Posted on 03/19/2006 11:27:34 PM PST by Starman417
Exactly what was it that new Yale student Sayeed Rahmatullah Hashemi did for the Taliban? Discussions of this issue so far have usually tagged him an envoy or ambassador. But a little digging shows he was far more than just a mouthpiece. To paraphrase one of my critics, Mr. Rahmatullah was quite the rising star in the Taliban firmament. His work as a translator, and then as a spokesman, vaulted him up the Taliban hierarchy into the service of Mullah Omar himself.
Folks wishing to see Mr. Rahmatullah as a storm-tossed waif who escaped the wreckage of Afghanistan (to use Yales own phrase from their only press release on the controversy) are deceiving themselves about his agency in creating that wreckage.
Exhibit one in this regard is his defense of Osama bin Laden. Many sources writing on the Yale Taliban issue have referred to his speech at USC in March of 2001. There has been less discussion of his March 27th interview with PBSs Ray Suarez that same month, in which he explains what a stand-up guy Osama is:
They have made this man [bin Laden] very famous, and this man has helped Afghans in their very hard time. He has helped the Afghans with his own personal money millions of dollars during the Soviet occupation.So for the Afghans, he is a good guy. If we were to hand this good guy to the U.S., what kind of justification will we give to our people? So we need some kind of evidence so that we can prove to our people that this man is involved in some kind of horrendous act somewhere.
Mr. Rahmatullah was actually quite familiar with Osamas true nature. Chip Browns New York Times Magazine article points out that Mr. Rahmatullah had translated the American indictment against him from English into Urdu and Pashto.
Exhibit Two is Mr. Rahmatullahs advancement within the Taliban. He started out as a document translator, then somehow landed his gig talking up the Taliban in America. At the time, according to John Fund, his official title was second foreign secretary.
Apparently he had impressed the mullahs with his footwork in America, because soon after he returned, Mr. Rahmatullah went to work as a personal adviser to Mullah Omara fact left out of the glowing New York Times Magazine writeup, which notes only that when he reported on his trip to Mullah Omar and a group of senior advisers in Kandahar, [i]t was quickly evident that they werent interested in his ideas.
Apparently they were so uninterested in Mr. Rahmatullahs ideas that they promoted him to the Talibans equivalent of Karl Rove. Leftist journalist Robert Fisk identifies Mr. Rahmatullah as a Senior Adviser to Mullah Omar. When UPIs Arnaud de Borchgrave interviewed Mullah Omar in June 2001, Mr. Rahmatullah did all the talking. Where Mullah Omar comes off as the strong, silent type in the interview, Mr. Rahmatullah emerges as the idea man, the big picture guy, the strategist with both eyes open, Mullah Omar having lost one of his fighting the Soviets.
In fact, the Talibans senior officials were so unimpressed by Mr. Rahmatullah that de Borchgrave notes he was rumored to be Afghanistans next foreign minister. And now, if Yale permits him to transfer in from his special student program to the regular undergraduate degree program, he may yet achieve that goal.
Mr. Ramahtullah is not, as Yales Whiffenpoofs might sing, some poor little lamb whos lost his way. It is condescending and, frankly, colonialist to give Mr. Rahmatullah a pass for his participation in Taliban tyranny. Just because he comes from a different cultureeven an indigenous, authentic onedoes not exonerate his knowing, willing work in shoring up the Talibans strength and possibly as an architect of their ideologyand as he notes in his March 2001 speech at USC, ideology is everything to the Taliban.
At best, Mr. Rahmatullah was an apologist for evil. But the widespread perception of Mr. Rahmatullah in 2001 suggests he didnt just work for the Taliban; he was the Taliban.
If these facts about Mr. Rahmatullah come as a surprise, they shouldnt. My research assistant, Mr. Google, found all this stuff in about half an hour. (Hes good at figuring out stuff the Times misses.) That this information was so easy to find says something scary about Yales and the State Departments decisions to admit him. Either they didnt perform this basic bit of due diligence on an applicant from a terrorist regime, or else they knew all this and decided to admit him anyway.
In either case, Yales decision to admit Mullah Omars personal adviser, and the likely next Foreign Minister for the Taliban, remains inexcusable. If you are interested in expressing your outrage to Yale, heres just the way to do it.
Wakil Ahmad Muttawakil
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/south_asia/2242594.stm
http://www.upi.com/inc/view.php?StoryID=20031105-080813-9092r
L
OPINION: Ditto.
Why don't they have some of the beaten up women of the Taliban at Yale? With their fingernails pulled out for using nail polish?
I wonder if he took an art history class at Yale, if he get extra credit for discussing how the Taliban destroyed the Buddhist Statues in the mountain. Do they admit him into their museums and art shows?
I swear, sometimes I feel like we've been taken over by aliens (not the mexicans), you read the news and your like there's no way this is true.
Hello!!!!!!!!!! The guy was in the freakin' Taliban, which I might add are still fighting our guys, and he gets invited to attend Yale!!!!! I have a constant headache from banging my head against the wall.
This whole thing just irritates the heck out of me. I would feel much better if the next time I read about this guy its a story about him getting his ass kicked by a feminazi.
btt
I don't know, but he did take a poli-sci class on terrorism. Seriously.
Actually it would be very effective if the Bush adminstration would just see to it that the guy's student visa is revoked, and have him deported.
Yale used to have a good reputation for academic excellence. Considering their lack of response, it's hard for me to consider them much better than mediocre anymore.
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