Aijaz Zaka Syed I Arab News
YOU don’t have to be born in the West or be a Westerner to hate the Taleban. Most of us in the
Look at, for instance, what they have been doing in the lawless territory between
There are reports of at least a hundred girls’ schools in
What really intrigues me is the fact that in spite of these patently absurd actions by the insurgents, support for them continues to grow in
The more the “Coalition of the Willing” pours in billions of dollars in funds, tens of thousands of the world’s finest soldiers and the most lethal arms and ammunition in Afghanistan, the more they seem to lose against an enemy that was supposed to have been destroyed in the 2001 invasion. An enemy that has no ostensible external support and few weapons continues to give the reigning superpower and its equally powerful allies a run for their money.
The more the US and NATO forces kill and destroy Taleban, the more they seem to grow, multiplying like those zombie soldiers in the Hollywood productions, The Mummy II and III.
Seven years after the invasion, the coalition is as close to victory against the Taleban as the Russians had been against the Mujahedeen in 1970s and 1980s. Last week, 10 French soldiers were killed in a Taleban attack, the biggest single day loss for
Why? What keeps the Taleban going? The 3,000-year-old history of
True,
RETURNING to the current occupiers, the Western observers and pundits appear genuinely surprised by the recent spectacular successes of the Taleban. Western leaders from the speedy Sarko to bored Brown have been paying unannounced visits to their demoralized troops on the front that Barack Obama calls the main front of the
What really perplexes the West is the hopeless longing of ordinary Afghans for the barbarians called Taleban. Instead of singing paeans to their Western liberators who brought them invaluable gifts like democracy, freedom and human dignity, as Bush puts it, the ungrateful Afghans are flirting with their tormentors. Why ordinary Afghans still look to the Taleban? Is it really a mystery to be unlocked by Dan Brown? The clues are right there, staring you in the face. This week, on Aug. 22, the coalition airstrikes in western
An understandably irate Hamid Karzai vehemently protested to the coalition. But since he cannot do much except protest when it comes to dealing with the coalition, he sacked two of his own generals. The
Even the tiny bodies of the victims couldn’t convince Karzai’s friends in high places that those killed in
But is this the first incident of its kind when the coalition mistook women and children for the militants? Last month, on July 6, a whole wedding party was wiped out by the coalition bombing near Jalalabad. A government inquiry found that at least 47 people died in that attack; 39 of them were women and children. The
The Afghan Human Rights Commission reports that more than 900 civilians have been killed this year alone in the coalition attacks.
According to the UN, at least half of those civilians killed this year were not fell by the Taleban bullets but were killed in the coalition strikes. Last year, nearly 2,000 civilians were killed by the friendly fire of the trigger-happy soldiers of the empire. These were the people who even the coalition agrees were civilian.
There are thousands of others who are routinely killed as Taleban, without so much as meriting a passing mention in the Western media — let alone raising questions if they were really militants or innocents caught in the crossfire. I wonder what crime those children in
And yet our friends in the West wonder why the Afghans continue to support and empathize with the insurgents. As far as the Afghan people are concerned, they see little difference in the Soviet occupation and the current reign of terror. Only the markings on those fighter jets have changed from Russian to English.
Aijaz Zaka Syed is a Dubai-based commentator. Write to him at aijaz@khaleejtimes.com
Source: arabnews.com
URL: https://newageislam.com/war-terror/lost-war-afghanistan/d/664