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Starting Another Year of War in Afghanistan

by: Norman Solomon, t r u t h o u t | Perspective

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The blue mosque in Mazar-e-Sharif, Afghanistan. (Photo: babasteve / flickr)

    October 2009 has begun with The New York Times reporting that "the president, vice president and an array of cabinet secretaries, intelligence chiefs, generals, diplomats and advisers gathered in a windowless basement room of the White House for three hours on Wednesday to chart a new course in Afghanistan."

    As this month begins the ninth year of the US war effort in Afghanistan, "windowless" seems to be an apt metaphor. The structure of thought and the range of options being debated in Washington's high places are notably insular. The "new course" will be a permutation of the present course.

    While certainty is lacking, steely resolve is evident. An unspoken mantra remains in effect: When in doubt, keep killing. The knotty question is: Exactly who and how?

    News accounts are filled with stories about options that mix "counterinsurgency" with "counterterrorism." The thicker the jargon in Washington, the louder the erudite tunes from the latest best and brightest - whistling past graveyards, to be filled by people far away.

    In the White House, there's no indication of a pane that's facing the pain in Afghanistan, one of the poorest countries in the world, where the US government continues to bring gifts: a dollar's worth of warfare for a dime's worth of everything else.

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    The letter was neatly printed with a blue pen. "I've been fed up and damaged," it said. "My hope is that from you and all entrepreneurs and all who have compassion, I respectfully ask you to help me for God's sake. I'm downtrodden. I hope you understand my situation."

    The situation, living in a squalid camp for refugees in Kabul, was desperate. "I am Sayed Ali - from Geresh district of Helmand province."

    Moments after handing me the letter, he grabbed it out of my hands. A controlled rage flooded his voice. Pashto words cascaded, and a translator tried to keep up.

    Sayed Ali said that he'd given other letters to officials and nothing changed, month after month in this forsaken camp, little more than ditches and improvised tents.

    Two weeks later, in mid-September, I met with a few staffers and members of Congress, some of the most progressive on Capitol Hill. But when I talked about the refugees I saw in Kabul - many of them homeless because of US bombing in southern Afghanistan - the discussion couldn't seem to get anywhere.

    In the air was an unspoken message: Desperate refugees are routine in war. That's the way it is.

    Washington doesn't recognize Sayed Ali, with his suffering and his smoldering rage, or other Afghans in similar predicaments. An unspoken calculus in Washington figures that we owe them next to nothing. It's a matter of priorities, you know.

    Yes, there are plenty of photo ops and news reports on US aid projects, happening in tandem with the Army's and Marines' military maneuvers. But what's budgeted to help rebuild Afghanistan is paltry compared to what's spent on making war there.

    "We proclaim moral principles when justifying our actions, but we wreak havoc and destruction on a backward, ancient world we do not understand," retired US Army Col. and author Douglas Macgregor wrote in Defense News on September 28. He added: "Our troops are not anthropologists or sociologists, they are soldiers and Marines who have been sent to impose America's will on backward societies. The result is mutual hatred - not everywhere, but in enough places to feed what American military leaders like to call an 'insurgency' ..."

    US media and politics are now awash in talk about getting smarter and shrewder in Afghanistan. The idea of setting a country right while waging war is a popular Washington fantasy. What it has to do with reality is another matter.

    "I don't want any foreigners building roads or big buildings for me when I am cleaning blood from my home," a shopkeeper in Helmand Province, Haji Dawood Khan, told a Financial Times reporter in late September. The newspaper quoted a businessman from Kandahar province, Mohammad Karigar, who said: "The more foreign troops there are, the more people will hate them."

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    In Washington, few politicians or journalists mention that 90 percent of the US government's current spending in Afghanistan is for military operations.

    There was plenty of money to pay for bombing Sayed Ali's neighborhood in Helmand Province, but there's no money to ease his current desperation.

    Sayed Ali is speaking for countless other people: "I respectfully ask you to help me for God's sake."

    More than eight months have passed since the inaugural speech when Barack Obama told foreign leaders: "Know that your people will judge you on what you can build, not what you destroy." And so President Obama will be judged.

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    Norman Solomon, executive director of the Institute for Public Accuracy, is the author of many books including "War Made Easy: How Presidents and Pundits Keep Spinning Us to Death." He is co-chair of the national Healthcare NOT Warfare campaign. For video of his recent appearances on "Democracy Now" and C-SPAN's "Washington Journal," go to: www.normansolomon.com.

  

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Comments

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this headline would be alot

this headline would be alot more "catchee if it reed,and i quote now live,today,*BIG POW WOW*russia to chat with arabian pennisula(Saudi) about Iranastain and Terrasia anna stain,pretty catchee huh,while zion and acme america stand by the way,(way)side

Dear Norman. Thank you. Once

Dear Norman. Thank you. Once again. Our leaders, business-like, intellectual, methodical, & militaristic have an endless appetite for neoliberally-inspired expansionistic games, imperialistic and mono-cultural colonialism, and therefore also for the killing and maiming that expedites these pathetic goals.

What an incredibly good

What an incredibly good article. It's nice to see really good journalism. Thank you Mr Solomon.

Normon Solomon swims very

Normon Solomon swims very close to the media Flounders* when he sees everything but the fact that this war, like Vietnam and Iraq is more about enriching the Merchants of Death than anything else. And in the process not only destroying an impoverished nation, but our own as well. Only someone who hopes we can continue to pour $10 billion a month down the rat hole indefinitely would fail to see that the opposition is spending a thousandth as much, if that, to keep us tied up in yet another miserable, undeclared and never properly debated war. (From The Urban Dictionary- Flounder: Reporter with two perfectly good eyes, both apparently on the same side of his head, which enables him a plausible excuse for not seeing what is happening on the bottom)

This is a repeat of a

This is a repeat of a comment I wrote about the insanity in Afghanistan. This is a great idea... is anybody listening ?? What about pulling the financial plug on the Taliban and making friends with the farmers of Afghanistan at the same time. Let's offer double the normal price for the entire poppy crop !! Create a consortium to go into business with the pharma industry in USA, Europe and Asia to market opium based painkillers (which by the way are in short supply) in the medical industry. This would get black market heroin off of the streets around the world (Afghanistan supplies 80% of the world's illegal heroin), help the farmers of Afghanistan and show that we really want to help, AND would remove the main source of funding for the Taliban. What about it ??

Just another day in the

Just another day in the empire. We need to bring all american personnel out of asia and give up fossil fuels. Anything else is a death warrant for our country and our planet.

When in doubt keep killing.a

When in doubt keep killing.a indictment of the USA government policy in Irak,Afghanistan, Colombia in the present. Wanton killing seems to be the USA government answer to the poor countries that do not submit to their fiat.

It's too bad that our

It's too bad that our economy can't survive without a war every ten years or less. Could we do with a little less "growth" in order to have less slaughter?

Thank you Norman Solomon.

Thank you Norman Solomon. We only need to look to American Indian reservations to see where this story ends, if we continue with Anglo/Capital/Christian values. Like "settlers" conquered the American West, stole the land, paved over the meadows, and imprisoned the native population, we (not a personal "we" but the we of our government operating on our behalf with our taxpayer $$) are preparing Iraq, Afghanistan, and any of the places we have troops to open the way for Chase Bank, Coca-Cola, Payless Shoes, etc. to offer cushy services for tourists and opportunities for new landowners. No doubt there will be a Starbucks on every corner - that will provide employment opportunities for the poor displaced population, and we'll expect them to be grateful.

This is not just great

This is not just great journalism, it is a call to all who value human life and dignity. Norman has addressed his deep experience, wisdom and insight to Washington's corridors of power repeatedly and with laser sharp focus. We must massively join with him. That is the only way to penetrate the Washington "bubble".

If our administration would

If our administration would read certain books, maybe they would understand about Afghanistan a little better. Instead of pouring $$$ into killing people they ought to build schools, highways, sanitation systems, hospitals, shelters for women and orphanages. "Three Cups of Tea" and "Places Inbetween " by Rory Stewart tell you more about Afghanistan than what the media puts out. That is just scratching the surface. I am part of a Non-Profit. We are helping women and children learn Dari and English and just opened a Women's Center where we also teach crafts. We are sending warm clothing, shoes, medical equipment and reading glasses and know, that we have helped many a desperate soul.

Does this analysis

Does this analysis matter? Norman, I agree with other folks here who praise the quality of your article. But I wonder: Do you believe that your article makes a difference? I'm beginning to think that we need action and not words. But really, I'm asking you: What do YOU think it will take--in practical terms--to change the course of events? Do you think that yet another article on this subject will do the job?

So what can we do about it?

So what can we do about it? How do we stop this insanity? A man runs for office pledging no war and we are still at war. Do we have a revolution as in 1776? Do we write a Declarationof Independence from big businees, corrupt politics, and lack of representation? Is there a John Adams and Thomas Jefferson amidst us who will pave the way? Should we set up another continental congress to draft a declaration and form a new country? 233 years, and the great experiment is over.

Thank you Norman Solomon.

Thank you Norman Solomon. You keep on keeping on.