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Read Cockburn and St. Clair's Whiteout: the CIA, Drugs and the Press and discover how the CIA gave a helping hand to the opium lords who took over Afghanistan, thus ushering the Taliban into power.


CounterPunch: Complete Coverage of 9/11 and the War on Afghanistan

New Print Edition of CounterPunch Published November 28: Kevin Alexander Gray explores the crisis in America's black leadership; an FBI agent's torture confession; liberals see "silver lining" in war; married to a muslim truck driver. Note: CounterPunch has fallen victim to the @home bankruptcy, leaving us without internet access since Friday. Things may not be entirely back to speed for another week. For those of you trying to reach Jeffrey St. Clair, his new email address is: sitka@attbi.com. Subscribe Now!

December 20, 2001

Miriam Rozen
Foundation Without Representation?

Kenneth Roth
A Letter to Rumsfeld on
Military Tribunals

William Blum
Casualties: Theirs and Ours

December 19, 2001

Marjorie Cohn
Don't Pre-Judge John Walker

Sam Bahour
Palestine and You

December 18, 2001

Shahid Alam
Clash of Civilizations?

Carl Estabrook
Who Opposes This War?

December 17, 2001

Edward Said
Mahfouz and the Cruelty
of Memory

December 16, 2001

Amira Howeidy
Dangerous By Definition?

Bahour and Dahan
Zinni's Doomed Mission

December 15, 2001

John Isaacs
Bush's 12 Lumps of Coal
for Christmas

Dana Cook
The Execution of bin Laden

Yusuf Agha
Tale of the Tape:
Osama Gump?

December 14, 2001

Don Atapattu
A Conversation with
Norman Finkelstein

December 13, 2001

Trojanow and Hoskote:
Nonsense Mantras of Our Times

Dr. A. Tajudeen
Afghanistan and Zaire

Michael Williams
Prohibit Prohibition

December 12, 2001

Jack McCarthy
Hitchens, Walker
and Osama's Tape

Laura W. Murphy
Ashcroft's Jihad

Shahid Alam
Race and Visibility

December 11, 2001

Joshua Orton
University of Wisconsin
Won't Aid FBI Interviews

Philip Farruggio
Cleansing the Nation's Soul

Robert Fisk
Why I Was Beaten


A Photographic Journal of Life in an Afghan Refugee Camp
By Judith Mann

Resources:
100s of Links About 9/11


CounterPunch:
Complete Coverage of 9/11 and Its Aftermath


Five Days That
Shook The World:
Seattle and Beyond

By Alexander Cockburn
and Jeffrey St. Clair
Photos by Allan Sekula

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Published Oct. 15, 2001

8-Page Special Issue

War Diary

CIA's Assassination Plan a History of Torture in US Prisons

bin Laden and Bush Business Connections

Aisha Ikramuddin on the Hidden Hype of US Food Bombs

Peter Linebaugh on Pakistan

Christopher Hitchens' Love for Mrs. Thatcher

Jiang Zemin Tells Bush:
Nuke 'Em


Search CounterPunch

Read Whiteout and Find Out How the CIA's Backing of the Mujahideen Created the World's Most Robust Heroin Market and Helped to Finance the Rise of the Taliban and Osama bin Laden

Whiteout:
CIA, Drugs & the Press

by Alexander Cockburn
and Jeffrey St. Clair

The Memphis Blues Again:
Six Decades of Memphis Music Photographs
Photos by Ernest Withers
Text by Daniel Wolff

The New Intifada:
Resisting Israel's Apartheid

Edited by Roane Carey

A Pocket Guide to
Environmental Bad Guys
by James Ridgeway
and Jeffrey St. Clair

The Phoenix Program
by Douglas Valentine

Al Gore:
A User's Manual
by Cockburn
and St. Clair

Buy This Explosive
New Book at an
Amazing Discount!
 

Reviews of Gore:
a User's Manual


Private Warriors
by Ken Silverstein

CounterPunch's Booktalk

December 20, 2001

The First Victim in
the War on Terror

By John Chuckman

It takes a good deal of time to realize the full impact of any large and sudden change in foreign policy, and this is especially true of the kind of sudden, violent interventions often undertaken by the United States since the end of World War ll.

In the case of Mr. Nixon's secret bombing of Cambodia during the Vietnam War, it took the best part of a decade for results to unfold: a beautiful, peaceful country was reduced to despair and savagery by bombing, a coup, invasions, and a politically-motivated holocaust.

The men responsible for destabilizing Cambodia in the name of expedient policy were not only ten thousand miles removed from the misery they created, they were soon gone from office, busying themselves with memoirs justifying their deeds to others also ten thousand miles removed. In all cases, the stench never quite reached their nostrils.

The most important antecedent of the War against Terror was another expedient, violent policy - the recruitment, training, and supply of Islamic fighters for a proxy war against the Soviet Union during the 1980s. Once America's immediate goal had been met in that war - that is, inflicting maximum damage on the Soviet Union - the mess created in achieving it was of no interest. Just as was the case in Cambodia. And just as was the case in many lesser American interventions from Chile to El Salvador.

Part of the behavior exhibited in these examples is a direct extension from American domestic life - enjoy your beer and toss the can for someone else to pick up. Only in foreign affairs, it's other people's lives being tossed.

The impact of intervention in Afghanistan during the 1980s has only been realized more than a decade after the Soviet Union ceased to exist. The Afghan people have experienced more than a decade of anarchy, tribal warfare, and the Taliban's coming to power as a result (Despite the Taliban's obvious shortcomings as a government, they came to power to end the violence that Americans, after arming everyone to the teeth, couldn't be bothered about, and they did succeed at least in cleaning up America's carelessly tossed trash).

The War against Terror itself will have many unforeseen results. This very fact was one of the soundest arguments against proceeding in the fashion that Mr. Bush has done, without ever attempting to use diplomacy or international institutions to bring to justice those responsible for terrible acts. Now, with the fairly rapid collapse of the Taliban, the Bush people are having a difficult time controlling a tendency to smirk, but the savage work of B-52s does seem an odd thing to smirk about.

The first clearly discernable victims of carpet-bombing Afghanistan and overthrowing its government (other than dead and starving Afghan peasants, streams of refugees, murdered prisoners of war, and a new bunch of thugs in power - none of which appear to be of great concern to Americans or their government) are the Palestinians.

Mr. Bush's actions in Afghanistan have made it almost impossible for him to resist the bloody-minded Mr. Sharon. After all, Bush's approach to terror originating out of Afghanistan is the Israeli model: you destroy things and kill people even if their only connection with an attack is shared geography.

The absurdity of the policy is made clear by analogy. Imagine the American government bombing the city of Buffalo, New York, because that is where Timothy McVeigh grew up. Or bulldozing the homes of his relatives.

The futility of the policy is obvious from Israel's decades-long experiment on unwilling subjects. She has succeeded only in raising new generations of bitter enemies - groups like Hamas or Islamic Jihad, more fanatical than the PLO, are in large part creatures of Israeli policy.

Despite extremely harsh practices, Israel has never succeeded in silencing such opposition groups in territories she herself occupied. Despite a lifetime's experience in brutality, Mr. Sharon is not able to stop desperate young men from committing kamikaze acts in the heart of Israel. Yet we have Mr. Sharon's demand that Mr. Arafat, with his pitiful resources and unstable political environment, do so as a pre-condition even for talking. At the same time, Mr. Sharon labels Mr. Arafat "irrelevant," proceeds with a policy of serial assassination in the West Bank, and blows up the tiny bit of infrastructure that gives Arafat's government any sense of authority.

This is plainly irrational, yet Mr. Bush is in no position to say so. Mr. Sharon has very pointedly made the comparison between the two situations, Bush bombing Afghanistan and Sharon bombing the West Bank and Gaza. Of course, there are many differences in the two situations, starting with the fact that the Palestinians live under conditions that most Americans would never tolerate without making full use of Second-Amendment rights. But the differences are too complex to explain to a broad political audience, while the gross parallels are obvious to everyone - facts which work in Mr. Sharon's favor.

In the long term, Mr. Sharon's approach is hopeless, but hopeless policies can do a lot of damage in the meantime. The Palestinians are not going to disappear or become, as so many of Israel's leaders have wished them to be, absorbed by Jordan. Israel with her policy of settlements in the West Bank has always talked of having "facts on the ground," but there are no more convincing facts on the ground than a few million people with a high birth rate.

And a few million people living with no hope, right next to a few million people who regard them darkly only as something to contain while themselves living in considerable comfort, is by definition a volatile and dangerous situation. Israel controls this situation, just as South Africa did in very similar circumstances (even more so, since the Palestinians are a minority rather than a great majority). It seems almost sarcasm to write or speak, as most of our press does, of two "partners" in a "peace process" and how one of them, the Palestinians, has utterly failed its responsibilities.

A viable Palestinian state with generous Israeli assistance for its economic success is the only intelligible concept of peace. But it seems impossible that the statesmanship required can ever come from a man with as much blood on his hands as Mr. Sharon, or from his nemesis, the Nixonesque Mr. Netanyahu who waits grinning darkly in the wings. And it seems equally impossible that Mr. Bush, purring with satisfaction over the immediate results of his nasty work in Afghanistan, can rise to what is required of an American president with any pretensions to genuine leadership in the world.

John Chuckman is a columnist for YellowTimes. His last story for CounterPunch was High-Tech Puritanism.