In his book titled, "Freedom
Next Time: Resisting the Empire,"John Pilger discussed Afghanistan ,
saying:
"Through all the
humanitarian crises in living memory, no country has been abused and suffered
more, and none has been helped less than Afghanistan ."
He described what looked
more like a moonscape than a functioning nation. In Kabul , "contours of rubble rather than
streets (exist), where people live in collapsed buildings, like earthquake
victims waiting for rescue....(with) no light or heat."
If hell on earth exists,
it's headquartered in Afghanistan ,
but has many global affiliate locations.
It goes back centuries since
before Alexander the Great. Afghans endured what few can imagine. Marauding
armies besieged cities, slaughtered thousands, and caused vast destruction.
In the 19th century,
imperial Britain
and Czarist Russia intervened. "Great Game" struggles followed. Wars,
devastation and deep poverty resulted.
Until 1919, Afghanistan was a UK protectorate. After Czarist
Russia fell, King Amanullah declared his country's independence. At the same
time, he signed an aid and friendship treaty with Lenin and fought Britain .
Border skirmishes followed. Kabul was bombed. Finally
London gave it
up and quit, but conspired with anti Amanullah elements against him. As a
result, he abdicated in 1929. Warlords contended for power.
King Muhammad Nadir Shah
took over. Four years later he was assassinated. Muhammad Zahir Shah replaced
him. As Afghanistan 's
last king, he ruled autocratically for 40 years.
In 1973, he was ousted and a
republic declared. However, little changed under family member Daoud Khan as
president. In 1978, a military coup removed him. In 1979, Soviet Russia
invaded. Moscow
put Babrak Karmal in charge, then Mohammad Najubullah in 1987. He lasted until
1992.
In the 1980s, US recruited
mujahideen fighters battled Soviet occupiers. In 1989 they left, but a ravaged
country remained.
Civil war followed. Then
came 9/11, America 's
attack, invasion, occupation, millions of deaths, further destruction, and
continued horrific human suffering to this day.
Pilger quoted the CIA once
calling Vietnam
"the grand illusion of the American cause." It's true of all US post-WW II
wars, the last one producing victory. Others left defeat, stalemate, and
today's unresolved conflicts heading for more defeats.
Nonetheless, imperial America won't
quit waging wars and plans more, no matter the human toll. For long-suffering
Afghans, it's incalculable.
Amnesty International's (AI)
Afghanistan
Report
In its new report titled, "Fleeing
War, Finding Misery: The Plight of the Internally Displaced in
Afghanistan," AI discussed their deprivation and harm.
One woman interviewed said
she didn't know what problem was worst. So many cause pain and hardships,
including "school, employment, not having proper housing, food, health -
when my children are getting sick and I have to pay for the doctor and
medications. It's everything."
With little or no income,
Afghans can't cope, especially under occupation and war. Another woman told AI:
"We are miserable here." Imagine how many others feel the same way.
No one's helping. Conditions go from bad to worse.
"Conflict affects more
Afghans now than at any point in the last decade," said AI. In many areas,
it's intense, including in once relatively peaceful towns and villages. As a
result, many families and entire communities fled for safety and security.
Four hundred people a day
are displaced. In January 2012, they numbered around 500,000, plus another 2.8
million or more in other countries. Tens of thousands sought refuge around Kabul and other cities.
Though hard to precisely estimate, perhaps 35,000 or more live in Kabul slums
alone under horrific conditions.
Some construct makeshift
dwellings from mud, poles, plywood, plastic sheeting, and cardboard. The offer
little protection from Afghanistan's harsh weather. As a result, around two
dozen children under age five froze to death in January 2012 alone.
Water's another major
problem, both its safety and amount. So is hard to find work, enough income to
survive, and food to avoid starving, let alone
unaffordable/inadequate/unavailable healthcare.
Moreover, families
"live under constant threat of forced eviction." Bulldozers level
their shelters. They have to scramble to save belongings and scavenge to
retrieve what they can from rubble.
"Life in close quarters
in unhygienic conditions means that illness spreads rapidly, particularly among
young children."
Some slum areas lack health
clinics. Others get scant services from mobile ones. They're unable to address
gynecological, pre and post-natal, and other specialized medical needs.
As a result, Afghanistan's
infant mortality rate is one of the world's highest at 129 per 1,000, according
to Afghan Ministry of Public Health data. Moreover, pre-age five mortality is
191 per 1,000.
Afghans also endure extreme
poverty, unemployment, and deprivation in virtually all aspects of their lives.
They constantly worry about getting enough food it eat, forced evictions, lack
of vital services, and occupation related violence.
"Afghanistan's human
development indicators - in categories such as health, education and income -
are below the regional average (and) among the world's worst-off
countries."
Internally displaced people
are most affected. Most fled after homes or communities were razed, after
violence killed family members and forced them out, after receiving threats, or
other conflict related reasons.
Wherever America shows up,
mass killings, destruction and incalculable human misery follow. After a decade
of war and occupation, Afghans perhaps suffer most of all.
Those displaced lack
virtually everything necessary to survive - housing, water, sanitation, healthcare,
education, employment, enough income, and sufficient food to avoid starvation.
Neither America or its puppet government provide help.
Hamid Karzai, in fact, is a
caricature of a leader. A former CIA asset/UNOCAL Oil consultant, he's little
more than Kabul's mayor. Outside the capital, he has no mandate, support or
authority. So many despise him, he wouldn't last a day without extensive
round-the-clock protection.
During the 1990s, ruling
Taliban officials kept order, despite their ultra-puritanical extremism and
harsh treatment for non-believers. They also eradicated opium production. Under
occupation that changed.
Afghanistan's the world's
leading producer. Crime bosses and CIA profit hugely. So do major banks. They
launder an estimated $500 billion annually, plus up to another $1 trillion in
other elicit laundering.
None of it trickles down to
Afghans, except minimally in crop grower underpayments. To the extent
authorities respond to human need, AI calls it "inconsistent,
insufficient, and ineffective." In addition, no plan exists to help
internally displaced refugees.
Some officials say they
don't exist to avoid responsibility. As a result, expect protracted extreme
deprivation for many years to come - for certain under occupation and conflict.
A Final Comment
Neither America or puppet
authorities prioritize human need. They either ignore it or pretend it doesn't
exist. They don't care.
America came to conquer,
colonize, occupy, plunder, and dominate Afghanistan and the region. War without
end rages. Conflict and killing continue daily. Civilians always suffer most.
Obama lied saying all US
combat forces will be out by 2014. America didn't come to leave. Think Japan
and Korea. Washington arrived post-WW II, never left, and plans to stay.
Imagine what Afghans,
Iraqis, Libyans, and other occupied people can look forward to. They're assured
protracted misery unless sustain long-term liberating struggles.
Perhaps Afghans have the
best chance, but not without years more conflict, human suffering, and mass
deaths.
It's America's imperial
legacy, especially across North Africa, the Middle East, and Central Asia.
Afghanistan best reflects it. Why else would fierce resistance continue.
Inspired, perhaps others
will replicate its struggle, and slay the beast once and for all. It can't
happen a moment too soon.
Stephen Lendman lives in
Chicago and can be reached at lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net.
Also visit his blog site at
sjlendman.blogspot.com and listen to cutting-edge discussions with
distinguished guests on the Progressive Radio News Hour on the Progressive
Radio Network Thursdays at 10AM US Central time and Saturdays and Sundays at
noon. All programs are archived for easy listening.
No comments:
Post a Comment
I want to hear from you but any comment that advocates violence, illegal activity or that contains advertisements that do not promote activism or awareness, will be deleted.