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Afghanistan Asunder - The Afghan Hounds Renew Their War On Women
Townhall.com ^ | July 19, 2021 | Duggan Flanakin

Posted on 07/19/2021 5:27:00 AM PDT by Kaslin

resident Joe Biden is about to do what President Donald Trump had proposed to do a year earlier – end the fruitless Western military presence in Afghanistan. Many, including President Trump, are applauding the move, while many others, including former President George W. Bush, are horrified, fearing a return to power of the Seventh Century Taliban.

International conflict specialist Dr. Greg Mills, who is Director of the Brenthurst Foundation, is more hopeful for Afghanistan’s long-term future. In a recent op-ed, Mills lists five primary reasons why the West failed to help Afghanistan right the ship of state the Taliban had torpedoed just five years prior to Bin Laden’s daring raid – and ways Afghans can achieve victory.

Mills, a South African who spent years in Kabul as an advisor to the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF), points the finger at the West’s failure to accept – from the outset – that a successful intervention in Afghanistan would require a broader based strategy than merely dislodging the Taliban.

Such a strategy, I believe, must build on the female-friendly Afghan society that existed prior to the Soviet-backed coup that brought in a Marxist-Leninist government in 1978. But first, the Afghan people must unite to stave off the assault of the Taliban, or else half the nation will again be enslaved.

Mills says a lack of advanced planning made it easy to focus first on regime change, then on nation building. But without clearly defined political objectives that could rally widespread support, the Taliban could declare the “foreign warlords” to be corrupting interlopers looking to take from Afghans much more than they might give.

Mills also notes that Pakistan and other neighboring nations were never convinced that the U.S.-led mission was not more about flexing U.S. military muscle than it was helping the nation recover from first Marxist, then Taliban oppression. Nor were they thrilled with the horde of “infidels” swarming their streets and sometimes committing atrocities.

Mills also faults ineffective aid programs for undermining the Afghan private sector economy, the primary employer in most developing nations. Aid programs, he says, are mostly led by those who apparently neither understand nor like private business. Rather than lend startup money to entrepreneurs with good ideas, over $100 billion in soft donor money was spent mostly funding pet projects of the donor agencies.

Despite the wastefulness and lack of focus of the West, Mills is optimistic about Afghanistan’s future, so long as the Taliban can be kept at bay by the Afghan people.

All is not lost; the struggle of the last 20 years – really, the last 43 years – has not failed. It is, instead, incomplete.

The current struggles of Afghanistan began with the Saur Revolution coup that brought to power the Marxist-Leninist People’s Democratic Party of Afghanistan (PDPA). The 10-year war gave rise to the Taliban, an assemblage of Mujahideen infiltrated by Al Qaeda veterans who envisioned a return to the days when women were chattel.

The Taliban emerged as the dominant Mujahideen group when Pakistan chose them to guard a convoy seeking to open a trade route to central Asia. Pakistan supplied weapons, military training, and financial support that helped the Taliban eventually overthrow the Kabul government and seize power.

After the September 11th attacks, the Taliban was instrumental in protecting Bin Laden, whom President Bush had vowed to capture. The Taliban was driven back, but Afghan life did not return to its pre-1978 glory.

Many may not realize that Afghanistan has a long history of women’s rights and participation in society. Afghan women got the right to vote in the 1920s, and the Afghan constitution in the 1960s provided for equality for women.

In 1977, a year before the Saur coup, women comprised over 15 percent of the nation’s highest legislative body. Just before the Taliban takeover, 70 percent of schoolteachers, half the nation’s government workers and university students, and 40 percent of doctors in Kabul were women.

At the outset of the U.S. response to Bin Laden’s raid, the U.S. State Department released, concurrent with President Bush’s speech before the November 2001 Warsaw Conference on Combating Terrorism, a “Report on the Taliban’s War Against Women.” As the report summarized, “…Prior to the rise of the Taliban, women in Afghanistan were protected under law and increasingly afforded rights in Afghan society.”

In his speech, Bush declared that, in Afghanistan under the Taliban, “Women are imprisoned in their homes and are denied access to basic health care and education. Food sent to starving people is stolen by their leaders… Children are forbidden to fly kites or sing songs.”

According to the State Department report, “The Afghan people want … a broad-based representative government, which includes women, in post-Taliban Afghanistan…. Only Afghans can determine the future government of their country. And Afghan women should have the right to choose their role in that future.”

Somehow, with all the saber rattling, that message never became the focus of the U.S.-NATO mission. To make matters worse, the retreating Americans had left behind “a treasure trove” of weaponry and other war materiel that the Taliban easily seized and is already using against the Afghan people.

Afghanistan’s immediate future at best, says Mills, is war between a (hopefully) modernizing republic and a reactionary Taliban that, despite its military might, is no longer seen as saving Afghanistan from the Russians.

Taliban leaders, while sensing an easy victory, have already encountered armed Afghan women who have proclaimed that they would rather die than live as sub-humans. Yet to be seen, though, is whether Afghan men will embrace the freedoms for women that were once the national norm.

Meanwhile, President Biden, apparently conceding a Taliban takeover, is bracing for a flood of refugees – including women, journalists, activists and interpreters – which his administration may bring to the U.S. to escape Taliban vengeance.

But what if they stay and fight – and win?

Closer to home, Cubans today are marching in the streets again for their long-denied freedom, with the Maduro government in Venezuela jailing political opponents in response to that country’s crisis. Yet America’s Secretary of State has asked the UN Human Rights Council to investigate the United States.

To prevent a Taliban victory that would condemn an entire nation to unending misery, Mills proposes that the Biden administration should at the least enable the Afghan government to pay its soldiers and “encourage” that others not join up with the Taliban.

Intelligence sharing and weapons maintenance are also options, as is aid targeted at regional infrastructure connectivity (to boost trade), but the long-term priority is pressing for a diplomatic solution that could only follow a Taliban defeat.

The Afghan people in 1978, in 2001, and again today, need allies as they try to rebuild a just society. They may well not get any.


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KEYWORDS: afghanistan
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1 posted on 07/19/2021 5:27:00 AM PDT by Kaslin
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To: Kaslin

Gosh Never Saw This One Coming!

BTW if you are going to place the blame at someones feet, the names Donald Trump & Mike Pompeo come to mind. They are the ones who negotiated the surrender treaty.


2 posted on 07/19/2021 5:37:32 AM PDT by Valin
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To: Kaslin

So basically...islam.


3 posted on 07/19/2021 5:38:36 AM PDT by 2banana (Common ground with islamic terrorists-they want to die for allah and we want to arrange the meeting)
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To: Kaslin
The Afghan people in 1978, in 2001, and again today, need allies as they try to rebuild a just society.

Such detailed analysis. But one thing is missing. They are Mooslims. That is all you need to know. They are destined to live in their hell hole. No need to try to rebuild because they will end up right back where they started from.

4 posted on 07/19/2021 5:43:15 AM PDT by ConservativeInPA (“When injustice becomes law, resistance becomes duty.” ― Thomas Jefferson)
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To: Kaslin

There is no cure for cowardice

If the cowards that live there, that were given their freedom by the sacrifice of American lives and blood, that were given trading and arms; are too craven to stand up to 7th Century savages who would kill them, rape their daughters and sons, and take thei possessions

Then these cowards deserve to die.

Humankind is better off without them. They are nothing more than parasites who FAR TOO MUCH was wasted in the attempt to redeem them

Next time, just nuke the problem away


5 posted on 07/19/2021 5:51:19 AM PDT by Hodar (A man can fail many times, but he isn't a failure until he begins to blame somebody else.- Burroughs)
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To: Kaslin

“But what if they stay and fight – and win?”

Is this Peggy Noonan’s new gender identity?


6 posted on 07/19/2021 5:51:58 AM PDT by Empire_of_Liberty
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To: Kaslin

It’s disheartening to see current Islamic sh*tholes that once were once very Westernized.The pictures of Afghanistan, Iran and Lebanon come to mind.


7 posted on 07/19/2021 5:53:10 AM PDT by shanover (...To disarm the people is the best and most effectual way to enslave them.-S.Adams)
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To: Valin

They had 20 years to get their act together.


8 posted on 07/19/2021 5:53:46 AM PDT by dfwgator (Endut! Hoch Hech!)
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To: Kaslin

“...would condemn an entire nation to unending misery...”

Forget that hell hole Afghanistan, because of Puppet Biden the misery is already being felt right here in the USA.

Our country is falling apart, along with the mess in Haiti, Cuba and South Africa. The entire world will soon follow thanks to the election steal by the coup plotters.


9 posted on 07/19/2021 5:55:35 AM PDT by Flavious_Maximus (Fauci is a murderer)
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To: Kaslin
To prevent a Taliban victory that would condemn an entire nation to unending misery, Mills proposes that the Biden administration should at the least enable the Afghan government to pay its soldiers and “encourage” that others not join up with the Taliban. Intelligence sharing and weapons maintenance are also options, as is aid targeted at regional infrastructure connectivity (to boost trade), but the long-term priority is pressing for a diplomatic solution that could only follow a Taliban defeat.

With policy “ experts” like this, nothing will ever change for the better, Spends his talk-talk ecplaining why the Afghan people need to claim their own freedom back, then advises the US pour more money down a rathole subsidizing an Afghan military and investing in “ infrastructure”…when the Chinese and Russians are already moving forward on the One Belt strategy …..we have blindly endorsed for central Asia for many years.

10 posted on 07/19/2021 6:09:20 AM PDT by silverleaf (In a time of universal deceit, telling the truth is a revolutionary act)
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To: Kaslin
Afghanistan Asunder - The Afghan Hounds Renew Their War On Women

So?

11 posted on 07/19/2021 6:10:48 AM PDT by Jim Noble (Extremism in the defense of Liberty is no vice)
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To: Kaslin

Wondering how many Afghan women will have their eyes plucked from their heads as punishment for learning to read.


12 posted on 07/19/2021 6:17:56 AM PDT by Lockbar (Vlad the Impailer had all the answers.)
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To: Kaslin
Until/UNLESS gender apartheid is ended, there is no hope for Afghanistan.

Is there ONE good reason there's no feminists full court press on that issue? I mean seriously.... how long have the feminists, who purport to espouse females, dragged their feet on this?

Don't they have ENOUGH media attention, ENOUGH will to challenge this matter, ENOUGH financial backing....etc., ???? Aren't there ENOUGH media addicted, self-important, loudmouth females in this country to step up to the plate for THIS????

13 posted on 07/19/2021 6:19:28 AM PDT by SMARTY (Republics decline into democracies & democracies degenerate into despotisms. Aristotle)
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To: shanover
It’s disheartening to see current Islamic sh*tholes that once were once very Westernized.The pictures of Afghanistan, Iran and Lebanon come to mind.

You can thank George W Bush. His invasion of Iraq (killing Saddam, for trying to assassinate daddy Bush) turned the entire Middle East/North Africa into Jihadist hell hole.
W, put family business before nations' business.
W wasted trillions of American dollars and thousands of American/allied lives only to make matters worse.

W one of the worst presidents ever.
W worse R president of all tine.

14 posted on 07/19/2021 6:22:55 AM PDT by jpsb
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To: Kaslin

“...Such a strategy, I believe, must build on the female-friendly Afghan society that existed prior to the Soviet-backed coup”


Only true in part. Yes, women in Kabul were allowed to ditch the chador but in the rest of the country, not so much. It was in the countryside that the mullahs fumed over what they saw in the capital, not unlike neighboring Iran.

To give you an idea, the ‘female-friendly’ society actually outlawed the practice of fathers killing their wayward daughters. To make up for this loss in parental rights, fathers were allowed to send their daughters to prison.

I very much doubt we’ll see a return to the ‘golden days’ of Muhammed Zahir Shah.


15 posted on 07/19/2021 6:28:09 AM PDT by hanamizu
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To: Kaslin

Well too bad, I guess the perfumed princess of the Pentagon and perverts in DC should have let us kill all the Taliban for being depraved. They wanted this.

Embrace the suck.


16 posted on 07/19/2021 6:40:01 AM PDT by wildcard_redneck ( COVID lockdowns are the Establishment's attack on the middle class and our Republic )
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To: Kaslin

LOL! Islam has been at war with its women for 1500 years!


17 posted on 07/19/2021 9:22:31 AM PDT by montag813
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To: 2banana

Unless Trump got the Taliban to drop the practice of Islam abuse of woman was going to always continue and it still does across the world by the practitioners of this death cult.

The Afghans had 20 years to change their course and join the 19th century, they chose the 7th century again and we’ve wasted enough blood and treasure with no clear strategy by those in that brain trust known as the Pentagon and State Department.


18 posted on 07/19/2021 10:57:05 AM PDT by sarge83
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To: Valin

idc.... seriously.

While I nominally supported going into Afhanistan during Dubya’s reign, the fact Afghani’s couldnt self organize against this sort of thing while we held the extremists at bay.... then who cares.

Particularly as there are many countries and regions in the region where women have few rights


19 posted on 07/19/2021 2:43:47 PM PDT by Katya (lacking in the feelings department, )
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To: Kaslin

Don’t care. Not our problem.

They had 20 years to learn how to fight. Not one more nickel.

L


20 posted on 07/19/2021 2:47:16 PM PDT by Lurker (Peaceful coexistence with the Left is not possible. Stop pretending that it is. )
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