Taliban
[back] Afghanistan
[2009] Afghanistan, Another Untold Story by Dr. Michael Parenti
Quotes
In Afghanistan itself, by 1995 an extremist strain of Sunni Islam
called the Taliban---heavily funded and advised by the ISI and the CIA and with
the support of Islamic political parties in Pakistan---fought its way to power,
taking over most of the country, luring many tribal chiefs into its fold with
threats and bribes.
The Taliban promised to end the factional fighting and
banditry that was the mujahideen trademark. Suspected murderers and spies were
executed monthly in the sports stadium, and those accused of thievery had the
offending hand sliced off. The Taliban condemned forms of “immorality” that
included premarital sex, adultery, and homosexuality. They also outlawed all
music, theater, libraries, literature, secular education, and much scientific
research.
The Taliban unleashed a religious reign of terror, imposing
an even stricter interpretation of Muslim law than used by most of the Kabul
clergy. All men were required to wear untrimmed beards and women had to wear the
burqa which covered them from head to toe, including their faces. Persons who
were slow to comply were dealt swift and severe punishment by the Ministry of
Virtue. A woman who fled an abusive home or charged spousal abuse would herself
be severely whipped by the theocratic authorities. Women were outlawed from
social life, deprived of most forms of medical care, barred from all levels of
education, and any opportunity to work outside the home. Women who were deemed
“immoral” were stoned to death or buried alive.
None of this was of much concern to leaders in Washington who
got along famously with the Taliban. As recently as 1999, the US government was
paying the entire annual salary of every single Taliban government official (SF
Chronicle, 10/2/2001). Not until October 2001, when President George W. Bush had
to rally public opinion behind his bombing campaign in Afghanistan did he
denounce the Taliban’s oppression of women. His wife, Laura Bush, emerged
overnight as a full-blown feminist to deliver a public address detailing some of
the abuses committed against Afghan women.
If anything positive can be said about the Taliban, it is
that they did put a stop to much of the looting, raping, and random killings
that the mujahideen had practiced on a regular basis. In 2000 Taliban
authorities also eradicated the cultivation of opium poppy throughout the areas
under their control, an effort judged by the United Nations International Drug
Control Program to have been nearly totally successful. With the Taliban
overthrown and a Western-selected mujahideen government reinstalled in Kabul by
December 2001, opium poppy production in Afghanistan increased dramatically.
The years of war that have followed have taken tens of
thousands of Afghani lives. Along with those killed by Cruise missiles, Stealth
bombers, Tomahawks, daisy cutters, and land mines are those who continue to die
of hunger, cold, lack of shelter, and lack of water.
[2009] Afghanistan,
Another Untold Story by Dr. Michael Parenti
While claiming to be fighting terrorism, US leaders have found other
compelling but less advertised reasons for plunging deeper into
Afghanistan. The Central Asian region is rich in oil and gas reserves. A
decade before 9/11, Time magazine (18 March 1991) reported that US
policy elites were contemplating a military presence in Central Asia.
The discovery of vast oil and gas reserves in Kazakhstan and
Turkmenistan provided the lure, while the dissolution of the USSR
removed the one major barrier against pursuing an aggressive
interventionist policy in that part of the world.
US oil companies acquired
the rights to some 75 percent of these new reserves. A major problem was
how to transport the oil and gas from the landlocked region. US
officials opposed using the Russian pipeline or the most direct route
across Iran to the Persian Gulf. Instead, they and the corporate oil
contractors explored a number of alternative pipeline routes, across
Azerbaijan and Turkey to the Mediterranean or across China to the
Pacific.
The route favored by
Unocal, a US based oil company, crossed Afghanistan and Pakistan to the
Indian Ocean. The intensive negotiations that Unocal entered into with
the Taliban regime remained unresolved by 1998, as an Argentine company
placed a competing bid for the pipeline. Bush’s war against the Taliban
rekindled UNOCAL’s hopes for getting a major piece of the action.
Interestingly enough,
neither the Clinton nor Bush administrations ever placed Afghanistan on
the official State Department list of states charged with sponsoring
terrorism, despite the acknowledged presence of Osama bin Laden as a
guest of the Taliban government. Such a “rogue state” designation would
have made it impossible for a US oil or construction company to enter an
agreement with Kabul for a pipeline to the Central Asian oil and gas
fields.
In sum, well in advance of
the 9/11 attacks the US government had made preparations to move against
the Taliban and create a compliant regime in Kabul and a direct US
military presence in Central Asia. The 9/11 attacks provided the perfect
impetus, stampeding US public opinion and reluctant allies into
supporting military intervention.
[2009]
Afghanistan, Another Untold Story by Dr. Michael Parenti