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An
Enraged Bull In Assias Nuclear China Shop
By Eric S.
Margolis, 23 September 2001
President Bushs declaration of war
and impending assault against Afghanistan, a dirt-poor, medieval nation of 24
million, will help assuage Americas fury over last weeks apocalyptic terrorist
attacks. But the dangers of an enraged American bull rampaging through the nuclear
china shop of South Asia are not yet understood by politicians or the public.
As of this writing, powerful US and
British forces are concentrating in the region for air, missile, and commando
strikes against Afghanistan. What they will attack remains a mystery: after
22 years of warfare, Afghanistan lies in total ruins. Two million of its people
are starving; 3.2 million are refugees. Some 80 million mines strewn by the
Soviets remain, killing people daily.
Afghanistan has no real military forces,
just ragtag tribal militiamen. Pulverizing medieval Afghanistan will bring no
glory on US arms.
Any large US assault would interpose
itself between two feuding nuclear powers, India and Pakistan, who, in mid-1999,
were only days away from a full-scale conventional war over Kashmir that could
have quickly and terrifying gone nuclear. Today, India and Pakistan clash almost
daily along Kashmirs cease-fire line, called by CIA `the worlds most dangerous
border.
Last week, Pakistans Air Force and
nuclear forces went on highest alert. India presumably followed suit. Both nations
nuclear forces have at best three minutes warning of attack by enemy aircraft
or missiles. US aircraft and missiles flying over Pakistan might trigger false
reports of a nuclear attacks by the rudimentary early warning systems of India
and Pakistan, provoking an exchange of atomic weapons that would kill 2 million
people and wound 100 million.
A conflict in Afghanistan risks spilling
over into neighboring Pakistan, whose NW Frontier Province is ethnically identical
to southern Afghanistan. Pakistan is a fragile nation, riven by regional, religious,
and political disputes. US intervention in Pakistan and Afghanistan could fatally
destabilize the moderate, pro-western military government of President Pervez
Musharraf, plunging Pakistan into chaos.
This, in turn, would tempt India to
intervene militarily. Influential extremists in Indias fundamentalist Hindu
government, which is now allied with Israel, have repeatedly vowed to crush
Pakistan and `reunite it with Greater India. Chinas reaction to US military
forces deployed on its sensitive western borders presents more dangerous uncertainty.
US forces operating in Pakistan or
Afghanistan will find themselves in the midst of a hostile population which
sees them as invaders. In other words, another Beirut or Somalia, writ large.
Unless the US confines itself to small commando raids and air raids, large numbers
of Afghan and perhaps Pakistani civilians may die, provoking yet more fury against
the US across the Muslim world.
Meanwhile, Israel and its American
supporters are urging the US to launch a new war against Iraq. The stongest
pro-Israel voice in the Bush Administration, deputy secretary of defense Paul
Wolfowitz, has called for the `extermination and `ending of states accused by
Washington of supporting terrorism: Iraq, Iran, Syria, Yemen, Sudan, and Libya.
All oppose Israel and US hegemony in the Mideast.
Secretary of State Colin Powell reportedly
opposes attacking Iraq at this time. Other senior officials are growing increasingly
concerned that the `crusade proclaimed by President Bush last week may end up
ensnaring the US into a low-intensity but long-lasting conflict across the Muslim
world. American-owned oil installations, commercial interests, and travelers
would become a primary target, inflicting yet further damage on the already
battered US economy.
Another concern. The US and Russia
have been secretly planning commando attacks from Tajikistan against bin Laden
and other Afghan targets. Russia seems to have convinced the Bush Administration
that its bloody repression of Chechen independence-fighters is, in Moscows words.
`our struggle against terrorism. To date, Russia is reported have killed 87,000
Chechen civilians. The Russians are trying to cover their ongoing atrocities
and massive human rights violations in Chechnya by joining up with Bushs Afghan
crusade. One hopes America will not be duped into providing moral cover for
Russias continuing crimes in the Caucasus.
Military men are taught to keep cool
heads at times of maximum stress, fear, and anger. This is good advice for Washington.
However outraged, the US needs to remember its strategic and economic interests
abroad, and its 7 million Muslim Americans, 70% who voted for Bush, who are
now the nations second largest religion.
Taliban has twice offered to send bin
Laden to a non-Afghan Islamic court for trial, provided the US shows evidence
of his guilt. The US refuses. This is a major mistake: the rest of the world
would have far more sympathy for US military action, however dire, if it saw
hard proof instead of the kill-all-Arabs and Muslims rhetoric of Secretary Wolfowitz
and his allies. Washington seems to have come to its senses on this issue. Secretary
of State Powell says he will produce proof shortly, perhaps as a prelude to
attacking Afghanistan.
Few Americans have ever been to Afghanistan.
Fewer in Washington or the media know or understand anything about this complex,
remote land. American ignorance of Afghanistan is exceeded only by the deep
ignorance shown by Talibans medieval-minded leadership which has done so much
to bring down the wrath of America on their turbaned heads. Sadly, they appear
to be more guilty of stupidity than terrorism.
As Gen. Musharraf said Wednesday, `strength
without wisdom is foolishness. The US needs to pause, and take a deep breathe.
And recall, before it destroys wretched Afghanistan, that 1.5 million Afghans
died fighting the Soviets so that American troops did not have to war there
during the 1980s. The Afghans and Pakistanis stopped the Soviet advance on the
oil-producing Gulf. Americans owe all Afghans a debt of honor.
Copyright eric s. margolis 2001
Date/Time Last Modified: 6/17/2002 3:36:48 PM
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