A Report on the appalling situation in Afghanistan
Spokesman for the stop the war coalition. | 30.08.2006 15:28
US aircraft have attacked the town on over 20 occasions and there was only one day in August on which US aircraft did not bomb targets in the Helmand province. Maiwand, the site of a great British military defeat in 1880, has become a centre of resistance to Nato assaults. It has also emerged that the Royal Military Police are investigating six shooting incidents in Afghanistan involving British soldiers. The circumstances are unknown.
For all the vast outpouring of blood and money, Afghanistan is further from peace or freedom than when the invasion began five years ago. According to a recent article by the journalist Ann Jones, “The story of success in Afghanistan was always more fairytale than fact - one scam used to sell another. Now, as the Bush administration hands ‘peacekeeping’ to Nato forces, Afghanistan is the scene of the largest military operation in the history of that organisation.
Today’s personal e-mail brings word from an American surgeon in Kabul that her emergency medical team can’t handle half the wounded civilians brought in from embattled provinces to the south and east. American, British, and Canadian troops find themselves at war with Taliban fighters - which is to say ‘Afghans’ - while stunned Nato commanders, who hadn’t bargained for significant combat, are already asking what went wrong. The answer is a threefold failure - no peace, no democracy, and no reconstruction. Remember when peaceful, democratic, reconstructed Afghanistan was advertised as the exemplar for the extreme makeover of Iraq?
In August 2002, secretary of defence Donald Rumsfeld was already proclaiming the new Afghanistan ‘a breathtaking accomplishment’ and ‘a successful model of what could happen to Iraq’. As everybody now knows, the model isn’t working in Iraq. So we shouldn’t be surprised to learn that it’s not working in Afghanistan either. The British ministry of defence has now barred journalists from forward Afghan units, a sure sign of panic. And while the bloodshed in Afghanistan worsens, the horror continues in Iraq. Between Saturday and Monday this week a series of explosions, gun battles, car bombs and executions left at least 192 people dead, including eight US soldiers.
This is the appalling world that Bush and Blair defend. It makes it more urgent than ever that everyone attends the 23 September demonstration in Manchester to demand an immediate withdrawel of allied troops from both Afghanistan and Iraq.
http://www.stopwar.org.uk
Spokesman for the stop the war coalition.
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