August 25, 2017
If it’s Independence Day, then
you can count on John McCain to be bunkered down in a remote outpost of the
Empire growling for the Pentagon to unleash airstrikes on some unruly nation,
tribe or gang. This July the Fourth found McCain making a return engagement to
Kabul, an arrival that must have prompted many Afghans to scramble for the
nearest air raid shelter.
From the press room at NATO
command, McCain announced that “none of us could say we are on a course to
success here in Afghanistan.” The senator should have paused for a reflective
moment and then called for an end to the war. Instead, McCain demanded that
Trump send more US troops, more bombers and more drones to terrorize a
population that has been riven by near constant war since the late 1970s.
McCain’s martial drool is now
as familiar as the opening notes to the “Law & Order” theme song. What may
surprise some, however, is the composition of the delegation that signed up to
travel on his frequent flier program, notably the presence of two Democratic
Senators with soaring profiles: Sheldon Whitehouse and Elizabeth Warren.
Whitehouse, the former prosecutor (aren’t they all?) from Rhode Island, has
lately taken a star turn in the role of chief inquisitor of suspected Russian
witches in the Senate intelligence committee hearings. Perhaps he finally
located one selling AK-47s to the Taliban to replace the guns they’d gotten
from the CIA. (We now know that it’s the
Saudis–not the Russians–who have been covertly funneling money to the
Taliban, though don’t expect the Trump to impose any sanctions on the Kingdom
of the Head-choppers.)
For her part, Warren largely
echoed McCain’s bellicose banter that Trump needs to double down militarily to
finish off the Taliban, the impossible dream. No real surprise here. To the
extent that she’s advanced any foreign policy positions during her stint in the
senate, Warren has been a dutiful supplicant to the demands of AIPAC and the
Council on Foreign Relations, rarely diverging from the neocon playbook for the
global war on Islam. Warren’s Afghan junket is a sure sign of her swelling presidential
ambitions. These days “national security” experience is measured almost
exclusively by how much blood you are willing to spill in countries you know
almost nothing about. It didn’t take long for Warren to matriculate to the
company position.
Most Americans have no idea
why we are in Afghanistan; it’s the longest running Fake War in American
history. Some, as many as 20 percent according to a Gallup Poll, have no idea
that we are still in Afghanistan. Osama Bin Laden and Mullah Omar are both long
dead. The shattered remnants of Al Qaeda have fled to Pakistan and parts
unknown. Hamid Karzai has come and gone. For the last six months, the US hasn’t
even troubled itself to send an ambassador to Kabul.
A kind of convenient cultural
amnesia has set in, abetted by a compliant press corps that has largely
decamped from the Hindu Kush and now treats Afghanistan as if it is some kind
of interstellar region, where photographers are occasionally dispatched to snap
eerie debris clouds from the detonation of MOAB bombs. It’s no wonder that the
few Americans who continue to support the war cling to the delusion that
Afghanistan orchestrated the 9/11 attacks. It is the War that Time Forgot.
Nothing better illustrates the
eclipse of US global power than the fact that Afghanistan refuses to be
subjugated or even managed, despite 16 years of hard-core carnage. Since the
first US airstrikes hit Kandahar in October 2001, more than 150,000 Afghan
civilians have been killed. Still Afghanistan resists imperial dictates. Even after
Obama’s shameful troop surge in 2010, an escalation that went almost unopposed
by the US antiwar movement, the Taliban now retains almost as much control of
the country as it did in 2001. And for that Afghanistan must be punished.
Eternally, it seems.
As for Trump, in his quest to
privatize as much of the federal government as possible the president is still
apparently entranced with the idea of turning over much of the Afghan operation
to military contractors. As McCain and Warren were issuing their
war cries from Kabul, Trump and Company huddled with Erik Prince, founder of
Blackwater Security, and billionaire financier Stephen Feinberg, owner of
DynCorp, on how to replace US troops with mercenaries from their training
camps.
Give Trump some credit. His
war plan is refreshingly vacant of moral posturing. Instead he views the war
through a greedily focused economic lens: Afghanistan as commodity. Over the
course of 16 years, the cratering American operation in Afghanistan has
consumed more than $1 trillion, a huge and nearly unchallenged benefaction to
military contractors. In 2016, the Pentagon spent $3.6 million for each US
soldier stationed in Afghanistan. A surge of 4,000 to 10,000 additional
troops, either as “private military units” or GIs, will come as a welcome new
infusion of cash to the dozens of defense corporations that invested so heavily
in his administration.
The New York Time’s Maggie
Haberman was thrilled by some most blood-curdling lines in Trump’s big speech
on the war, Tweeting: “We are not nation-building again. We are killing
terrorists,” says POTUS, in one of his more forceful/best lines of address.”
All you need to do to earn the love of the “failing New York Times,” Donald, is
to kill-kill-kill and not re-build what you destroy. Trump’s new Afghanistan
plan replicates worst aspects of Obama’s awful Af-Pak strategy, with India
thrown into the mix just to increase risk of nuclear war. If Trump continues
with this neocon drift, HRC may get a 3 AM call from “the creep” asking her to
replace Rexxon as Secretary of State….
If that living monument to the
Confederacy Jefferson B. Sessions was serious about confronting the rising
scourge of opiate addiction in the US, he would start by calling for an
immediate end to US military operations in Afghanistan. Forget marijuana, the
real gateway to heroin abuse is war. Since the start of Operation Enduring
Freedom, opium production has swelled, now accounting for more than one-third
of the wrecked Afghan economy. In the last two years alone, opium poppy yields
have doubled, a narcotic blowback now hitting the streets of American cities
from Amarillo to Pensacola. With every drone strike in the Helmond Province, a
thousand more poppies bloom.
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