-------------------------
Via Workers World News Service
Reprinted from the Oct. 18, 2001
issue of Workers World newspaper
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A WAR FOR DOMINATION

By Fred Goldstein

After weeks of military build-up and three days of 
relentless bombing of Afghanistan, it is becoming clear that 
the Bush administration is using the horrific attacks of 
Sept. 11 as a pretext to assert and expand U.S. imperialist 
military domination in the entire region of the Middle East 
and Central Asia.

The enormous display of military striking power directed 
against an impoverished country that had already been mostly 
destroyed by two decades of war can only be understood by 
the world as a blatant act of intimidation directed against 
all governments and movements that Washington regards with 
hostility--and as preparation for a much wider war.

To carry out the massive bombing raids and to prepare for 
putting ground troops in Afghanistan, the Pentagon has sent 
four aircraft carrier-led battle groups into the region: the 
Enterprise, the Carl Vinson, the Theodore Roosevelt and the 
Kitty Hawk, which is on its way from Japan. Each battle 
group has a dozen or so warships, including submarines and 
destroyers. The Enterprise group alone carries 7,500 troops 
along with F-14 and F-18 fighter planes and E6-Bs for 
electronic warfare.

In addition, the Pentagon has shown its murderous global 
reach by mobilizing B-1 and B-2 bombers on non-stop 6,000-
mile bombing runs from as far away as Missouri as well as B-
52s from Diego Garcia in the Indian Ocean, almost 3,000 
miles south of Afghanistan. The British junior partners of 
Washington have also participated in the bombings.

Together these two imperialist powers have close to 80,000 
troops in the area. Such massive forces are clearly meant to 
attack existing states.

Under the banner of "fighting terrorism," the Pentagon has 
pushed its way into the Central Asian republic of Uzbekistan 
and has gotten permission to use Tajikistan as a staging 
area. A crucial part of the plan to bring oil out of the 
region is to build a pipeline running through Afghanistan. 
This mobilization, among other things, has served to provide 
the U.S. military with inroads into the oil-rich area of 
Central Asia, which the oil companies would like to secure 
for their empire along with their domination of the oil-rich 
Arabian/Persian Gulf.

WASHINGTON WANTS NO RESTRAINTS FROM ITS ALLIES

The aggressive mood in Washington is such that it wants 
absolutely no restraint upon its military ambitions, even 
from its imperialist allies. According to the New York Times 
of Oct. 7, Robert Oakley, former head of the State 
Department's "counter-terrorism" office and former 
ambassador to Pakistan, said that "coalition is a bad word 
because it makes people think of alliances."

"A senior administration official put it more bluntly: 'The 
fewer people you have to rely on, the fewer permissions you 
have to get.'"

Not only did Washington immediately reject UN Secretary 
General Kofi Annan's suggestion that the Security Council 
approve military action. The Pentagon was at first, 
continued the Times, "even unwilling to have NATO invoke the 
alliance's mutual defense clause requiring members to defend 
one another against an armed attack, senior administration 
and European officials said. 'The allies were desperately 
trying to give us political cover and the Pentagon was 
resisting it... It was insane. Eventually Rumsfeld 
understood it was a plus, not a minus and was able to accept 
it.'"

NO COUNTRY IS SAFE

The U.S. does not want to have to ask anyone's permission 
precisely because it has plans to use the current situation 
to expand its world domination. Washington is telling the 
world directly that it plans to widen the war. In Bush's 
speech of Oct. 7 announcing the beginning of the bombing 
attacks, he said, "Today we focus on Afghanistan, but the 
battle is much broader." He declared that no country could 
be neutral.

At the United Nations the next day, according to the New 
York Times of Oct. 9, "the American representative, John 
Negroponte, submitted a letter to the Security Council 
saying the United States may find it necessary to carry its 
military campaign into other nations, without specifying 
which ones."

"We may find that our self-defense requires further actions 
with respect to other organizations and other states," said 
the letter. The Times interpretation was that this was 
laying the groundwork for attacks on Iraq, Lebanon, Syria 
"and other countries identified as harboring terrorists."

On the same day Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld "warned 
the nation to prepare for not months, but years, of battle," 
according to the Times. And he "insisted that the attacks in 
Afghanistan should be viewed as 'part of a much larger 
effort against world-wide terrorism, one that will be 
sustained and which is wide-ranging.'"

To dub this attempt to terrorize the world with military 
power as a "war on terrorism" is cynical in the extreme.

The destruction of the Taliban regime in Afghanistan by the 
Pentagon will not put an end to terrorism. The U.S. 
government has just announced that the Taliban is an 
oppressive regime that persecutes women, among other crimes. 
But the U.S. knew this from day one because the Taliban was 
one of many reactionary forces that received part of the $8 
billion the CIA spent on years of counter-revolutionary 
warfare to destroy the progressive socialist government of 
Afghanistan.

Washington knew that this government gave rights to women 
and to the long-suppressed progressive forces of Afghanistan 
society. The Soviet Union spent blood unsuccessfully trying 
to defend this regime from the counter-revolutionary terror 
campaign conducted under the aegis of the CIA.

TALIBAN, NORTHERN ALLIANCE AND U.S.

The U.S. is now trying to hold up the Northern Alliance as 
the liberators of Afghanistan from the reactionary Taliban. 
The Northern Alliance forces were also a significant part of 
the CIA's anti-communist army of counter-revolutionary 
terrorists.

Even the pro-imperialist Human Rights Watch issued a report, 
covering the period of the 1990s after the defeat of the 
USSR and the socialist forces in Afghanistan, which declared 
that all the victorious contra forces, including the 
Northern Alliance, "engaged in rape, summary executions, 
arbitrary arrests, torture and 'disappearances.'" (New York 
Times, Oct. 7) In 1997 in Mazari-I-Sharif the Northern 
Alliance executed 3,000 Taliban soldiers and in 1998 the 
Alliance sent rockets into the market place in Kabul, 
killing 76 civilians.

So the difference between the Northern Alliance and the 
Taliban is that the former, having been defeated by the 
Taliban, is willing to reenter the service of Washington in 
this new phase of the war against Afghanistan.

To be sure, the Taliban is internally an extremely 
reactionary formation. It deserves to be destroyed--but only 
by the masses of people, and only in order to put in its 
place a progressive government that will fight imperialism 
and serve the interests of the people. It will be of no help 
to replace it with a regime imposed on Kabul simply to 
further the war aims and economic interests of the U.S. 
military and corporations that are trying to get a 
stranglehold on the region.

If the U.S. government is able to accomplish this goal, it 
will only set the stage for a wider war in which untold 
thousands of people in the Middle East and Central Asia, as 
well as soldiers from the U.S., will die.

As for the war against Osama bin Laden, the people in the 
U.S. must see beyond the Sept. 11 catastrophe. They must 
understand that this U.S. mobilization and the bombing of 
Afghanistan are another chapter in a long and bloody history 
of Western colonialist and imperialist intervention in the 
region.

The mobilization is seen by hundreds of millions in the area 
as continuing the colonial wars the French and British began 
in Afghanistan early in the 19th century. The people of the 
Middle East remember the more recent killing of 20,000 
innocent civilians in Lebanon in 1982 by a U.S.-equipped 
Israeli invasion that destroyed Beirut. They still have 
nightmares over the U.S. bombing of Iraq in 1991 that killed 
200,000 people, and the deaths of a million more over the 
next decade from U.S.-imposed sanctions.

This attack on Afghanistan must also be seen along with the 
expulsion of the Palestinian people and the bloody 53-year 
occupation of their homeland by the Israeli settler regime.

The people of Central Asia and the Middle East have suffered 
so much at the hands of Western colonialism and military 
intervention that they inevitably regard this latest 
incursion by U.S. and British forces as another move to hold 
them down. They will resist and have a right to resist.

The workers in this country must not be drawn into a war in 
which they have to kill or be killed to defend U.S. military 
and corporate expansionism.

It is ludicrous to think that George W. Bush, Dick Cheney, 
Donald Rumsfeld and the rest of the Bush administration in 
Washington are making all these military moves in order to 
protect the people in the U.S. They are using the horrible 
destruction of thousands of innocent people on Sept. 11 as 
an excuse to carry out long-held expansionist designs.

BUSH HASN'T CHANGED

No one should forget that this is the same George Bush who 
came to power through a racist miscount of the votes in 
Florida and presided over more executions than any other 
governor. This is the Bush who appointed the racist, sexist 
John Ashcroft to be attorney general. He's the one who gave 
the rich a trillion-dollar tax break at the expense of the 
workers, the poor and the lower middle class. It is the same 
George Bush who is raiding Social Security and endangering 
the retirement funds of millions of workers.

George Bush has not changed in his undying loyalty to the 
oil companies and big business. That's what caused him to 
push through a plan for oil drilling in the Arctic 
wilderness and to pull out of the Kyoto Agreement, 
threatening the entire planet with pollution and global 
warming so his corporate buddies can be saved the cost of 
anti-pollution measures. When this administration sends 
military forces abroad, it is only to fight for profit in 
the same greedy way that they fought for it at home before 
Sept. 11.

And who are the "terrorists," according to Washington? Iran, 
Iraq, Syria, Libya, the Sudan, the People's Democratic 
Republic of Korea, Cuba, the Palestinians, the Lebanese, the 
Colombian liberation fighters, among others, are all on the 
list.

What do these governments and movements all have in common? 
They are either trying to hold on to their national 
independence or are fighting for their liberation. Many in 
Washington are talking about the post-Sept. 11 era as 
comparable to the Cold War, in which world imperialism 
finally brought about the collapse of the USSR and the 
eastern-bloc countries that constituted the material 
stronghold of the socialist camp.

This is truly the context in which they see the present 
struggle. The 75-year war against socialism and the USSR was 
not just a Cold War but a class war, a war of big business 
to defend private property and profit. It was a war against 
the workers and oppressed who want to use the world's 
economic resources for people and not for profit.

Bush and the ruling class would like to continue this class 
war against the oppressed of the world by using the cover of 
fighting terrorism to overturn every government and movement 
that resists the will of the big multinational corporations, 
the banks, the IMF, the World Bank and the Pentagon.

This is a dangerous pipedream. It cannot succeed because the 
mass of the people will ultimately stop them. But the time 
to resist this new surge toward expanded domination is now. 
The first demand is to stop the war and get the U.S. forces 
out of the Middle East and Central Asia.

That is the only way to secure the peace and security of the 
people of that region and the people at home.

- END -

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