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Archive for the ‘Afghanistan’ Category

US “Surge” in Afghanistan in Disarray

Posted by seumasach on June 16, 2010

Barry Grey

WSWS

15th June, 2010

In the midst of one of the bloodiest weeks for US and NATO forces in the nearly nine-year war in Afghanistan, Gen. Stanley McChrystal, the overall commander, announced Thursday that major military operations around Kandahar would be delayed until September.

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Israeli Murders, NATO and Afghanistan

Posted by seumasach on June 4, 2010

Craig Murray

I was in the British Foreign and Commonwealth Office for over 20 years and a member of its senior management structure for six years, I served in five countries and took part in 13 formal international negotiations, including the UN Convention of the Law of the Sea and a whole series of maritime boundary treaties. I headed the FCO section of a multidepartmental organisation monitoring the arms embargo on Iraq.

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Kyrgyzstan’s ‘Roza Revolution’ – cui bono: (part 4) Washington and the Kyrgyz future—securing the pivot

Posted by seumasach on June 3, 2010

In this final part, F. William Engdhal explains why the stakes for Washington in the Kyrgyzstan events are of vital geopolitical importance. Central Asia is key for Washington’s strategy of global dominance, hinging on the militarization of the entire region. To this end, time-tested tactics of Low Intensity Warfare are generating the pretext for NATO’s permanent expansion under the guise of the ‘war on terror’, with opium gainfully fueling the operations. In Central Asia, as Engdhal suggests, the survival of the U.S. empire hangs in the balance.

F.William Engdahl

Voltairenet

2nd June, 2010

Since the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991 a prime strategic objective of the Pentagon and of US intelligence has been to deeply penetrate the former Soviet states of Central Asia. The Pentagon pressed for increasing US military presence in the region and succeeded in seducing four of the five central Asian states, including Kyrgyzstan, into NATO’s Partnership for Peace in 1994.

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45 US-led forces killed in Bagram

Posted by seumasach on May 19, 2010

PressTV

19th May, 2010

At least 45 US-led forces have been killed during an attack by Taliban militants on the US-run Bagram airbase in Afghanistan, the group claims.

A Press TV correspondent quoted a Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid as saying that 45 US-led soldiers including several army generals have been killed during the attack.

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Colin Buchanan trashing lib dem conservative coalition on RT

Posted by smeddum on May 17, 2010

Posted in Afghanistan, Battle for Europe, Financial crisis, Iran, Multipolar world, New Cold War, Uncategorized | Tagged: , | Leave a Comment »

UK names foreign secretary, sets up American-style NSC

Posted by seumasach on May 13, 2010

Clegg offers change, but change a la Obama.(Plus ca change…..) He represents an update of atlanticist thinking which has fallen behind on this  side of the Atlantic since the election in the US of the greener, hipper, pseudo-charismatic conman, Barak Obama of Goldman

.What does Nick Clegg stand for?

Laura Rozen

Politico

12th May, 2010

After naming William Hague as the UK’s new foreign secretary, Britain’s new prime minister David Cameron set up the UK’s first American-style National Security  Council, whose first priority would be coordinating UK policy to Afghanistan and Pakistan.

The new NSC was to hold its first meeting Wednesday, including Cameron, Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg, Hague, and other ministers.

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“The council will discuss the situation in Afghanistan and Pakistan, and review the terrorist threat to the UK,” the prime minister’s office said, according to the AFP.

“It is our most urgent priority here in my work to make sure we have a grip on what is going on in Afghanistan,” Hague told Sky News.

“And I know that will consume a lot of our time and energy and effort,” he continued. “We have been fighting some political battles here but they are in a real battle out there.”

Hague served as Tory leader from 1997 to 2001, and as Secretary of State for Wales in the UK’s last conservative government of John Major.

“The advent of the kind of international co-operation at least discussed at recent summits of the G20, and of a new United States administration with a multilateral approach to foreign policy that provides other nations with a fresh opportunity to respond positively, both give some cause for optimism in international relations,” Hague said in a speech last year to the International Institute for Strategic Studies about what a Conservative UK foreign policy would look like.

“It is not unreasonable at least to hope for advances in the Middle East Peace Process, for success in a new approach in Afghanistan, for a better era in U.S.-Russia relations and for a more constructive response to the international community from the leadership of Iran, or a more determined effort by the international community to overcome Iranian intransigence,” he continued. “While the prospect of any of these hopes coming to fruition survives it is vital for America’s allies to work hard to bring that about for the good of all.”

Secretary of State Hillary Clinton met Hague last October when he visited Washington in his capacity as the Shadow Foreign Secretary, the State Department said Wednesday.

“The @Foreign Office have uploaded a selection of photos from my first day in the office,” hetweeted today

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Doubts grow on McChrystal’s war plan

Posted by seumasach on May 11, 2010

Gareth Porter

Asia Times

12th May, 2010

Although General Stanley McChrystal’s plan for wresting the Afghan provinces of Helmand and Kandahar from the Taliban is still in its early stages of implementation, there are already signs that the setbacks and obstacles it has experienced have raised serious doubts among top military officials in Washington about whether the plan of the commander of North Atlantic Treaty Organization forces in Afghanistan is going to work.

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Seven Britons killed in Kandahar

Posted by seumasach on April 16, 2010

PressTV

16th April, 2010

Two bomb explosions have ripped through Afghanistan’s southern city of Kandahar, killing several people, including seven Britons, and injuring scores of others.

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Hamid Karzai, R.I.P.

Posted by seumasach on April 13, 2010

Karzai isn’t as weak as Raimondo makes out. He is forging close links with Russia , China and Iran and it’s questionable whether the Americans, now terminally weakened, could get away with their traditional methods of removing dissenters which rely on the preparedness of the vast majority to turn a blind eye. Every eye is turned, wide open and all- seeing, on the US occupation and every secret is being shouted from the rooftops, not least on Russia Today. The game is up for the empire as Justin confirms here in inimitable style.

Justin Raimondo

antiwar.com

12th April, 2010

The war in Afghanistan, which George W. Bush started and Barack Obama pledged to win, is over – and we lost. No one realizes this, quite yet, but give them time – because the fruits of our defeat are already a veritable cornucopia. And the reason can be summed up rather neatly in two words: Hamid Karzai.

The fashion-plate heralded as the savior of Afghanistan by the Bush administration is turning into the Americans’ harshest critic: from quite credibly claiming that the US was trying to manipulate the recent Afghan election in order to give its sock-puppets the advantage, to declaring that he’s about ready to join the Taliban, President Karzai is making waves – and coming in for a barrage of disdain from the Washington cognoscenti, who cavil he’s an “unreliable partner.” Translated into ordinary language, this means he isn’t kowtowing to Washington’s whims, and is instead seeking to pursue his own aims – shocking, isn’t it?

What’s the reason for Washington’s very public discontent with our erstwhile “partner”? Well, in any relationship, you know, it’s always the little things that lead to divorce: like announcing you’re about to walk out, and not only that, but threatening to hook up with your ex’s worst enemy. However, that’s just talk: banter, really, of the sort couples engage in all the time when one is trying to gain the upper hand. It’s the kind of thing that could be tolerated, even enjoyed – at least if you’re a character in a play by Edward Albee.

Yet there’s always a line you don’t cross in public, certain subjects you don’t talk about to outsiders, unless you want to wind up in divorce court. In Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf, it was the secret of George and Martha’s imaginary son – in Who’s Afraid of the Taliban? it’s the secret of Karzai’s imaginary “government” – which, in reality, can hardly be said to exist outside of Kabul’s urban core. As Martha put it to George: “You’re nothing!

Billions of taxpayer dollars are going to aid the Afghan government – an entity that, for all intents and purposesdoesn’t really exist. What exists are names on an organizational chart, a few offices in US-NATO –held areas, a seat in the United Nations, and that’s just about it. This gossamer network of paid shills and American-educated sock-puppets is superimposed over the real power structure of clan leadersand warlords, a thin thread that could break at any moment. No one knows this better than Karzai, and so he has taken a new tack to ensure his political – and physical – survival. No amount of “spin” can interpret the following report, taken from the Timesof London, except as open subversion of the US-NATO war effort:

“The president of Afghanistan, Hamid Karzai, has cast doubt over NATO’s planned summer offensive against the Taliban in the southern province of Kandahar, as more than 10,000 American troops pour in for the fight.

“Karzai threatened to delay or even cancel the operation — one of the biggest of the nine-year war — after being confronted in Kandahar by elders who said it would bring strife, not security, to his home province.

“Visiting last week to rally support for the offensive, the president was instead overwhelmed by a barrage of complaints about corruption and misrule. As he was heckled at a shura of 1,500 tribal leaders and elders, he appeared to offer them a veto over military action. “Are you happy or unhappy for the operation to be carried out?” he asked.

“The elders shouted back: ‘We are not happy.’

“Then until the time you say you are happy, the operation will not happen,” Karzai replied.

“General Stanley McChrystal, the NATO commander, who was sitting behind him, looked distinctly apprehensive.”

As well he might. Karzai is either going to change his tune, or else find himself the victim of an “accident”: a military coup is not out of the question. If I were the CIA station chief, I’d release those photos of Karzai toking on a hashish pipe. And if I were Karzai, I’d send my resume to Gucci, and get out of town fast. Because “the chicest man on the planet” wouldn’t do well at Bagram.

Like all weaklings, whenever Karzai tries to assert himself he only underscores his impotence: he has no chance of stopping the Kandahar offensive, and everyone – including the attendees at the shura – knows it. What this does, however, is make mincemeat of the announced American strategy, which is to “clear, hold, and build.” Because at this point it’s fair to ask what, exactly, are we building – the largely imaginary national “government” headed by Karzai, who can only hope to gain popular support by denouncing Washington?

Instead of building a stable or even credible Afghan government, the spanking newcounterinsurgency doctrine propounded by Gen. David Petraeus, and those Deep Thinkers over at the Center for a New American Security, is creating the conditions for America’s inevitable defeat. As long as the Obama-ites have Karzai on their hands, the experiment that was supposed to prove the validity of the Petraeus doctrine winds up creating a Frankenstein monster, at best, feeding the very forces fighting the American presence. Which is why you don’t have to be Nostradamus to predict Karzai’s exit from the presidential palace, sooner rather than later.

Oh, they say they can work around Karzai, and deal with local clan leaders. Yet these very same clan leaders, at least the ones in Kandahar, are less than enthusiastic about the American occupation. The great problem we have yet to overcome in Afghanistan is that the majority of the population clearly sympathizes with what American journalists lazily call “the Taliban,” and which is really a series of local insurgencies which have largely supplanted the old Taliban leadership of Mullah Omar as the chief military resistance to the occupation. Both the fighting core of the Taliban and certainly Al-Qaeda have long since fled to Pakistan and points beyond: what we are fighting in Afghanistan is a fresh crop of militants bred in the horror of nearly ten years of constant warfare.

A wars is like any and all [.pdf] government programs: its advocates and beneficiaries (very often the same people) seek to prolong it long after its original rationale has been rendered irrelevant and/or conveniently forgotten, and the Afghan example is a veritable textbook case.

As announced by President Obama, our war aims in Afghanistan are to disrupt and destroy al-Qaeda cells resident in that country, a goal that has long since beenaccomplished. Al Qaeda can hardly be said to exist in Afghanistan these days, and the same goes for the Taliban remnants. The more sophisticated war proponents acknowledge this. The real problem, they aver, is Pakistan, where they strongly imply bin Laden is hiding out. (Hillary Clinton apparently believes this.)

The government of Pakistan denies this, and, in spite of Hillary’s hectoring hysterics, it’s been the Pakistanis who have taken out and actually capturedgood number of the top al-Qaeda leaders, who are today in custody – far more than we have. If bin Laden and/or his top cohorts were in Pakistan, and the ISI knew it, who can doubt they’d turn them over – just to get the US to stop the not-so-secret “secret war” the Pentagon’s been waging on Pakistani soil?

The war in Afghanistan, which George W. Bush started and Barack Obama pledged to win, is over – and we lost. No one realizes this, quite yet, but give them time – because the fruits of our defeat are already a veritable cornucopia. And the reason can be summed up rather neatly in two words: Hamid Karzai.

The fashion-plate heralded as the savior of Afghanistan by the Bush administration is turning into the Americans’ harshest critic: from quite credibly claiming that the US was trying to manipulate the recent Afghan election in order to give its sock-puppets the advantage, to declaring that he’s about ready to join the Taliban, President Karzai is making waves – and coming in for a barrage of disdain from the Washington cognoscenti, who cavil he’s an “unreliable partner.” Translated into ordinary language, this means he isn’t kowtowing to Washington’s whims, and is instead seeking to pursue his own aims – shocking, isn’t it?

Our announced war aims are like George and Martha’s imaginary son: it’s all part of a private narrative, a story we tell ourselves that somehow reassures us and makes us feel better – even noble – as we enslave, torture, and ravage a country in the name of “progress” and civilization.

So if these aren’t our real aims, if the whole thing’s a fairy tale, then what’s the real reason we’re wreaking mayhem in that part of the world?

The answer, I fear, is not to be found in any theory of politics, economics, or international affairs, but in one neglected field of human psychology: the psychology of political power, and those who wield it.

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Kandahar Riots Show Rising Resentment in Key Province

Posted by seumasach on April 13, 2010

Jason ditz

antiwar.com

12th April, 2010

Who knew that opening fire on a busload of innocent civilians would be such a hot-button issue?

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Karzai threatens to join the Taliban

Posted by seumasach on April 6, 2010

PressTV

6th April, 2010

President Hamid Karzai has threatened to step down and join the Taliban if outside pressure for reform continues, Afghan lawmakers say.

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