Here’s everything the war in Afghanistan should have taught us
By: Rachel Marsden
PARIS — Now that America’s 20-year war in Afghanistan is ending, it’s a good
opportunity to assess what worked and what didn’t.
First, to the success! (Try not to blink, because you might miss this part.)
The original mission of the post-9/11 military invasion was to overthrow the
Taliban and neutralize al-Qaeda and Osama bin Laden. That mission was
accomplished. Bravo to the brave men and women in uniform who succeeded based on
the dictionary definition of the tasks initially outlined.
Except that the initial mission was itself misguided. Soldiers were following
orders issued by people who were either incompetent, oblivious or corrupt. Those
calling the shots knew that the 9/11 attackers were mostly Saudis, yet they
continued to emphasize Saudi Arabia’s ally status while bombing a country that
was not Saudi Arabia. They knew that the Taliban didn’t attack the U.S. homeland
or have the capacity to do so, yet they led the American people to believe that
these guys in flip-flops were capable of doing so by conflating them with
al-Qaeda.
And speaking of al-Qaeda, its leader, Osama bin Laden, was designated as the
figure onto which all public outrage crystallized, while American leaders
omitted the inconvenient fact that bin Laden was trained in the early 1980s as
the leader of pro-American proxy fighters in the CIA-led war in Afghanistan
against the Soviet Union.
The question that should have been asked at the outset was why the U.S. was
suddenly concerned about a terrorist that it had created, and why anyone should
trust that going back into the same country and creating more assets to fight
more scapegoats (the Taliban, in this case) wouldn’t backfire again. Judging by
the Taliban’s shiny new American weapons, history has repeated itself.
So, yes, for our soldiers it was a job well done. It wasn’t their performance
that failed, but rather the poorly conceived mission and strategy designed by
establishment cronies.
Which brings us to the failures.
The U.S. and its allies had 20 years to cut their losses and should have done so
years ago. So why didn’t they? Our leaders were clearly interested in sticking
around until they could get a return on investment. That would have involved
setting up a puppet government in Afghanistan and then securing guarantees of
access to the country’s unexplored mineral deposits, which American officials
have assessed at $1 trillion. That includes one of the world’s largest reserves
of lithium, from which electric car batteries are made.
It was clearly taking longer than anticipated to shake those interests loose,
particularly with many of the mining concessions having been awarded to China,
which dragged its feet acting on them due to the endless war. So we stuck around
pretending to “democracy-build,” all while trying to figure out a way to get our
hands on the treasure.
About the only decision-maker who was blunt about the underlying economic
interest was former U.S. President Donald Trump, who reportedly told officials
at a White House meeting in July 2017 that the U.S. should demand access to
Afghanistan’s mineral wealth in exchange for continued support of the Afghan
government, according to Reuters. Everyone else pretended that it was about
counterterrorism.
Which brings us to yet another problem.
We really need a less propagandistic definition for terrorism. When you occupy a
country for 20 years and a group of people who live there attack you inside
their own country and on the other side of the world, it’s not terrorism but
rather self-defense against a foreign invader/occupier. When two groups of
fighters — both citizens of the same country — are fighting with each other,
it’s not terrorism if the side that you support happens to be losing.
Afghanistan isn’t the only place where we’ve seen terrorism evoked as a pretense
to defend U.S. proxy fighters losing a civil war. The same thing happened in
Syria, where the U.S.-backed “Syrian rebels” lost to the Syrian army, which was
casually described as a group of terrorists as they fought to secure their own
country. In reality, the terrorists were the “rebel” combatants supported by the
U.S. and its allies.
So maybe we should stop taking the U.S. government’s word for it, start
demanding more details whenever terrorism is evoked in relation to a foreign
entity, and start asking what interest our government might have in manipulating
public opinion in favor of regime change and the foreign fighters it’s using to
pursue its interests — which usually involve gaining control of a valuable
asset.
And finally, maybe we should be a lot more skeptical about the use of a
humanitarian pretext for war, or at least the well-worn notion that war is the
first step toward democracy-building. It should be obvious by now that the
concept is fatally flawed — and it’s particularly obvious to the women of
Afghanistan who waited 20 years for democracy to flourish under Western
occupation.
COPYRIGHT 2021 RACHEL MARSDEN