The Taliban is finally making another try at initiating
peace talks. Who is listening and who cares?
Afghans care. Their hearts are in pieces like the rubble
that is strewn wherever the US-led NATO/Karzai forces have bombed from the air,
or where the Taliban has crude-bombed, sometimes suicide-bombed, from the
ground.
The Bush-installed Karzai government cares—and they don’t
want it because the Taliban are sort of acting like a government-in-exile, replete
with a new
office in Doha, Qatar that sported a Taliban flag and a plaque identifying
the building as the offices of the “Political Office of the Islamic Emirate of
Afghanistan.” Whoops. Hamid Karzai wants it clear that these are just ragtag
insurgents, not a government-in-exile. But both sides have a point. Karzai
holds that, unlike the Taliban, his government is elected. The Taliban, who did indeed take
power by military force—although the origin stories of the Taliban tell of
liberation and defense of the vulnerable, making them popular in the
early-to-mid 1990s and made recruiting easy for them, paving their way to power—ruled
Afghanistan from 1996 until ousted by the US invasion in 2001 (and were heavily
supported during their formation and rule by the Pakistani Inter-Services
Intelligence, who were massively supported by the US), so in their eyes they
are the government-in-exile. They see Karzai as the puppet government of the
occupying military.
Underlying these deep differences are the age-old problems
of the conflict industry, that is, those who benefit financially, politically,
or militarily by the continuation of the war and so work to sabotage peace
efforts. Those parties may be visible or shadowy and they may proclaim public
support for peace or peace talks, but their actual work is to undermine any
real peace. They are the war contractors, the business owners both in
Afghanistan and elsewhere who profit handsomely from the ongoing war, the
military leaders from all sides, and the politicians who stand to lose
everything if peace breaks out. Indeed, says a Pakistani source who told
Reuters on condition of anonymity, “there were many likely spoilers in the
peace process who would want to maintain the status quo to continue to benefit
from the war economy and the present chaotic conditions.”
How can we who live in a democracy help in a situation like
this?
First, tell our President and our Secretary of State and our
elected representatives that we expect the US to stick to the military exit
plan, to accelerate it if possible, and to bring home or destroy all US
military weapons and munitions as we leave. The US should ban itself from
selling or giving any weapons to any party in the region. That is a proven losing
strategy, again and again. It was a loser when we gave tons of weapons to the
mujahedeen in the 1980s—weapons that then became the arsenals of the fighting
Islamic forces that either launched the September 11 attacks or harbored those
who did. It’s called blowback and it works well for US war profiteers. Ending
their profit-taking is perhaps the most important peace step the American
people can achieve by themselves, without the involvement of any foreign
government. As long as American war corporations are allowed to sell their
warmaking arsenals and ammunition either to the Pentagon to give away to
Central Asian governments or to any of those governments (or any parties who
trade with those governments and who can act as transshipment brokers), we are
enabling the conflict industry that is killing innocent Afghans and enraging
the survivors and crippling any efforts toward peace.
We, the American people, can take decisive steps to give
Afghans more hope than they’ve had since 1979 if we outlaw the sale of the
goods of war to the region, withdraw our own troops and weaponry, and convert
funds that our Congress was going to take from the US taxpayers for making war
and spend them instead on some combination of desperately needed humanitarian
aid, US war-debt reduction, US domestic expenses (education, environmental
protection, and US infrastructure maintenance—all of which create far more jobs
than the weapons industry ever did).
In short, what is good for peace for the people of
Afghanistan is good for the well being of all Americans except for the
extremely wealthy war profiteers. It’s time for them to stop controlling us.
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