Trump is reportedly being
encouraged by corporate executives to take advantage of Afghanistan's mineral
wealth
As the 16th anniversary of the
U.S. invasion of Afghanistan
approaches, President Donald Trump is reportedly
being pressured by a billionaire financier and a chemical executive to
extend the scope of the conflict for one simple, greedy
reason: to exploit Afghanistan's mineral reserves.
According to James Risen and
Mark Landler of the New York Times, the Trump administration is
"considering sending an envoy to Afghanistan to meet with mining
officials" as the president is receiving encouragement from Stephen
Feinberg, the billionaire head of DynCorp, and Michael Silver, the head of
American Elements, a firm that specializes in "extracting rare-earth
minerals."
"In 2010, American
officials estimated that Afghanistan had untapped mineral deposits worth nearly
$1 trillion," Risen and Landler note. This large figure reportedly
"caught the attention of" the president, who has in the past argued
that the biggest failure of the U.S. in Iraq was not"taking"
the country's oil.
Trump is hardly the first
president to notice and eagerly examine Afghanistan's mineral reserves.
"In 2006, the George W.
Bush administration conducted aerial surveys of the country to map its mineral
resources," Risen and Landler note. "Under President Barack Obama,
the Pentagon set up a task force to try to build a mining industry in
Afghanistan—a challenge that was stymied by rampant corruption, as well as
security problems and the lack of roads, bridges or railroads."
Nonetheless, Trump appears to
be committed to the belief that mineral extraction "could be one
justification for the United States to stay engaged in the country," despite
warnings from security analysts that such a strategy could risk further deadly
confrontations with the Taliban.
If Trump moves forward with a
mineral extraction plan, Eric Levitz of New York Magazine adds,
there is a serious "danger of feeding the Taliban top-notch propaganda.
It's hard to win hearts and minds, when you're also trying to win minerals and
mines."
But as Gizmodo's Adam Clark
Estes observes,
such concerns are unlikely to move Trump, whose "greed has led the man to
leave a path of destruction behind him on his pursuit of profit and
glory."
"That sort of habit makes
some people rich in the business world, at the expense of making others
poor," Estes writes. "When you're talking about global politics and
terrorism, however, people die, and nations fail."
As Common Dreams reported
earlier this month, the Trump White House has been consulting with high-profile
war profiteers who have argued that the way forward in Afghanistan is to
further privatize military operations in the country. White House Chief
Strategist Steve Bannon and senior advisor Jared Kushner reportedly "recruited"
both Feinberg and Blackwater founder Erik Prince to lay out a war plan for the
president.
Critics denounced this
development as a step toward "colonialism," and commentators had
similar words for Trump's apparent attraction to Afghanistan's mineral wealth.
Law professor and former White
House lawyer Andy Wright concluded that the Times report lays bare Trump's
"British
Empire thinking," which places plunder over "threat-based
security."
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