10-20-15 Indefinite War Means Endless Suffering For Afghan People |
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By Debra Sweet President Obama’s announcement that he will cease U.S. troop withdrawal from Afghanistan exposes the utter futility of forcing American style “democracy” on noncompliant populations. Troop levels will remain at somewhere near 10,000 through the end of Obama’s term of office, ostensibly to train local forces to replace the imperial forces of occupation. We’ve witnessed this before, one notorious example being Richard Nixon’s “Vietnamization” policy. South Vietnamese troops were supposed to replace U.S. ground forces, but their ranks collapsed in short order when U.S. troops were forced to withdraw as Vietnamese liberation forces advanced. Puppet troops are puppet troops and never gain the support of the people. Above, villagers in Jabar, Afghanistan, stand next to a site bombed by NATO in March 2007. It is now 14 years since the U.S. first attacked and invaded Afghanistan, one of the poorest countries in the world. Even by official U.S. estimates, around 30,000 Afghan civilians have been killed. Hundreds of thousands have been driven from their homes by bombing, drone attacks, night raids, and special forces operations, and what little infrastructure existed has been devastated in region after region, resulting in rampant child malnutrition and one of the world’s highest rates of mortality in child birth. This is the war that candidate Obama called “the good war” when he ran for President in 2008. Above, the aftermath of the US attack on the Doctors Without Borders hospital in Kunduz, which left more than 22 people dead and 37 injured. Yesterday, October 15, we learned of another horrific campaign waged by the Obama administration in Afghanistan: “Haymarket,” as revealed by Ryan Devereux in The Intercept. This was a 2+ year high-tech nightmare of drone strikes guided by on-the-ground intelligence, featuring the most elite U.S. military forces and state-of-the-art electronic surveillance. Although the program is still classified, newly leaked U.S. Army analysis indicates that the majority of those killed were not al Qaeda or Taliban but rather “not direct targets,” i.e. civilians and local forces attempting to fight both the U.S. and the Taliban. This is the face of Obama’s “dirty wars” strategy, and whether in the form of “Haymarket” or some other delivery system for death and massive destruction, more troops in Afghanistan can only mean more death and suffering for the people of Afghanistan.
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