Nine years in Afghanistan with failed mission
Posted on 09. Oct, 2010 by Raja Mujtaba in Afghanistan
American wars waged in the Muslim world are all for the Zionist Israel. Americans are only picking up enmity and puffing the tax payers money for the sake of Israel that is clubbed with India. Raja G Mujtaba
By Hanan Habibzai

Lance Corporal Joshua Bernard, a 21 year old Marine who succumbed to injuries in Afghanistan recently.
It have been nine years since the U.S led invasion of Afghanistan but the situation in Afghanistan is worsening, gap of confidence between the people and US backed government is widely increasing. ISAF turned embedded force and International mission in Afghanistan remained unsuccessful.
Keeping tabs on the events of the war in Afghanistan is not difficult. Press coverage includes daily reports of soldiers dying and killing, corruption within government and even stories from the far flung tribal areas.
But there is little about what the ordinary Afghan thinks. What is his story? How does the war affect him? Does he want warlords to stay in power? Does he want more troops, be they from the US or France? Do they make him feel safe.
When answered these questions weave the missing thread through the real story of the war. These answers tell a frustrating tale.
Look back to May 2009, for example, when US air strikes killed more than 100 civilians. This is when the Afghan people first began to lose faith in President Barack Obama.
As protocol required Obama and US secretary of state Hillary Clinton expressed their deep sympathy with the victims, and said sorry for the civilian deaths.
But a change occurred. Right at that moment that the ordinary people of Afghanistan lost faith in Obama’s commitments for peace and stability. After the death of yet more non-militants, they began to suspect that Obama could not keep his early promises to protect civilian live in Afghanistan.
Karzai, meanwhile, in the US at the time, and travelled back to the devastated area. He sanctioned the award of 100,000 Afghanis (US$2,000) to each of the victim’s families.
This is the price of an Afghan life:
Along with the government ‘gift’, families were forced to sign a document to say they were happy with the settlement. Happy that the $2,000 should clean up the human mess that bombs leave behind. For those families with little money, their options were limited.
In the west, some countries have a law to protect animals. If anyone dares to harm an animal, he or she will face justice. In my country a human life can be taken very easily because there is little justice.
Since the war began, mass killing has become part and parcel of everyday life. If any dare to challenge this notion or to call for justice, perhaps, they accused of being insurgents. This is the story of the ordinary Afghan.
The ordinary Afghan, who testimonies I have spent years collecting, does not understand why the international forces have not found key Al-Qaida leaders ,like Osama Bin Ladin. He does not understand his fellow countrymen and women are paying the price. None of Afghan invaded or attacked a foreign country but by invading their country a war brought to the villages and valleys of Afghanistan.
Three decades of war takes its toll:
Some of those ordinary Afghans killed in the bombs on two fuel tankers earlier September 2009, had survived Russian invasion. They would not be surprised by theirs deaths because of what they had seen once before.
When a small group of Taliban hijacked two tankers which carried fuel for NATO forces in northern Kundoz province , local people saw it as a chance to get free fuel for their lamps.
They remembered a time back in 1980s, when Mujahideen gave out captured equipment seized from the Russian invaders. These included fuel, food, cloths and car spare parts.
On pondering further on the Russian invasion, the ordinary Afghan remembers that, despite war, the USSR considered attacks on locals’ haphazard and foolhardy way to conduct their military campaign. Such attacks would only bring retaliation and in turn cause a long drawn out battle.
The Russians strategy was to give to the Afghan government at the time. They didn’t keep private jails and they tolerated petty looting.
But the Americans and Germans decided to frightened local people when the Taliban stole their tanks, heavily bombing
them. After World War II it was the first mass killing committed by German troops in the history.
Isn’t it strange, Afghans are saying to themselves, that while we did not expect peace from the Russian army because, well they were invaders and committed to no international treaty.
Yet these Americans and Germans invaded Afghanistan under the cloak of an international treaty committed to peace. But so far, it poses a continuous threat to normal life.
Lives in countless Afghan villages have been threatened since 2003, for the lives of perhaps one or two Taliban militants were hidden there. Sometimes they are killed in these deadly air strikes, other times they escape. But what is consistent is that hundreds of ordinary villagers have been killed by wild card strikes.
Women rights, democracy, human rights and political stability are the constant battle cry of the invaders. But ordinary Afghans appreciation of such gifts is tampered by heavy bombs, which are damaging all hopes of democracy and justice.
Meanwhile, the criminals and sadly comical farce of Karzai’s government remains. After allegedly winning the elections last year, hopes of competency governance is vanishing fast.
It seems unlikely that my country will be free of its current government, full of drug lords and war criminals, who care little for social justice and democracy and more about lining their already bulging pockets.
This is just a snapshot of what my fellow Afghan witnesses day by day. He also sees a resurgent Taliban, offering an alternative.
And it is because of this that NATO must talk to the Taliban. There is no option but to negotiate. The Taliban alternative, while distasteful to some, is more palatable than the trekking across Europe sleep on the streets of Calais or to stay at home and hope the bombs do not fall.
Hanan Habibzai was born in 1979 in Baghlan Province. At the Soviet invasion,
his family entered Pakistan he grew up in a refugee camp near Peshawar. After completing his secondary education in Peshawar, he studied at Kabul University. Just before the fall of Taliban regime in 2001, Habibzai began working with the BBC World Service as a correspondent and as a freelancereporter for Reuters in Afghanistan. Currently he is based in London, writing on the conflict in Afghanistan and the regional politics. Habibzai is known as one of the key critics of warlords and war criminals in the country who are still holding power. While in the UK, since last year he is working for Radio liberty as freelance correspondent covering the Afghan and Pakistan related issues around Europe and the UK. During his work for Radio Free Europe he covered Afghanistan: London Conference in the beginning of 2010. He also produced several stories on Illegal migrants and the business of human traffickers.
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Nine years in Afghanistan with failed mission | Opinion Maker | Afghanistan Today
09. Oct, 2010
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Sikkin
10. Oct, 2010
You can’t negotiate with the Taliban. The Taliban are a bunch of hillbillies who know how to fight but as far as diplomacy goes, you would have better luck dealing with sheep.
Marz
10. Oct, 2010
They don’t want to ‘negotiate with the taliban’. This is expansionism; world domination. As with Iraq: take control, shut it down, don’t let anybody else have it. Next: Pakistan, Iran, Yemen, etc. Welcome to the New World.
John
10. Oct, 2010
Nobel laureate estimates wars’ cost at more than $3 trillion:
http://www.mcclatchydc.com/homepage/story/28891.html
Since 1973, violently racist ashkeNazi Israel has cost the United States about $1.6 trillion. If divided by today’s Israeli population, that is more than $5,700 per person, or almost $30,000 per family of five.
This is an estimate by Thomas Stauffer, a consulting economist in Washington: http://www.csmonitor.com/2002/1209/p16s01-wmgn.html
Anyway – it’s now official – there’s been no actual shortage of Holocaust Survivors:
quote from The Holocaust Industry by Norman G. Finkelstein of the City University of New York, published by Verso in the year 2000:
‘The Israeli Prime Minister’s office recently put the number of “living Holocaust survivors” at nearly a million.’ (page 83)
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Jimmy
11. Oct, 2010
No one, including Alexander the Great, Genghis Khan, Tamerlane, English imperialists, Indian warlords, Russians, Iranians ( all of whom tried repeatedly to subjugate Afghanistan) has ever succeeded. Bush and Obama and their factotums will not succeed either and in the end the Americans will leave, bleeding and broke and having failed to built the oil pipeline which was promised to Israel when the Israelis ordered the ‘allies’ to start the war.
Rush Shukla
11. Oct, 2010
The Zionist fuelled wars are nothing more than mini imperialist conquests of third world oil, gas and opium rich countries.
They’re NOT meant to be won. Plain and simple. Its a war of attrition and greed thats played out against the smokescreen of ‘fighting terrorism’, ‘human rights’, ‘democracy’, none of which they believe in as is evident in their brutal civilian targeting strategies.
The ‘war on terror’ is designed to be sustained for as long as possible until every last resource has been capped.
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