-in-retrospect-wasted years of scuffling with the Taliban in an effort to push it back and out of contention to once again gain control of the country, the U.S. troop pull=out leaving their main military base of Bagram, effectively hands Afghanistan back to the Taliban.

Some U.S. forces will remain in Afghanistan as part of a "rational drawdown with allies", it seems, and to protect the U.S. embassy in Kabul. But for how long? The Taliban, set to regain control and oust the U.S.-backed government of President Ashraf Ghani will have no tolerance for an ongoing presence of U.S. troops for any reason, and the presence of an American embassy in Kabul will be viewed as unhelpful, an irritant meant to be expunged.

It was from Bagram air base that the air war and logistical support for the Afghan mission was co-ordinated. Over 3,500 members of international forces lost their lives in Afghanistan, answering their nations' call to duty in support of their American allies in the wake of the 9/11 attacks in New York, Washington and Pennsylvania. The number of deaths of allied troops exceeding the number of deaths resulting from the 9/11 attacks by close to 50%.

According to one Western diplomat located in Kabul, the U.S. and its NATO allies had "won many battles, but have lost the Afghan war", as good a summation as any of the immense energy, finances and human life the prosecution of the war against the Taliban and al-Qaeda cost the international community. And to what avail? All the advances Afghan society gained during those decades in equality for women, economic support, health services, education for children including girls, lessons in the rule of law and democratic action, lost.

New York City firefighters arrived at Bagram surrounded by the Hindu Kush mountains that sheltered Osama bin Laden from the search for justice by bringing a primary terrorist before an American court of law, to symbolically bury a piece of the World Trade Center there mere days after the Taliban fled the oncoming allied forces in search of the elusive Osama bin Laden.  The "black site" detention centre was operated out of Bagram air base.
 
Soldiers from the 10th Mountain Division prepare ground to bury a piece of rubble from the World Trade Center at Bagram Air Field north of Kabul on December 21, 2001
A piece of World Trade Center rubble was buried in the frozen ground of the base in December 2001   Reuters
 
The base hosted a sprawling fortified encampment absorbing the huge international military force, offering gyms and a cafe and fast-food outlets; a touch of 'home' in an alien land under duress. The base, on desertion, will become the official property of the Government of Afghanistan. Eventually to be handed over to the Taliban. And that piece of the World Trade Center will be trashed along with the memory of the international soldiers that sequestered and operated out of for two decades.

General Austin Miller, top U.S. commander in Afghanistan "still retains all t he capabilities and authorities to protect the force" while a minuscule proportion of it remains stationed in Kabul. General Miller informed journalists that civil war for Afghanistan was "certainly a path that can be visualized", Taliban fighters swooping into districts while foreign troops departed. Not only can it be 'visualized', it can also be expected, a brief preliminary to total takedown of the Afghan government.

President Biden evidently had no use for advice from his own generals hoping to hang on until such time that a political agreement was reached between the Taliban and the Kabul government of President Ashraf Ghani. He has been hung out to dry, to twist in the wind of change, along with the people of Afghanistan who realistically can 'visualize' their oncoming future, a return to the dismal misery of the recent past under Taliban Islamist rule.

The Taliban have left their signature everywhere even as negotiations were in process, lest people forget what they once experienced and will once again undergo, by staging suicide attacks even in high-security areas in Kabul, as well as anywhere else in the county where they deemed a message was overdue. The death toll of Afghan soldiers and the national police was another reminder that their days were numbered as well. Any Afghans known to have been of assistance to the kafirs had best exile themselves.
 
Wounded Afghan soldiers aboard a helicopter north of Kandahar, Afghanistan, 6 May
These wounded Afghan soldiers were rescued by helicopter north of Kandahar last month   Getty Images
 
"Afghans are going to have to decide their future, what they want", President Ghani was advised last week by President Biden in Washington. As if. In acknowledgment President Ghani responded that his job now was to "manage the consequences" of the U.S. withdrawal. The death knell of any vision of democracy in the country, of peace and stability, of gains made by women and girls, who can now expect they must be fully tented in burqas at all times; no laughing, no music, no dancing, no employment, no life.

As part of the agreement between the U.S. and the Taliban the withdrawal gained the U.S. a promise from the Taliban leadership that international terrorists will never again to permitted to operate from Afghan soil. Islamic State is on Afghan soil, as is al-Qaeda, all in good health, which makes three terrorist groups operating on Afghan soil, all of whom do not regard the United States with any level of affection.

Oh yes, the Taliban reiterated to the Americans their commitment to negotiate with the Afghan government. In talks taking place in Doha, Qatar, which have to the present made little progress, and will make precisely no progress in recognition of the government of Afghanistan as valid, since plans are that it will be forfeit the minute the all-clear is given for the Taliban to take complete charge. Both pledges by the Taliban to assuage the guilt of the U.S. over abandoning Afghanistan are rubbish. And both parties know it is face-saving and self-serving.

"We urge an end to violence, respect for the human rights of all Afghans and serious negotiations in Doha so that a just and durable peace may be achieved", stated the U.S. Embassy in Afghanistan, giving assurance that the United States was firmly committed to provide security assistance of $3 billion in 2022 to benefit the Afghan government's security. The smokescreen of betrayal.

But of course Afghanistan has an obligation to look after itself. It cannot and should not be under the direct protective wings of foreign militaries. Afghanistan has throughout its long history been invaded and occupied, a centre of jockeying by world powers for control of trade routes and entry to markets waiting to be conquered. Afghans have always resisted occupation by foreign powers. Their future is occupation by oppressive religious fundamentalist terrorists.

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