The Seldom Reported Legacy of the US Military Occupation of Afghanistan

Not since the days immediately following the Twin Towers attacks on 9/11 has the war in Afghanistan received as much media attention as it is getting today. Now, everyone is for its continuation, or so it seems.

Corporate media war-mongering knows no bounds.

President Biden’s plans to withdraw American forces from Afghanistan has suddenly turned every broadcast journalist into a distressed, hand-wringing, honorary member of Human Rights Watch, fretting and fussing over the future state of an Afghanistan free of American military forces.

Let’s set aside for the moment the fact that US forces will continue to dominate the Afghan landscape (and neighboring Pakistan) with armed drones dropping bombs and missiles into peoples’ homes, a legion of civilian contractors pursuing American business interests, and intelligence operations manipulating the government and assassinating anyone who gets in their way.

Not since music producer Phil Spector’s famous “wall of sound” have I heard such a fully orchestrated, monotonous, uniform wall of repetitious lament from corporate news broadcasters universally expressing, whether explicitly or by implication, their desire to keep US troops in a war overseas.

Never mind that this war – which has always included US attacks in neighboring Pakistan – has dragged on for over 20 years; never mind that the original mission of capturing Osama bin Laden was accomplished long ago; never mind that the recent release of the Afghanistan Papers demonstrates what many have long suspected – that no one in the Pentagon, State, or Defense Departments ever had any hope for the situation’s improvement, much less a military solution to our “why can’t we fix Afghanistan?” query.

Nevertheless, everyone from Fox News to MSNBC is now lamenting president Biden’s “irrational,” even “cowardly” decision to withdraw from Afghanistan.

Suddenly, it appears that American elites actually care about the fate of poor

Army troops returning in December from a deployment to Afghanistan. Credit…John Moore Getty Images

Muslims overseas. Thoughts of a barbaric Taliban regime imposing their version of Sharia law over women and girls is more than suburban coffee table conversations can tolerate.

But the fact of the matter is that the only reason CNN and CBS news anchors now want us all to believe that Afghanistan’s future (sans US group troops) looks so devastatingly bleak, is because these same people have thoroughly and irresponsibly ignored the lives of the Afghan people for nearly 20 years.

Propaganda is not only a matter of spreading misinformation. It also requires withholding inconvenient truths.

Think about it.

How often has the American public been updated, on a regular basis, about the details of what the US presence in Afghanistan has meant for the country’s civilian population?

The answer is, rarely if ever.

How often have we been told about the tens of thousands of innocent civilians killed in the frequent US drone strikes?

What about the regular CIA assassinations; murders that can wipe out entire families, including young children?

(Below. Watch “Living Under Drones,” approx. 7 minutes)

 

No. Only the ignorant or the propagandists will believe that the future suddenly looks bleak for the Afghan people after America “leaves.” The truth is that sharing their country with America’s occupation army has always been a nightmare for the Afghan and Pakistani people.

Just ask the little children who instinctively run in fear every time they imagine a noise overhead because they are terrified of another drone attack.

In the early days of planning in the Oval Office, there was a nanosecond given over to the suggestion that al Qaeda should be treated as an international criminal organization, and that the Twin Towers attack should be viewed as a horrible crime rather than an act of war.

Two possible paths were laid out before president George W. Bush. The first option, with important historical precedent, is explained in a 2006 report, 9/11: Five Years Later. The Forward to this government report explains that: “Before 9/11, combating terrorism was treated largely as a law enforcement problem.”

Not anymore.

 President Bush forever changed the US attitude towards “terrorism” – which still remains horribly (and conveniently) ill-defined.

Eager to declare himself “a war president,” George W. Bush acquiesced to the military bureaucracy’s (which naturally includes the weapons manufacturers who have made billions since this war began) insistence that 9/11 be viewed as an act of war requiring a military (rather than an international law-enforcement) response.

The people of Afghanistan, Pakistan, Somalia, Syria, Iran, Yemen, AND the United States have all suffered the devastating, inhumane consequences of that egotistical, presidential decision ever since.

Only those who have not been paying attention will now believe that US forces have been protecting Afghan women and children, civilians who will suddenly come under threat by our withdrawal.

Author: David Crump

Author, Speaker, Retired Biblical Studies & Theology Professor & Pastor, Passionate Falconer, H-D Chopper Rider, Fumbling Disciple Who Loves Jesus Christ

2 thoughts on “The Seldom Reported Legacy of the US Military Occupation of Afghanistan”

  1. Thanks so much! You’ve answered questions I hadn’t.e. Why is getting out of a 20 year war a bad thing. It feels like we learned nothing from our foreign invasion of Vietnam.

    1. You are welcome. And you are absolutely right. We haven’t learned a thing from our time in Vietnam. Remember when Nixon touted his plan for “Vietnamization” of the war. The goal was to train S. Vietnamese troops to fight their own war. It was a complete failure because you can’t train a nationalist army to fight for American goals. That is exactly what the Pentagon has been attempting again in Afghanistan. And it has been an even more spectacular failure, especially when US operations are consistently atrocious.

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