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The War is a Trap
Antiwar.com ^ | 11/12/01 | Justin Raimondo

Posted on 11/12/2001 2:06:17 AM PST by Ada Coddington

Behind the Headlines
by Justin Raimondo
Antiwar.com

November 12, 2001

THE WAR IS A TRAP
We've taken the bait

Two months into the war, and the Americans were hard-pressed to point to a single success, never mind the proverbial light at the end of the tunnel. The argument that the Afghan war is a quagmire waiting to swallow them seemed more credible than ever, and significant voices of dissent were beginning to be raised, in Europe if not quite yet in America. Then, suddenly, a "victory" – the Northern Alliance, our foot-soldiers on the ground, scored a major success with the taking of Mazar-i-Sharif, and our laptop bombardiers exulted: On to Kabul! Ah, but not so fast…

'TOTAL MAYHEM'

President Bush was quick to announce that "We will encourage our friends to head south, but not into the city of Kabul itself." Oh? And why not? the media wanted to know. Bush was vague on this point, but his guest, Pakistan's President Pervez Musharraf, was more forthcoming, bluntly stating that the last time these guys took Kabul – from the Soviets – they carried out "total atrocities," and "mayhem" was the order of the day: "And I think if the northern alliance enters Kabul we'll see the same kind of atrocities being perpetuated against the people there." He might well have added: and, just like last time, Pakistan will have to deal with half a million refugees, as Afghans fleeing their "liberators" pour over the border in an unstoppable human wave.

NO CUDDLING

The American reluctance to cuddle up to the Northern Alliance is justified on a number of levels. To begin with, Musharraf is right about their thuggish proclivities: Human Rights Watch has detailed their sorry record on this score. After all, the very success of the Taliban in overthrowing them to begin with was due, in large part, to the Northerners' brutal campaign of pillage, rapine, and mass murder, which did not exactly endear them to their subjects. The Taliban, for all their ferocity, seemed like they might be an improvement over the Alliance: at least the violence of the former was predictable and focused on implementing some concept of law, even if it meant an absurdly extreme interpretation of the Sharia, or Islamic law. The violence of the Northern Alliance was – and is – utterly lawless. Just on moral grounds alone, they are insupportable (unless, of course, you're Bill Kristol or Richard Perle, in which case the horrific human rights record of our unsavory Afghan allies is just another way to show how tough-minded we are).

THE AFGHAN SNAKE PIT

On practical grounds, however, the Northerners are even less attractive as a potential proxy force for the US. To begin with, the ethnic make-up of this tenuous Alliance makes its victory highly unlikely: for it is an alliance of three minorities which, taken together, add up to barely 50 percent of the population. Tajik supporters of (Tajik) President Burhanuddin Rabbani and Uzbeks of the Junbish-I-Milli party, have joined together with the Shi'ite Muslim Hazara of the Hezb-i-Wahdat against their common enemy of the moment. Riven by intense rivalries, these disparate and fully autonomous groupings have continually fought one another over the years, and could turn on one another at a moment's notice. And then there is the problem of the lack of military leadership….

A DEAD END

Nominally headed by President Rabbani, the Northern Alliance was up until September dominated by its military leader, the Tajik Commander Ahmed Shah Masood. Masood's untimely assassination at the hands of Bin Ladenite agents threw the leadership into the hands of a very dicey character, even by Afghan standards, Uzbek General Abdul Rashid Dostum. In the 1980s, Dostum joined with Soviet puppet President Najibullah in fighting the anti-Communist insurgents: when the rebels took Kabul he decided to go with a winner and abruptly switched sides. The Taliban regime sent him fleeing northward, where he established his own fiefdom headquartered in Mazar-i-Sharif; although he was being aided by Russia, India, and Iran, Dostum couldn't hold on even to that, and was soon driven out of the country. He took refuge in Turkey, and, on his return, once again joined up with the Northern Alliance: the Uzbek commander was the logical successor to Masood until he, too, was killed by the Taliban, struck down a few weeks after Masood's death, during the siege of Mazar-i-Sharif. Without military leadership, and with the support of a rapidly shrinking sector of the population, the Northern Alliance is a strategic dead-end, and the Bush administration knows it.

WAR BY PROXY

The success of the proxy force strategy rests on the task of somehow appealing to the Pashtun majority in the central and southern regions of the country, including the area around Kabul, but there is little chance of that at the present juncture. The only other contender for Pashtun loyalties who might be enticed into the ranks of the Alliance is Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, onetime leader of the Islamic Party, known as the Butcher of Kabul: his siege of that city in 1992 resulted in 20,000 civilian deaths. Not many relish the thought of Hekmatyar's return. In any case, he has just announced that he might indeed return – to fight at the side of the Taliban.

INTO THE QUAGMIRE

As we get bogged down in the details of which tribe should get which ministerial post in a postwar government, the distance from the original cause of the war grows until the connection between the two is so tenuous as to be nonexistent (or, at least, deniable). Only the other day, US combat commander Tommy Franks did indeed deny it, declaring that the targeting of Bin Laden – "dead or alive," as Bush put it – is not the goal of the US military mission. But then, what is the goal? The overthrow of the Taliban? The restoration of the Afghan monarchy? The "liberation" of Afghan women? The implantation of democracy in the most inhospitable soil imaginable? The conquest of Afghanistan by US troops and the creation of a giant Bosnia in the midst of Central Asia? As the original justification for the war gets lost in a welter of political and military maneuvers, any and all of the above will tend to fill the vacuum – and we will have fallen into the very clever trap Bin Laden has laid for us.

THE IMPOSSIBILITY OF DEFEAT

The bombing of the Beirut barracks, in which 241 American soldiers were killed, and the assaults on the Khobar military outpost in Saudi Arabia, must surely serve as a warning to American policymakers who might otherwise not hesitate to establish a US military presence in Afghanistan – or anywhere in the region. Our own bases on the Saudi peninsula are precarious and exposed enough as it is, without setting ourselves up for an even larger-scale potential disaster. If the logistics don't defeat us, the weather and the Afghans' well-earned reputation for being fiercely resistant to foreign invaders will – and this is one instance where a defeat is out of the question, as far as the Bushies are concerned.

THE POLITICS OF ESCALATION

As usual, our warmongering punditocracy, insulated by ignorance and motivated by sheer bloodlust, is clamoring for Bush to "unleash" the Northern Alliance and biting at his heels about the likelihood of sending in US ground troops. Their darling, Senator John McCain, is palavering about the alleged necessity of this course, and this chorus, together with the "on to Baghdad" crowd, is howling for escalation. The Bushies, for their part, seem torn, caught between the Powellian strategy of using both military and political pressure to split the Taliban and get at Al Qaeda, and the Rumsfeld-Wolfowitz school of steady escalation. Clearly, the administration realizes that the "northern strategy" of using the Alliance as a proxy force would unite most Afghans against the foreign invaders. What they aim to do is to isolate Bin Laden, both politically and militarily, casting Al Qaeda in the role of the foreign invasion force. It is a tricky maneuver which may be impossible for the President and his Secretary of State to pull off, not so much due to resistance on the part of the Taliban, but because of political pressure on the home front. The McCainiacs and their neocon handlers are pushing for an American Jihad, fought by American troops, on the ground in Afghanistan, and if the Powell strategy doesn't bear fruit before the onset of winter the momentum for escalation may be unstoppable.

AN ASTUTE ANALYSIS

I was struck by something the writer Tariq Ali said to an interviewer, in answer to a typically leftoid question:

Q.: "What would you say is at stake in this war? What is the center of the dispute: access to gas and water in the Middle East, establishment of hegemony in the Islamic world, assuring a permanent U.S. presence in the region, or none of the above?"

Tariq Ali: "I really don't believe that this war was begun for economic gain. We, on the left, are always quick to look for the economic reasons and usually we're right, but not this time. I think the war was basically a response to domestic pressure after the events of September 11. There were choices to be made. The US could have decided to treat this for what it was: a criminal act and not an act of war. They chose war. Obviously they will use it to strengthen and assert US global hegemony on all three fronts: political, military and economic, but first they have to get out of the situation they're in."

The situation, I might add, we are all in. It is a very astute analysis, one that avoids America-bashing and Bush-bashing while identifying the tragic dilemma faced by this administration. Although he doesn't quite say it, Ali clearly sees that Bush is right on one major point: we didn't start this war. We didn't choose this battle, it has been chosen for us. But how we fight it is vital to the question of whether we succeed or not, or else create a worse disaster.

AT WHAT PRICE?

And here we stumble on real reason for this war: the need to appease domestic opinion, to appear to be doing something – anything! – as long as it looks and feels decisive. Furthermore, our leaders, of course, are only human: they, too, have emotional reactions, which often overshadow the national interest. Vengeance on behalf of the victims of 9/11 is emotionally satisfying – but the question is, what price will we pay for that satisfaction?

VENGEANCE VERSUS THE NATIONAL INTEREST

The US national interest is in no way served by the destabilization of Pakistan, and the news in this regard is hardly comforting: the latest is that Islamabad is relocating its nuclear weapons out of the country. Kashmir is about to explode, and this could trigger a nuclear exchange with Pakistan's arch-rival, India. Across the Muslim world, the "street" is roiling and ready to explode in a paroxysm of rage, bringing down pro-Western governments from Cairo to Riyadh, threatening even Turkey. Such a pan-Muslim uprising would throw the world economy into chaos, with the West's access to oil blocked: our recession could well turn into a worldwide depression.

GOD HELP AMERICA

A war fought against this ominous backdrop would soon take on the character of a global cataclysm. The most farseeing advisors to the President surely see this: God help us if they fail to convince Bush. For in that case, we are all screwed, and nothing short of a miracle can save us.


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1 posted on 11/12/2001 2:06:17 AM PST by Ada Coddington (ACoddington@Compuserve.com)
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To: Ada Coddington
Does anyone but Justin Raimondo give a flying one what Justin Raimondo thinks any more?

Possibly Justin Raimondo's mom.

2 posted on 11/12/2001 2:12:05 AM PST by Ratatoskr
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To: Ada Coddington
I.........S-S-S-S-S-E-E-E-E-E-E-E P-P-E-E-E-E-OPLE!

Jeez are these guys scared puppies or what?

3 posted on 11/12/2001 2:16:25 AM PST by Cold Heat
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To: Ada Coddington
Justin Raimondo....oppressor of women...enemy of the downtrodden.
4 posted on 11/12/2001 2:18:08 AM PST by zarf
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To: Ada Coddington
Our goal is to break the Taliban for supporting AL Qa'eda, destroy the Afghan based portion of Al Qa'eda, and bring in OBL, dead or alive. We have no imperative to create an Afghan governing body although it seems we will try. If initial efforts at achieving this fail then we should move on to the next terrorist target and let Afghans sort out their own problems.
5 posted on 11/12/2001 2:27:39 AM PST by Movemout
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To: wirestripper
Given the source of this - Antiwar.com - places it as our daily dose of leftist thinking. Evidently Lew Rockwell had nothing to say today.

There isn't a day that goes by that I'm not thankful that these folks aren't in charge (of anything).

6 posted on 11/12/2001 2:32:03 AM PST by 11B3
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To: Ada Coddington
It's good to know one can always count on Justin for an upbeat analysis of the situation.
7 posted on 11/12/2001 2:34:58 AM PST by Zorobabel
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To: Ada Coddington
Leftist "Logic".


8 posted on 11/12/2001 2:37:25 AM PST by 11B3
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To: 11B3
I hope we don't have to many but they are definately in congress. BTW, I was a 12D40.
9 posted on 11/12/2001 2:46:55 AM PST by Cold Heat
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To: Ada Coddington
Only the other day, US combat commander Tommy Franks did indeed deny it, declaring that the targeting of Bin Laden – "dead or alive," as Bush put it – is not the goal of the US military mission. But then, what is the goal? The overthrow of the Taliban? The restoration of the Afghan monarchy? The "liberation" of Afghan women? The implantation of democracy in the most inhospitable soil imaginable? The conquest of Afghanistan by US troops and the creation of a giant Bosnia in the midst of Central Asia? As the original justification for the war gets lost in a welter of political and military maneuvers, any and all of the above will tend to fill the vacuum – and we will have fallen into the very clever trap Bin Laden has laid for us.

I realize it's hard to hear with you head up your rear. It goes like this Anti-War, the goal is to eliminate terrorist and all who harbor them. That would include bin Laden and all his buddies. It's been said a about a million times. Pretty straight forward.

The very clever trap bin Laden has laid is the one Anti-War is about to fall into. My advice, get thee to the nearest Costco and buy an industrial vat of vaseline, apply liberally (pun intended) to your collective Anti-War heads. Then everybody make a human chain and YANK!

10 posted on 11/12/2001 2:55:35 AM PST by BigWaveBetty
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To: Ratatoskr
This Justin feller'd complain if he was hung with a new rope…
11 posted on 11/12/2001 3:06:41 AM PST by Mr. Thorne
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To: Ratatoskr
You have raised exactly the right point. Poor old Justin become irrelevant on 911, like the anti-war movement in WW II became irrelevant on 12/7/1941.

The latest screed from this benighted soul had to come out exactly when the Taliban in northern Afghanistan is collapsing like a house of cards in a high wind. As Dennis Miller said, Justin is a "rebel without a clue."

Conressman Billybob

12 posted on 11/12/2001 4:14:06 AM PST by Congressman Billybob
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Comment #13 Removed by Moderator

To: Mr. Thorne
You better cut some holes in that sheet before you try, bud.
14 posted on 11/12/2001 6:54:55 AM PST by Justin Raimondo
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To: Ada Coddington
This report denies there are Pashtun influences already in the ranks of the Northern Alliance. However there are Pashtun infuences in the Northern Alliance. The ommission of this fact assumes we will believe anything as long as it is repeated often enough, typical liberal B.S. strategy.

The Northern Alliance is much more inclusive then what Pakistan wants in the new government of Afghanistan. Of course there are human rights abuses on all sides of the Afghan conflict they have been at war for over twenty years. There are human rights abuses all over the region and they are not limited to Afghanistan. You could twist this fact to fit any scenario you want. The Northern Alliance may be bunch of thugs, but so are all the other parties involved in this conflict. The Northern Alliance are our thugs which is more then anyone can say for the Taliban. The Northern Alliance is more inclusive then the other principles involved and have stated their intentions are to create an inclusive form of Government for Afghanistan. To stand in the way of N.A. would promote another Theocracy and bigoted government that would continue the human rights abuses of the Taliban, that is what Pakistan promoted by supporting the Taliban in the first place and seems to be what they still want for Afghanistan. Pakistan wants to install a puppet government that will bow to their own wishes for the region.

Antiwar.com continues to ignore facts that discredit their own agenda, only a fool pays attention to them.

15 posted on 11/12/2001 7:37:01 AM PST by Fearless Flyers
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To: Ada Coddington
Justin is correct in his assessment that this whole mission has crept and distorted into something unrecognizable -- or, acutally, VERY recognizable. Generals always fight the last war, it is said. The same could be said for diplomats. We are seeing, partly due to the astonishing provincialism of the American foreign policy establishment, partly due to the usual high-paid foreign lobbyists, partly due to lack of creativity, a replay of Bosnia, Kosovo and other similar interventions. When in doubt, try and build a nation. Who cares if it has never worked, got any better ideas? Sorry, but this is not good enough for those of us who actually care about what they are being forced to foot the bill for.

Justin would disagree, but there are many similarities between this Northern Alliance and the Djindjic/Kostunica gang that has run former Yugoslavia into the ground courtesy of our tax dollars.

16 posted on 11/12/2001 10:02:48 AM PST by Zviadist
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To: Fearless Flyers

This report denies there are Pashtun influences already in the ranks of the Northern Alliance. However there are Pashtun infuences in the Northern Alliance. The ommission of this fact assumes we will believe anything as long as it is repeated often enough, typical liberal B.S. strategy.

I don't know if you are correct. Certainly in the king's entourage there are the Pashtun, but the NA/King alliance is pretty much DOA -- except in the fantasy world of most Congressmen and think tankers.

17 posted on 11/12/2001 10:08:36 AM PST by Zviadist
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To: Justin Raimondo
Justin,

I recall reading your article where you stated how much more civilized and cultured the world would be if only Japan had won World War II.

I’m sincerely interested in your dingbat opinion on how our benevolent and loving Japanese Imperial leaders would have reacted to five thousand dead people in Manhattan?

Do enlighten me further, sensei. Or do I need to snatch a pebble from your hand first?

18 posted on 11/12/2001 10:09:49 AM PST by dead
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To: Ada Coddington
justin thinks this is about revenge? tearing down an eveil infrastructure is insurance that this will not happen again.
19 posted on 11/12/2001 10:11:45 AM PST by mlocher
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To: Fearless Flyers
You seem to forget that the NA warlords atrocities are the reason for the rise of the Taliban. GWB is right. If the NA takes over, we'll have to deal with the same crap in 10 years.
20 posted on 11/12/2001 10:17:51 AM PST by Elenya
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