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http://www.larouchepub.com/other/1995/2241_afghansi_intro.html

This article appeared in the October 13, 1995 issue of Executive Intelligence
Review.

War in Afghanistan spawned
a global narco-terrorist force

by Jeffrey Steinberg

On Christmas Eve 1979, the Soviet Red Army invaded Afghanistan. Advance
echelons of KGB units captured the presidential palace, assassinated the once
staunchly pro-Moscow President, and installed a more pliable successor, who
announced—from Soviet territory—that he had "invited" the Russian forces to
intervene under a recent Soviet-Afghani friendship treaty. Within a short
period of time, Moscow had 89,000 troops inside Afghanistan.

Less than a month later, U.S. President Jimmy Carter's national security
adviser, Zbigniew Brzezinski, stood at the Khyber Pass in Pakistan, and was
photographed pointing a rifle across the border into Afghan territory.
Brzezinski was in Pakistan to deliver a commitment from President Carter that
the United States was ready to provide the government of Gen. Mohammed Zia
ul-Haq with massive military aid to help build up the Afghani mujahideen
resistance to the Soviet invaders.

The ensuing decade of surrogate warfare between the United States and the
Soviet Union drew the two superpowers into a geopolitical trap that proved
disastrous for both. The defeat that the Red Army suffered at the hands of
the massively western-backed Afghan mujahideen aggravated the ongoing crisis
within the Warsaw Pact, that was actually triggered on March 23, 1983, when
President Ronald Reagan announced his Strategic Defense Initiative, a policy
that Moscow's top leadership knew had been designed by Lyndon LaRouche. The
SDI—not the Afghan War—was the principal, driving factor that accelerated the
collapse of the Soviet system. The defeat in Afghanistan was but one more
serious sign that the Bolshevik system was headed for the scrap-heap of
history.

The impact upon the United States and the West as a whole would be more
subtle, but, in the long run, equally disastrous. By falling for a
British-authored geopolitical strategy of encouraging the spread of a
virulently anti-western, nominally Islamic form of fundamentalism, the United
States gave aid and comfort to the creation of a new terrorist
international—far more deadly than the earlier global terrorist apparatus
that stalked world leaders during the decade of the 1970s. The new terrorist
international—built around the mujahideen veterans of the 1979-89 Afghan
War—is responsible for such terrorist incidents as the February 1993 World
Trade Center bombing in New York City. And British intelligence-controlled
operatives, such as Lord William Rees-Mogg's underling Dr. Jack Wheeler, who
were actively involved in the recruitment and training of the Afghani
mujahideen, were implicated before the fact in the April 1995 bombing of the
federal building in Oklahoma City, which claimed 168 lives. The Afghani
mujahideen are the primary force carrying out the irregular warfare
destabilization of France, since the election of Jacques Chirac as President,
and France's ensuing break with the British "Entente Cordiale."

Over the ten-year period that followed Brzezinski's visit to the Khyber Pass,
the United States would officially pour $3 billion into the Afghan mujahideen
war against the Red Army, a relatively small fraction of the total cost of
the effort. A broad spectrum of nations—from Britain and Israel, to Saudi
Arabia, Kuwait, Egypt, China, and even Iran—would collectively contribute an
equal amount of money.

According to one well-placed U.S. intelligence source, the combined Medellín
and Cali Cartel contribution to the Afghan mujahideen was $10-20 billion!

A new opium war

Whether that figure is accurate or not, the profits from illegal narcotics
sales unquestionably bankrolled the war—on both sides. By the mid-1980s, the
Golden Crescent, extending from Iran to Afghanistan and Pakistan, was
providing one-half of the heroin reaching the streets of the United States.
Pakistan's North West Frontier Province (NWFP) became a hub of guns-for-drugs
trade, and Pakistan's gross revenue from opium and heroin sales soared to
$8-10 billion a year by 1988. That figure represented one-quarter of the
Gross Domestic Product of Pakistan. U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration
statistics as of 1994 still identified Afghanistan as the source for
one-third of all the heroin sold in the United States.

Prior to the outbreak of the Afghan War in 1979, the region's opium
production had been relatively small, after early 1970s eradication programs
pushed through by the Nixon administration had taken the Golden Crescent out
of the world heroin trade. What opium poppy was produced, went into the small
addict population in South Asia. The Afghan War changed all of that. Not only
did the Golden Crescent of Southwest Asia surpass the Southeast Asian Golden
Triangle in opium production in the mid-1980s; by the same date, Pakistan's
opium addict population had skyrocketed to over 1.3 million people. In 1980,
the figure was 5,000.

In the aftermath of the Soviet military withdrawal from Afghanistan in
February 1989, Afghanistan degenerated into a battlefield of rival mujahideen
factions, who were more interested in controlling the lucrative opium poppy
fields and in using the wartime military bases and vast stockpiles of
hardware as training grounds for a whole new generation of international
terrorists. According to one senior U.S. intelligence official, Iran moved
quickly into the vacuum created by the sudden U.S. pullout.

At the center of both the drug and the terror efforts was Gulbuddin
Hekmatyar, the head of one of Afghanistan's seven rival mujahideen factions,
who enjoyed the most active support of Pakistan's British-trained and
-modeled military intelligence agency, the Inter-Service Intelligence (ISI).

Although American diplomats and intelligence officers posted in Pakistan
often warned of Hekmatyar's strong anti-western and pro-Iranian views,
speculated about possible Soviet KGB links, and even acknowledged his
undisputed status as Afghanistan's "heroin king," his forces received the
largest portion of American and other international military support
throughout the Afghan War. Intelligence reports back to Washington about the
progress of the war were notoriously biased, and filled with disinformation
portraying Hekmatyar's mujahideen as the most successful fighters. Often the
reports to the Pentagon and the CIA were identical to the reports prepared by
British intelligence—complete with the same spelling and typographical
errors. More reliable on-the-scene reports indicated that Hekmatyar spent
more time and effort fighting rival mujahideen groups than battling the
Soviets.

Yet, months after the Soviet pullout from Afghanistan, CBS journalist Kurt
Lohbeck witnessed a massive delivery of weapons to Hekmatyar's camp at the
Pakistan-Afghanistan border by American intelligence officials. And according
to Lohbeck, the Bush administration placed so much emphasis on Hekmatyar's
conquest of postwar Afghanistan that U.S. diplomats were ordered to drop all
public criticisms of Hekmatyar, as the arms pipeline remained open.

A new terrorist international

Under a summer 1979 Presidential Finding, the Carter administration expanded
the already-ongoing covert financing of the Afghan mujahideen for the stated
purpose of "increasing the costs" to the Soviet Union of its efforts inside
Afghanistan. Even after the December 1979 Soviet invasion of the country, the
goal remained essentially the same.

When Ronald Reagan was inaugurated President in January 1981, the U.S.
objective in Afghanistan shifted. No longer satisfied to heap additional
penalties on the Soviets, the Reagan administration sought to drive the Red
Army out of Afghanistan. To accomplish this, it was estimated that a
mujahideen fighting force of no less than 150,000 trained and well-equipped
troops would have to be created. To accomplish this, a worldwide recruitment
effort was conducted, which stretched from the Afghani exile communities in
Europe, to North Africa, to other parts of the Islamic world, to the streets
of America.

By the time the Red Army completed its pullout from Afghanistan, in February
1989, the ranks of the Afghan mujahideen groups were swelled with combatants
who had been recruited to fight the "Great Atheistic Satan" in Moscow. Out of
that operation evolved a mercenary force, currently estimated at over 10,000,
who have shifted their anger from Moscow to the West, and who now comprise
the largest labor pool of potential terrorists ever seen.

According to the April 1995 edition of Jane's Intelligence Review, "afghansi"
fighters are now actively deployed "across North Africa and the Arabian
Peninsula, China and Kashmir, the Philippines and Tajikistan and the U.S.
eastern seaboard."

Among the largest "Afghan veteran" contingents: 5,000 Saudis, 3,000 Yemenis,
2,000 Egyptians, 2,800 Algerians, 400 Tunisians, 370 Iraqis, and 200 Libyans.
According to the Jane's report, the Chechen capital of Grozny became "a key
transit point for Arab veterans of the Afghan war."

While the majority of these veterans are not part of the new terrorist
international, enough of them have been recruited—either by British
intelligence, Iran, or other intelligence services or crime syndicates—that
they now represent a serious national security concern for virtually every
nation on earth.

Sinking into the trap

The United States had become involved—at a token level—in bankrolling several
Pakistani-supported mujahideen groups in May 1979, when CIA station chief
John Joseph Reagan was introduced, for the first time, to a pre-selected
group of Afghani rebel leaders. The Pakistanis told the Americans that
Gulbuddin Hekmatyar was the most skilled, best armed, and most popular of the
half-dozen mujahideen leaders actively engaged in battling the Soviet client
regime in Kabul. Reagan had virtually no independent intelligence profile of
the Afghan rebels, and had no alternative but to take the Pakistani ISI
briefings at face value. The briefings were a British-scripted lie.

Ironically, back in Washington, President Carter's CIA director, Adm.
Stansfield Turner, had initially voiced his opposition to even the token aid
program for the Afghan mujahideen. According to several published accounts,
including Bob Woodward's biography of William Casey, Turner was disturbed
that U.S. intelligence had fallen under the near-total domination of British
intelligence; and it was apparently the British, who were gung-ho to get the
Americans engaged in a surrogate war against the Soviets in Afghanistan.

Turner's prescient concerns were ignored by President Carter, who had by then
fallen increasingly under the sway of his national security adviser, Zbigniew
Brzezinski. Brzezinski had, in turn, been seduced by a senior British
intelligence figure, Oxford University's leading Arabist, Dr. Bernard Lewis,
into believing that Islamic fundamentalism could be played as a
"geo-strategic" card to destabilize the Soviet empire all across South Asia.
In a Time magazine cover story published on Jan. 15, 1979, Brzezinski
proclaimed Iran, Afghanistan, and the Indian subcontinent as an "arc of
crisis" that posed a grave challenge to the West, but could also spell doom
for the Soviet empire.

Time's cover story on "The Crescent of Crisis" ended with the following
observation: "In the long run there may even be targets of opportunity for
the West created by ferment within the crescent. Islam is undoubtedly
compatible with socialism, but it is inimical to atheistic Communism. The
Soviet Union is already the world's fifth largest Muslim nation. By the year
2000, the huge Islamic populations in the border republics may outnumber
Russia's now dominant Slavs. From Islamic democracies on Russia's southern
tier, a zealous Koranic evangelism might sweep across the border into these
politically repressed Soviet states, creating problems for the Kremlin....
Whatever the solution, there is a clear need for the U.S. to recapture what
Kissinger calls 'the geopolitical momentum.' That more than anything else
will help maintain order in the crescent of crisis."

Fifteen years later, when some of the very Afghani mujahideen who had given
Moscow a bloody nose were turned loose as an international terrorist force,
carrying out some of their most heinous crimes on the streets of America
(including at the front gate of the CIA headquarters), a senior CIA officer
who had played a central role in the Afghan War admitted to New York Times
reporter Tim Weiner that, back in the late 1970s and early '80s, when the
United States first began pouring in billions of dollars in aid to the
Afghans, it had never occurred to anyone inside U.S. intelligence that the
program would blow back in such a bloody fashion. Charles G. Cogan, the CIA's
operations chief for the Near East and South Asia from 1979-84, told Weiner:
"It's quite a shock. The hypothesis that the mujahideen would come to the
United States and commit terrorist actions did not enter into our universe of
thinking at the time. We were totally preoccupied with the war against the
Soviets in Afghanistan. It is a significant unintended consequence."

Replaying the 'Great Game'

Maybe it was unintended in Washington and Langley, but not so elsewhere. Such
American naiveté was anticipated in London, where British intelligence had a
200-year history of playing what Rudyard Kipling had dubbed the "Great Game"
across the steppes of Central Asia, and where Islam had been probed, prodded,
and profiled by the British East India Company, and by the successor British
India Office's Arab Bureau, since the time of James Mill, and, later,
Lawrence of Arabia.

Great Britain jealously guarded its Great Game, and, at times, fiercely
fought to keep the United States out of the picture.

In 1944, British Prime Minister Winston Churchill had gone so far as to
assert that Afghanistan was "denied territory" to the Americans, when
President Franklin Roosevelt dispatched his most trusted military aide, Gen.
Patrick Hurley, to Kabul to get a first-hand picture of how Afghanistan might
be drawn into FDR's vision of a postwar decolonized world. British
intelligence did everything short of assassinating Hurley to prevent him from
successfully reaching the Afghan capital. When Hurley did finally get to
Kabul and spend four days with the king and senior government officials, he
made such a lasting impression that the Afghanis immediately declared
themselves anxious to forge a partnership with the Americans, whom they saw
as totally different from the two imperial Great Game rivals, England and
Russia, who had kept the country in a state of enforced backwardness and
poverty for half a century, preventing the construction of even a railroad or
a paved highway. Senior British military officials, based out of the
Northwest Frontier Province across the border in Pakistan, had, however, put
their stamp of approval on the production of vast crops of opium poppy in the
rich mountains of Afghanistan, and had facilitated the processing and
distribution of that opium in the South Asian and Chinese markets.

With the death of FDR, Afghanistan's vision of economic partnership with
America died as well. Once again, Afghanistan fell into the category of
denied territory for the United States.

The British destabilization of the "arc of crisis" began with the Khomeini
Revolution in Iran, which overthrew the Shah in February 1979. Khomeini had
been a longstanding British intelligence tool, and Khomeini's Islamic
Revolution was a crucial ingredient in the Bernard Lewis Plan.

Brzezinski, long schooled in British geopolitics, had locked the United
States into the British Great Game in the early days of the Carter
administration, when he rejected Japanese offers to finance major development
projects in Iran and Mexico. Brzezinski had declared that there would be "no
new Japans in the Persian Gulf or south of the Rio Grande." That American
embrace of British geopolitics doomed the Shah, and drew the United States
into the British covert drive to install Khomeini in power. With the taking
of the American embassy hostages in November 1979, the United States was
drawn ever deeper into the "arc of crisis."

It would be an oversimplification to say that the Soviet invasion of
Afghanistan was the result of a fine-tuned British conspiracy. However,
mujahideen operations had been launched inside Afghanistan as early as 1974,
when Pakistani Prime Minister Zulfikar Ali Bhutto was manipulated into
sponsoring a 5,000-man guerrilla force under the direction of a young Islamic
fanatic, Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, to destabilize the country and dissuade
Afghanistan's President Muhammed Daud from pursuing a "Greater Pushtun"
nation extending into Pakistan's Northwest Frontier Territory. Back at the
height of the Great Game in the late nineteenth century, the British had
deliberately created an Indian-Afghan border that cut through the middle of
the Pushtun tribal territory, thereby setting up a border crisis that could
be manipulated at will.

Although Hekmatyar's forces were soundly defeated in 1974, the effort did
result in Muhammed Daud's decision to negotiate a border deal with Primen
Minister Bhutto that brought a temporary peace to the area. The situation
dramatically changed when Prime Minister Bhutto was overthrown in 1977 by the
Pakistani military, under the direction of Gen. Mohammed Zia ul-Haq. During
the same period, the Soviet-backed Afghani communists launched their own
drive to power, which ultimately resulted in the overthrow of Muhammed Daud
and the installation of a Soviet-puppet regime in April 1978.

British brains and American dollars

A careful review of the covert apparatus established to support the Afghan
mujahideen effort against the Red Army (see other articles in this section)
shows that the entire program was directed, top-down, from London—either
directly through senior British intelligence figures like the Privy Council
head, Lord Cranborne, or through notorious Anglophiles within the U.S.
intelligence establishment, like Wall Street banker John Train and
International Rescue Committee President Leo Cherne.

Under National Security Directive 3, signed by President Reagan in early
1982, Vice President George Bush was placed in charge of the entire global
covert action program. It was Bush's Special Situation Group (SSG) and Crisis
Pre-Planning Group (CPPG) at the White House, that deployed Oliver North,
Richard Secord, "Public Diplomacy" head Walter Raymond, and the entire
Iran-Contra crew. Throughout the 1980s, the Afghan War was the largest single
program under this Bush chain of command. And because the Afghan program was
sold to the U.S. Congress as an opportunity to give the Soviets "their own
Vietnam," it enjoyed nearly unanimous support and financing—and was to remain
a well-kept secret.

Private sector figures like John Train and Leo Cherne (who also served on
President Reagan's Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board, PFIAB), who
coordinated the American aid program to the Hekmatyar forces, were senior
officials in the Bush-directed program.

The 'Get LaRouche' effort

It is particularly noteworthy that Train and Cherne simultaneously played
central roles in the campaign to slander and then frame up Lyndon LaRouche
and his associates, on behalf of George Bush and Henry Kissinger.

While heading the Afghan Relief Committee (ARC), Train organized a media
salon, involving the Anti-Defamation League of B'nai B'rith (ADL), NBC-TV,
Readers Digest, the New Republic, and others, which churned out mountains of
black propaganda against LaRouche, and set the stage for the railroad
prosecution and jailing of him and many of his associates. Train's chain of
command on the "Get LaRouche" effort ran into the White House via Walter
Raymond—the same person who coordinated Train's Afghan support efforts within
the Bush White House task force.

Cherne used his position on PFIAB to ensure, on behalf of his close friend
Henry Kissinger, that the FBI launched a bogus "national security" probe of
LaRouche in January 1983—at the very moment that LaRouche was serving as a
back channel for National Security Adviser William Clark in sensitive talks
with Moscow on what later became President Reagan's SDI.


-----
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All My Relations.
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Amen.
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