-Caveat Lector-

from:
http://www.narconews.com/alphandry1.html
Click Here: <A HREF="http://www.narconews.com/alphandry1.html";>Narco News
Publishes Kim Alphandry on Afghanist…</A>
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Narco News 2001


AUC and Taliban:


U.S. Policy Backfires from


Colombia to Afghanistan


By Kim Alphandry


 Special to The Narco News Bulletin


In the wake of the attacks on U.S. soil, Afghanistan and its ruling Taliban
are at the center of media attention.

The Taliban, whose name means "students," was created by the the Pakistani
Intelligence Agency (ISI), and developed during the Soviet occupation of
Afghanistan. The Taliban army consists of Muslim fundamentalist mercenaries
from Afghanistan, Pakistan, and Saudi Arabia, armed and financed primarily by
the United States and Saudi Arabia. Over the last six years the Taliban have
gained control over 90% of the country. (Until recently the Taliban have been
referred to as 'freedom fighters' in the western press.)

The Taliban, thus, began as a U.S.-backed paramilitary organization, using
the same strategy as was used in Colombia with the formation of the United
Self-Defense Forces of Colombia (AUC). As in South America, the explosive
mixture of paramilitary groups and the massive profits to be made in
narco-trafficking under drug prohibition has grown into a force beyond
control of its makers. Even as the U.S. government today opposes the Taliban
in Afghanistan, it is creating another one in Colombia.

And as with the Colombian people and the paramilitaries unleashed upon them
by U.S. policy, the Afghan people are not supporters of the Taliban. In fact,
there is a very strong opposition movement in Afghanistan to the Taliban.
Yet, as with Plan Colombia, a U.S. military intervention in Afghanistan could
end up harming the innocent Afghani people who oppose the Taliban.

Just last week, the opposition movement to the Taliban lost its heroic leader.



AFGHAN COMMUNITY MOURNS


The Afghan community is now mourning the death of their most highly regarded
leader, Ahmad Shah Mas'ood, commander of the Northern Alliance (NA),
opposition forces to the Taliban in Afghanistan. (The NA is referred to a as
a 'rebel group' in the western press.)

Commander Ahmad Shah Mas'ood has held this fragile opposition group together
since the 1979-89 Soviet occupation of Afghanistan. He is famous for leading
battles on the frontlines.

Qand Dukhtar, an Afghan American states, "It is with great pain that I inform
you that Ahmad Shah Masood, commander of the Northern Alliance forces against
the Taliban and Osama bin Laden passed away on Sunday, September 9, 2001."

Afghan commander Ahmad Shah Mas'ood was the victim of an assassination
attempt by bin Laden this last Sunday -- two Arab men posing as journalists
exploded a bomb at a meeting being held in his office in the Takhar Province
of Northern Afghanistan.

Saudi dissident Ossama bin Laden is blamed for the attack. Osama bin Laden is
not a member of the Taliban, but apparently assists the Taliban in it's
objectives by violent means.

Mas'ood's death is viewed with such deep concern that countries wary of
Afghanistan's Taliban held an emergency meeting on Thursday, representatives
from Iran, Russia, Tajikistan, India and Uzbekistan attended. His loss will
be a major blow to the NA as Mas'ood has been the leader of the anti-Taliban
forces for some 20 years.

Dukhtar explains, "While the whole world has been preoccupied with the events
in NY and DC, this has been an extremely painful week for millions of Afghans
who will never forget their fallen heroes and the sacrifices they have made
for their country." Dukhtar went on to say that, "Ahmad Shah Mas'ood was one
of the bravest heroes in the history of Afghanistan. He spent his entire
lifetime fighting to free his nation. The only dream and hope he had was for
a free and peaceful Afghanistan. "

On Tuesday September 11th, two hours after the bombings of the World Trade
Center, the Northern Alliance retaliated for the assassination of their leader
 by shelling Kabul, the Taliban controlled capitol of Afghanistan. At which
point CNN reported that the US government could be responsible for the
bombings -- and later apologized for the erroneous report.



HISTORY


Afghanistan, once a stable nation, has been literally destroyed as it has
been forced to fight a civil war the past 20 years. Six million of its
population are refugees, with more than 75 percent of the country laid to
waste.

"The Soviet Union invaded Afghanistan in December 1979. It was the last hot
war it would fight, and one whose failure played a leading role in its loss
in the Cold War and disintegration. Afghanistan is infamous today for being
in the grip of the most benighted, fanatical and misogynist government in the
world." [Cosma Shalizi's review of "The Soviet Invasion and the Afghan
Response, 1979-1982" (University of California Press, 1995), by M. Hassan
Kakar, (http://www.santafe.edu/~shalizi/reviews/kakar-soviet-invasion/)]

Over the last few years the US has known that the Taliban has been a threat
to the stability in the region - the Gulf, Central Asia, and South Asia -
because of the growth of terrorism and the drug trade (Afghanistan is the
second-largest producer of heroin in the world). And, especially because the
Taliban can no longer be controlled by Pakistan and therefore cannot be
controlled by the United States.

The US government has been examining its options for protecting its interests
in the region for some time, and just this July 2001 chose to give the
Taliban in Afghanistan $48 million dollars because they agreed 'to institute
a ban on drugs.'



CURRENT SITUATION


According to a September 14 report by the BBC, "A quarter of Afghanistan's 26
million people face starvation this autumn following three years of drought
and the pull-out [of all foreign aid workers from the country]." The plea for
help given by the Afghan people has been for the most part been ignored.

Pakistan's own civil stability is now at extreme risk because of economic
pressures from decades of mounting debt combined with political and economic
corruption that has made the country virtually ungovernable.

Pakistan President Pervez Musharraf has reluctantly promised full
co-operation with US demands Saturday September 15th, placing Pakistan in an
extremely precarious situation. There are millions of Taliban-aligned
extremists in Pakistan along with Islamic militant training camps. The
Pakistani corps commanders and intelligence chiefs are deeply divided as its
own secret service is backed by Islamic militants.

With current events unfolding as they are right now, Dukhtar remembers,
"Mas'ood's famous prediction that the war would end in Pakistan. Even if
Pakistan sides with the US, the Taliban-aligned fundamentalists of Pakistan
will declare a holy war against it's own government and destroy it."

... an attack on Afghanistan, could come as early as this week.





Kim Alphandary, freelance journalist and international news contributor to
Radio for Peace International, has traveled and studied extensively in
Pakistan, Turkey, Colombia, Bolivia and Peru.


For more background information see http://www.antiwar.com for current
coverage, such as current links entitled: "US Troops Land in Pakistan,"
Taliban Threatens Pakistan with War," and "Bush Finalizes Battle Plan."
-----
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Om, Shalom, Salaam.
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