[R-G] Obama, Afghanistan, and the Anti-War Movement

Anthony Fenton fentona at shaw.ca
Tue Jul 15 15:06:54 MDT 2008


http://www.monthlyreview.org/mrzine/flanders150708.html
About MR
Obama, Afghanistan, and the Anti-War Movement
by Jon Flanders

Nine US soldiers have been killed in Afghanistan this week in a major  
attack attributed to the Taliban.

More US troops have been killed in Afghanistan than Iraq in the past  
several months.

We can expect as a result that the Democrats and their Presidential  
candidate Obama will intensify their calls for shifting the "war on  
terror" to Afghanistan, where it should never have been abandoned for  
the invasion of Iraq.

We will hear talk of attacking Pakistan's Northwest Frontier Province,  
even calls for invasion, I suspect.

Given the support for Obama by a significant sector of the anti-war  
movement, confusion about how to respond is sure to be noticeable.

In order to have some clarity on the question, a little research is  
necessary.  For example, what about that Afghan-Pakistani border?   
Where did it come from?

Per usual for this part of the world, we find that the British had a  
hand in setting up the Durand Line, which separates Afghanistan and  
Pakistan's borders.  This border crosses the territory of the Pashtun  
people, some 42 million of them, a population much bigger than that of  
Iraq.  The Durand Line was declared invalid by the 1949 Afghan Loya  
Jirga, but has been given legitimacy by court rulings upholding  
colonial divisions of territories across the globe.

There has been and still is a movement for a Pashtunistan nation.

So when we hear stories from the corporate press about the Taliban  
violating borders, let's keep the above in mind.  And when we hear  
denunciations of the Taliban, universally supposed to be the devils  
incarnate and sponsors of Al Quaeda, let's remember that for the  
Pashtun people, it is very likely that repelling the foreign invaders,  
whether from the US, Afghan, or Pakistani government, is a far  
likelier motivator for war than the religious theories of a particular  
Islamic sect.

More US troops in Afghanistan will change nothing.  There is not going  
to be any solution in the lands of the Pashtun coming from foreign  
occupiers. Given the Pashtun code of honor, that demands retribution  
for unjust attacks, US escalation will only see increased resistance  
in response.  As we have just seen in the deaths of nine Americans.

The demand of the anti-war movement for Afghanistan should be no  
different than Iraq.  US Out!
Jon Flanders is a member and former president of IAM LL 1145 and a  
member of the Troy Area Labor Council, AFL-CIO.




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