Pacific Free Press was launched in March 2007 by Dutch-Canadian Richard
Kastelein of V.O.F. Expathos, in the Netherlands along with Chris Cook- CFUV radio journalist and Editor in Chief of Pacific Free Press. Cook is based in , Victoria, British Columbia.
The site is a sister to Atlantic Free Press and Brick Ogden an American Expatriate in Amsterdam has been a key supporter of this project.
The mission of Pacific Free Press is simple: to dig out nuggets of truth from
the slag-heap of lies, ignorance and witless diversion that has buried
public discourse today. Pacific Free Press provides a new venue for
disseminating hard news and insightful, fact-based analysis of the
harsh realities too often ignored or distorted by the mainstream press.
Swan Song for NATO: The Real Cost Of Defeat In Forgettistan
by Mike Whitney
It was supposed to be "the good war"; a war against terror; a war of liberation. It was intended to fix the eyes of the world on America's state of the art weaponry, its crack troops and its overwhelming firepower.
It was supposed to demonstrateonce and for all-- that the world's only superpower could no longer be beaten or resisted; that Washington could deploy its troops anywhere in the world and crush its adversaries at will.
Then everything went sideways. The war veered from the Pentagon's script. The Taliban retreated, waited, regrouped and retaliated. They enlisted support from the Pashtuns and the tribal leaders who could see that America would never honor its commitments; that order would never be restored. Operation Enduring Freedom has brought neither peace nor prosperity to Afghanistan; just occupation.
"It is our right to defend our country. We are not a threat to
other countries. But we have to use our rights when our country is
occupied by foreign forces."
- Mullah Omar, Taliban leader
"ICH" - Seven years have passed and the country is still ruled by
warlords and drug-merchants. Nothing has gotten better. The country is
in shambles and the government is a fraud. The humiliation of foreign
occupation persists while the killing goes on with no end in sight.
War
is not foreign policy. It is slaughter. Seven years later; it's still
slaughter. The Taliban have taken over more than half of Afghanistan.
They have conducted military operations in the capital of Kabul.
They're dug in at Logar, Wardak and Ghazni and control vast swathes of
territory in Zabul, Helmand, Urzgan and Kandahar. Now they are getting
ready to step-up operations and mount a Spring offensive. That means
the hostilities will progressively intensify.
The Taliban's
approach is methodical and deliberate. They've shown they can survive
the harshest conditions and still achieve tactical victories over a
better-equipped enemy. They are highly-motivated and believe their
cause is just. After all, they're not fighting to occupy a foreign
nation; they're fighting to defend their own country. That strengthens
their resolve and keeps morale high. When NATO and American troops
leave Afghanistan; the Taliban will remain, just as they did when the
Russians left 20 years ago. No difference. The US occupation will just
be another grim footnote in the country's tragic history.
The
United States has gained nothing from its invasion of Afghanistan. US
troops do not control even a square inch of Afghan soil. The moment a
soldier lifts his boot-heel; that ground is returned to the native
people. That won't change either. General Dan McNeill said recently
that "if proper US military counterinsurgency doctrine were followed;
the US would need 400,000 troops to defeat Pashtun tribal resistance in
Afghanistan." Currently, the US and NATO have only 66,000 troops on the
ground and the allies are refusing to send more. On a purely logistical
level; victory is impossible.
The battle for hearts and minds
has been lost, too. A statement from the Revolutionary Association of
the Women of Afghanistan (RAWA) sums it up like this:
"The
reinstatement of the Northern Alliance to power crushed the hopes of
our people for freedom and prosperity and proved that, for the Bush
administration, defeating terrorism has no meaning at all....The US
doesnt want to defeat the Taliban and Al-Qaeda, because then they will
have no excuse to stay in Afghanistan and achieve their economic and
strategic goals in the region....After seven years, there is no peace,
human rights, democracy or reconstruction in Afghanistan. The
destitution and suffering of our people is increasing everyday. ...We
believe that if the troops leave Afghanistan, our people will become
more free and come out of their current puzzlement and
doubts...Afghanistans freedom can only be achieved by Afghan people
themselves. Relying on one enemy to defeat another is a wrong policy
which has just tightened the grip of the Northern Alliance and their
masters on the neck of our nation." (RAWA www.rawa.org)
Gradually,
the Allies are beginning to see that Bush's war cannot be won and that
continuing the fighting is counterproductive. There is no military
solution to the conflict in Afghanistan and the political objectives
are getting murkier all the time. The lack of direction just adds to
the growing frustration.
Recently Secretary of Defense Robert
Gates tried to bully the allies into sending more combat troops to
fight in the South, but he met with stiff resistance . He said:
"I
am concerned that many people on this continent may not comprehend the
magnitude of the direct threat to European security," Gates said. "We
must not become a two-tiered alliance of those who are willing to fight
and those who are not. Such a development, with all its implications
for collective security, would in effect destroy the alliance."
But
public support for the war is waning in Europe. This is America's war,
not theirs. Europeans don't need to occupy foreign nations to meet
their energy needs. Their economies are thriving and they can simply
pay for their fuel on the open market. Only America wants the war. It's
all part of a crazy geopolitical "grand strategy" to project US power
into the region to control its resources. So far, there's no indication
that the plan will succeed.
Germany has the third biggest economy
in the world. Over the last few years, they have strengthened ties with
Russia and made agreements that will satisfy their long-term energy
needs. But German involvement in Afghanistan has put a strain on
relations with Moscow. Putin thinks that the US is using the war to put
down roots in Central Asia so it can control pipeline-routes from the
Caspian Basin while surrounding Russia and China with military bases.
Putin is right. Naturally, he'd like to persuade German Chancellor
Angela Merkel to withdraw from Afghanistan which would strike a blow
against the US-led alliance. And, that is the way it will probably turn
out, too.
Eventually, German leaders will see that its foolish
to tweak the nose of the people who provide them with energy (Russia)
just to support Washington's adventures. When Germany withdraws from
Afghanistan; NATO will disband, new coalitions will form, and the
transatlantic alliance fall apart. The cracks are already visible.
President
Bush has said that the war in Afghanistan must continue or the country
will become a haven for drugs, terrorism and organized crime. He says
we are fighting a poisonous ideology of Islamic extremism which
threatens to become a global movement.
But the Taliban and
Pashtun tribesmen see it differently. They see the conflict as an
imperial war of aggression which has only added to the suffering of
their people. A recent report by the United Nations Human Development
Fund appears to support this view. It shows that Afghanistan has fallen
in every category. The average life expectancy has gone down,
malnutrition has risen, literacy has dropped, and more than half the
population is living below the poverty-line. Hundreds of thousands of
people have been internally displaced by the war. The occupation has
created plenty of misery, but no democracy. The war was a failure.
Afghanistan
now produces 90% of the world's opium; more than any other country. The
booming drug trade is the direct corollary of the US invasion. No one
even denies this. Bush has created the world's largest narco-colony. Is
that success?
Presently, there are no plans to improve the
lives of ordinary Afghanis or to remove the warlords. Reconstruction is
at a standstill. If the US stays in Afghanistan, the situation 10 years
from now will be the same as it is today, only more people will have
needlessly died. Most Afghanis now understand that the promise of
democracy was a lie. The only thing the occupation has brought is more
grinding poverty and random violence.
There's no back-up plan
for Afghanistan. In fact, there is no plan at all. The administration
thought the Taliban would see America's high-tech, laser-guided
weaponry and run for the hills. They did. Now they're back. And now we
are embroiled in an unwinnable war with a tenacious enemy that grows
stronger and more resolute by the day.
Eventually, the Europeans will see the futility of the war and leave. And that will be the end of NATO.