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Bu-lat-lat (boo-lat-lat) verb: to search, probe, investigate, inquire; to unearth facts Issue No. 35 October 14 - 20, 2001 Quezon City, Philippines |
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Into the Morass: There is no clear way to end this war BY
GEORGE MONBIOT
Back to Bulatlat.com Alternative Reader Index Two
weeks ago, the US Under Secretary of Defense, Paul Wolfowitz, compared
Afghanistan to a swamp, which must be drained to catch the snakes which hide
there. His analogy may be rather more apt than he intended. Swamps, as everyone
knows, are harder to get out of than they are to get into. On
Sunday night, the West took its first, irreversible step into the morass. It may
well prove to be the only simple one on an ever more uncertain journey. But
there is now no going back. Once you have initiated military action, you are
committed to it, and all further adventures in Afghanistan need be armed. It is
not clear that either the British or the US governments fully understand the
implications. Yesterday
morning, some fifteen hours after the airstrikes began, the United Nations
announced that it had halted convoys of food to Afghanistan. >From now on,
and for as long as the conflict lasts, the humanitarian aid which both Blair and
Bush promised would be an integral component of this campaign must be delivered
primarily with the help of the armed forces. They don't seem to have any idea
what this responsibility entails. The
military answer to the country's crisis so far has taken the form of 37,500
yellow ration packs, dropped from transport planes into regions in which hungry
people are believed to live. Each of them contains around 2,200 calories:
roughly enough to sustain one person for one day. If
you believe, as some commentators do, that this is an impressive or even
meaningful operation, I urge you to conduct a simple calculation. The United
Nations estimates that there are 7.5 million hungry people in Afghanistan. If
every ration pack reached a starving person, then one two hundredth of the
vulnerable were fed by the humanitarian effort on Sunday. The US Department of
Defense has announced that it possesses a further two million of these packs,
which it might be prepared to drop. If so, they could feed 27 per cent of the
starving for one day. Four
weeks remain before winter envelops Afghanistan, during which enough food must
be delivered to last until March. Yet the US is prepared to drop, at its own
best estimate, barely one quarter of one day's needs. Some
of these rations will, of course, be lost. Many, perhaps most, will be eaten by
people who are not in immediate danger of starvation, as they are more mobile
than the seriously hungry and better able to reach the packs. Some will remain
untouched. One of the warring factions may discover that an effective means of
eliminating its enemies is to remove the contents of these packs and replace
them with explosives. This is just one of the problems associated with
dispensing kindness at 20,000 feet: no one can be completely sure whose
generosity they are about to enjoy. The
usefulness of any feeding programme, moreover, is greatly diminished if it is
not carefully targetted. People in different stages of starvation require
different preparations. Children, especially infants, are more vulnerable than
any others. Yet all the packs being dropped on Afghanistan are identical, and
all are equipped only to feed adults. The packs contain medicine as well as
food, but unlike aid workers on the ground, the pilots delivering them can offer
no diagnosis. This blanket prescription is likely to be either useless or
dangerous. So
western governments have terminated what may have been an effective humanitarian
programme, and replaced it with a futile gesture. The bombing raids, moreover,
have persuaded thousands to flee from their homes. Yet Afghanistan's borders
remain closed, while the camps the UN is building in Pakistan will not be ready
for another two weeks. The refugees have nowhere to go. The military strikes,
the US Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld announced, would "create
conditions for sustained ... humanitarian relief operations in
Afghanistan". They have, so far, done precisely the opposite. But
the purpose of the food drops is not to feed the starving, but to tell them they
are being fed. President Bush explained on Sunday that by means of these
packages, "the oppressed people of Afghanistan will know the generosity of
America and our allies". They will know it, for they know that gestures
will not feed them. Hunger brooks no tokenism. It demands food, not a semblance
of food. This
show of generosity is, of course, designed to impress us as well as them. The
yellow packages drifting onto the minefields of the Hindu Kush are likely to be
the most, over the next few days, that we will see of the humanitarian crisis in
Afghanistan. The hungry will die quietly, on the forgotten trails through the
mountains, huddled behind rocks, searching the streets of deserted cities,
clawing for roots in the empty fields. The satellites which can count the shells
stacked behind a howitzer cannot peer into the faces of the starving. And
if, somehow, a sensible humanitarian mission resumed, the linkage established by
both Bush and Blair between aid and ordnance, which sounds so bold and
compassionate at home, could turn out to be disastrous in Afghanistan. If the
humanitarian programme continues to be perceived as part of the military
offensive, we could expect the dispersed guerillas of a partly vanquished regime
to slip into the feeding centres, to lob a few grenades into the crowd. While
it is not hard to predict how the humanitarian operation might end, it is rather
more difficult to see how the military mission could be concluded. The Taliban
have vowed to fight "to the last breath". While many of their
conscripts will desert, the hardcore are likely to do just this. They dispersed
sometime before Sunday's attacks. Their anti-aircraft guns, tanks and planes
were peripheral to the operation of what has always, in effect, been a guerilla
force. In confronting them, as Russian veterans have warned, we will be
pummelling thin air. Donald Rumsfeld has defined "victory" as the
Taliban's "collapse from within". But this is not victory, only the
beginning of the next phase of war. If,
as Bush and Blair maintain, they aim to leave Afghanistan better than it was
when they found it, then the West is committed to defend it against all
oppressors, whoever they might be. This implies that if the Northern Alliance
moves into the vaccuum left by the nominal defeat of the Taliban, and
establishes not the "broad-based" government of assorted extremists
the West envisages, but a narrow government of homogenous extremists, we must
fight them too. So
at what point do we stop fighting? At what point does withdrawal become either
honourable or responsible? Having once engaged its forces, are we then obliged
to reduce Afghanistan to a permanent protectorate? Or will we jettison
responsibility as soon as military power becomes impossible to sustain? The
consequences of this endless war may be dangerous for the West. They could be
deadly for Afghanistan.
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