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« A Hail Mary Strategy in Pakistan: The Gut Reaction to Obama's Speech (Part 2) | Main | The Latest from Iran (4 December): The Weekend Before »
Friday
Dec042009

Josh Shahryar's Afghanistan Primer: The US and The "Warlords"

AFGHANISTAN FLAGAfter my rather scathing criticism of President Barack Obama’s troop surge plan for Afghanistan yesterday, I received many questions from readers on Twitter, Facebook, and e-mail about the realities of the situation. This is the first of three articles trying to offer some answers.

Obama gets away with one thing and one thing only in his approach: he is not the person who has made the wrong choices since the Afghan Invasion of 2001. The first step in the War on Terror was perhaps one of the most misguided and poorly planned of President Bush’s policies. Here is a summary: remove Taliban, institute democracy, then capture bin Laden, and then maybe get out?

What Was Missing in Obama’s Speech: The Black Jail of Afghanistan
Afghanistan Special: Josh Shahryar on the Obama Not-So-Grand Plan
A Gut Reaction to Obama’s Afghanistan-Pakistan Speech: The Halfway House of The Long War (Part 1)
Afghanistan-Pakistan: Video & Transcript of Obama Speech (1 December)


The biggest blunder the US made, contrary to common belief, was not over the second step of democracy promotion but over the first one of regime change. Instead of using its superior military to fight the enemy, the US sought help from Afghan warlords who controlled less than 5% of Afghanistan’s territory and had been all but vanquished by the Taliban. This might have helped the US oust the Kabul Government, but it handed the country back to the Afghan warlords who may have committed some of the most heinous crimes against humanity.

Rewind history to the early 1990s.

After the ouster of the communist government of Afghanistan, these same warlords, then known as mujahideen and hailed the world over as freedom fighters, took over Afghanistan. For the next several years, the population was abused to the point where more than eight million Afghans were forced to leave the country. The rest remained at the mercy of men who ruled them with such brutality that just reading about it brings a shudder.

Hezbe Wahdat, one of the main groups led by a ruthless warlord named Ustad Abdul Ali Mazari, were notorious for their death dance. Stationed in Western Kabul, Mazari’s men, who were composed of the Hazara ethnic minority, would catch anyone who belonged to the Pashtun group and slaughter them without hesitation.

The death dance would proceed with a man being held down by several Hazara fighters. He would be decapitated and hot oil would be poured over his neck. This would make the body wildly jerk around.

Another group from the north, composed of the Uzbek minority, would place captured fighters and bystanders inside shipping containers, take them to the desert, and then fire hundreds of rounds. The lucky prisoners would be struck and die. Those who did not were left in the desert to die of starvation or thirst.

In the south, the Pashtun-led groups were notorious for sexually abusing young boys. This reached a point where commanders would openly marry boys as young as 12 in official ceremonies attended by their cronies. The situation was so dangerous for pre-teen and early-teen boys that they were kept at home until they grew beards

In this climate of fear, the Taliban entered the scene. Backed up by Pakistan militarily and by the Gulf states financially from 1994, they were able to take over the entire country within a few short years. Their forces were not much superior to their opponents; however, they used people’s hatred for the warlords to gain control of the country. At the time of the US invasion, they held all but one of 32 provinces of Afghanistan, ruling almost 95% of the territory and the population.

People always ask me how Taliban with their stone-age laws were able to rule Afghanistan for almost six years. The answer is simple: stone-age laws are better than no laws at all. They gave people something they had yearned for years –-- safety and security.

Previously, you would be robbed in daylight in front and inside your house. With the Taliban in power, you could haul sacks full of money from one side of the country to the other without hiding the fact that you were transporting cash. And except for targeting the Hazara minority, about 10% of the country’s population, they treated people far more mercifully than the warlords did.

Now the same groups of militias who committed the crimes of the 1990s form the majority of Afghan governors, provincial administrators, security chiefs, and army commanders, as well as the overwhelming majority of senators and representatives to the Afghan bicameral legislature. And they are only able to do so because of the US.

This is why the US invasion was a disaster from the very beginning. The US could have taken over Afghanistan without resorting to help from the much hated warlords, winning the hearts of Afghans. Instead, removing the regime that had brought peace of mind to many, Washington brought back the terror that had haunted them.

So, if the US strategy saved American lives at the start of the offensive, this conflict now takes American lives each week. Afghanistan now has both a Taliban, which not only exists but is enjoying success, and a corrupt and ineffective government.

The reason why the US cannot defeat the Taliban is not because they are powerful or America is weak but because the Taliban have the sympathy of a majority of the Afghanistan’s largely rural population. (The educated class, which makes up a small portion of the population, is simply hoping and praying that both the warlords and the Taliban could somehow miraculously cease to exist.)

The village-dwellers have two choices. They can either support the US military as it finds Taliban hideouts and brings the enemy to justice, then wait for the Americans to depart and leave them at the mercy of the warlords. Or they can continue to lie low and let the Taliban exist, hoping that when the US leaves, the Taliban will get rid of the warlords again.

The choice between a harsh Islamic regime that allows you to live a peaceful life if you lock your wives at home, grow beards, and pray five times a day or between a group of bandits who would pillage your property, rape your women and kill you is quite simple. The Afghans may be illiterate, but they’re not stupid.

If Obama and the US are serious, they still have plenty of time. They could do what the Taliban did and remove these criminals from the Afghan government. This would immediately win the hearts of Afghanistan’s people. If the US chooses otherwise, then it should not blame itself for failing to gain the support of the Afghans.

Reader Comments (59)

The Moderator [removed by moderator]. He publish materials which is completly based on lies and propaganda, I used to read this website and I liked this website and from now I have been completly late down by this website, I will never open this website anymore, I thought some educated people are moderating this website and now it looks like very uneducated are running this website. How could you publish such materials which doesnt even exist hahahaha, if this is the case I am also going to email u some of my dream letters hahahaha you keep publishing, actualy we should sue you.
I think the editor of this website should apologise for what he did and he should remove this nonsence soon.

Regards

December 7, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterTurktabar

Turktabar- I'm sorry you feel this way, but I do think it's an overreaction to say you're never going to read Enduring America again, threaten to sue, and request an apology just because you disagree with a post. Everyone here is more than happy to engage in debate around these topics, but without offering any substance beyond demands that things you disagree with be removed it's very difficult to do this.

December 7, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterMike Dunn

To SomeBody and Mike Dunn. I dont think its just about getting some facts about the Hazaras wrong. I left a comment at the start of this topic and have been following it thru. I worked in Afghanistan for eight years in the 90s, and i believe the main reason behind the hot feelings and large number of comments is fact that they (Hazaras) are trying to break this traditional chain of being treated unfairly. Unfortuately Hazaras have been victoms of many systematic pracecutions, forced migrations, turtures, haterads, propagands which are in many ways still continuing to this day both in and outside of Afghanistan by other the ethnic groups, and every Hazara would find this writing part of the same chain of unjust and unfair projection of Hazara identity. As the writer the right thing for Josh would have been to get at least all the facts right. If one can understand the Afghan social enigma then one can clearly see the Josh's BIASED stance in his writing. This piece of writing is just a disgrace to any from of journalistic work. As readers we expect to be fed with corect information, and he has not only faild to do that, but has insulted Hazara. I stongly recommend those who agree with Josh to read both side of the stories and then have their say.

Regards
Andy

December 7, 2009 | Unregistered Commenterandy

andy- I'm not disputing facts or making a call on whether Josh's post was accurate or biased. The commenter I was replying to didn't offer any information or seek to correct anything that they believed to be wrong, but simply requested we censor ourselves.

December 7, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterMike Dunn

Mike

he put hazaras as 10% of afghanistan population which is incorrect, hazaras are between 19 to 20% and this is what the international community accepted in bone canference refer to this http://www.rferl.org/content/article/1097844.html
and this http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:WikiProject_Hazara/Articles

another thing he says that Mazari was a brutel killer and death dance etc, is completly based on lie and propaganda. Mazari and his force just defended his people from Ahmad Shah masud attacks.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/programmes/from_our_own_correspondent/4258343.stm

We we got video and pictures as profe and this things which josh says doesnt have any profe at all, if he says he is right he should profe it.
watch the distruction of afshaar on YouTube, for example....

December 8, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterUzbek Bacha

Dear Andy,

Thank you very much for your wide and bright vision towards our people.

Dear All,

Please have the right judgments by reading impartial articles, reviews and topics about Hazara people, Josh's article has no reality basis and please ignore this and any other article he writes about any topic. Because he fails to be an impartial writer and a good journalist.

Dear web master,

Please do not publish [removed by moderator] anymore, by this you offended many people. I personally doubt on your work from this point on.

Thanks

December 8, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterZahir Irfan

One would think that Josh Shahryar may be correct to a certain point. But as an Afghan, I know whose side he is in and what political intentions he has by making that offensive statement against Baba Mazari. Shame on you! You are a disgrace to all Afghanistan. Go and educate yourself and stay away from spreading wrong information on the net. People are not stupid to listen to your stupidity.

December 9, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterHazara

This artical is a totally biased one ... Thats Why I want To Tell The Publisher And The Writer That HAZARA's Are And Were and Will Be The Most Peacful People Of Afghanistan. They Have Never Supported Insurgency ... An example Is This That The Most Peacful Province Of Afghanistan is BAMIYAAN Which Is The Cradle Of Hazaras ...

December 9, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterHajeer Hazara

Comments on this post are now closed. We'd like to thank everyone for their feedback, and would encourage any new visitors to read Josh/NiteOwl's responses in the comments above.

December 9, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterMike Dunn

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