Whatever the CIA's been up to in
Afghanistan it's nothing good
00
John Wight has written for a
variety of newspapers and websites, including the Independent, Morning Star,
Huffington Post, Counterpunch, London Progressive Journal, and Foreign Policy
Journal.
Published time: 22 Aug, 2019 12:44
© AFP / GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA
/ MARK WILSON
The US and the Taliban, we are led
to believe, are close to agreeing a deal that would see the withdrawal of all
US and NATO forces from Afghanistan. The question is though, will it?
First some context, beginning with
the fact that the tortured history of this landlocked country, whose geographic
location as a land bridge between Central Asia and the Middle East, and in
modern times also as a potentially vital energy
bridge, entitles the
Afghan people to believe that they are uniquely cursed.
The inordinate price they have been
forced to pay since the US-backed Mujahadeen overran the country in the early
nineties, all the way up to now at the end of 18 years of US/NATO attacks,
occupation, and the propping up of a series of corrupt
governments in
Kabul, should be inscribed on the gravestone of what has passed for foreign
policy in the West since the Soviet Union departed the scene.
As it did in Yugoslavia, as it did
in Iraq, and as it did in Libya, Western intervention in Afghanistan only
succeeded in making a bad situation many times worse. It has exacerbated
religious, tribal and communal tensions instead of alleviating them.
Though, given the above, any peace
deal that will hasten the departure of US and NATO forces from Afghanistan is
to be welcomed, the devil as ever is in the detail.
And the devil in this particular
instance is the CIA.
Before we come on to that and them,
though, let us first consider the terms of the draft
agreement, arrived at after
eight rounds of talks over two weeks in the Qatari capital of Doha (though at
the time of writing yet to be ratified by President Trump).
They require that in return for the
complete withdrawal of US and NATO forces the Taliban will not allow the
territory under its control,predominantly but not exclusively in the south of the
country, to be used as a
base and launchpad for terrorist groups such as Islamic State (IS, formerly
ISIS) and Al-Qaeda.
The terms of the agreement also
mandate intra-Afghan dialogue between the various factions in the country
engaged in hostilities. However whether the Taliban will accept the current
Afghan government in Kabul, led by Ashraf Ghani, as a legitimate participant in
any such future dialogue remains to be seen.
Up to this point, the Pashtun
nationalist movement has steadfastly refused to recognise the government in
Kabul. It has dismissed it as a US puppet regime, and in line with that has
dismissed the upcoming Afghan
elections, set to take
place on September 28, as a sham.
Despite the enthusiasm of the chief
US diplomat involved in the talks with the Taliban, US Special Representative
Zalmay Khalilzad, expressed in a series of tweets, the entire thing smacks of a desperate cut and run
exit by the Trump administration.
Here it should be borne in mind
that Trump inherited this dog’s dinner of a military occupation in the country
from Obama, a president who has much to answer for when it comes to the current
state of the country.
Currently there are 14,000 US
troops in the Central Asian country, along with a further 17,000 troops from 39
NATO and other countries. This it must be stressed is the official occupation
force.
There is, however, an unofficial
element to the US presence in the country. It is a presence both sinister and
conspicuous by its absence from the draft agreement, drawn up in Doha.
It is here we come to the shadowy
and sinister activities of an equally shadowy and sinister CIA.
Calling to mind the infamous
CIA-run contras in Central America in the 1980s, the notorious US intelligence
agency has been running in Afghanistan what amounts to a private war with its
own private army.
Details of the CIA’s operations in
the country are highlighted in a chilling report, produced by the Costs of War Project based at Brown
University’s Watson Institute of International and Public Affairs in the US.
Specifically, the report traces the
origin of these militia groups to the initial “2001 invasion, when US
military forces and the CIA organized” them “to fight Islamist militants.”
However “the CIA” 18 years on“is still running local militias”
in the country, which have “reportedly committed serious human rights
abuses, including numerous extrajudicial killings of civilians.” Finally,
the report’s authors make the point that “There is virtually no public
oversight of their activities or accountability for grave human rights abuses.”
What this describes is the conduct
not only of a private war but a dirty war by the CIA, one clearly inimical to
any prospect of a lasting peace in a country that has known only conflict and
strife over the past two decades.
Covering the story in The
Intercept, the
investigative news website, Alex Emmons reveals that the best known of these
CIA-run Afghan militia groups is the Khost Protection Force, operating out of
the CIA’s Camp Chapman in Khost province.
Drilling deeper, in a country whose
most valuable commodity is opium, we are entitled, indeed obligated, to ponder whether
there has been or is any crossover between the burgeoning opium trade emanating
from Afghanistan and the CIA’s activities in the country.
It is a pertinent question to ask,
and one that’s been pondered by better minds than mine in recent times,
especially given what we know of the CIA and its legacy of criminality around
the world.
Whatever the CIA is up to in
Afghanistan it is nothing good. Moreover, unless its operations cease
forthwith, any peace agreement between Washington and the Taliban carries about
as much weight as a butterfly’s wing.
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