The U.S. war and occupation in Afghanistan, waged to avenge the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks that killed nearly 3,000 people, took the lives of more than 71,000 Afghani and Pakistani civilians. The country is left littered with unexploded ordnance, which kills and injures unknowing civilian adults and children as they move through their land. The war also forced six million Afghani people to flee their homes, almost half as refugees to other countries.
None of this tragedy of the 20-year .U.S. war in Afghanistan has been in our news media. Could it be because at the war’s onset, George W. Bush advised Americans to “go shopping” and forget about his war in a poor, remote, non-Western country?
During this war, the U.S. poured money into Afghanistan, money that flowed to oligarchs within regimes our government propped up, and to U.S. military contractors, civilian contractors and warlords, for which there is little to show. Our government’s Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction concluded, in his March 2021 assessment of the two-decade war, that much of the (U.S.) spending has been “woefully out of touch at best, and delusional at worst” and much of it has gone to graft and corruption by U.S. and Afghan profiteers.
When the U.S. fled Afghanistan seven months ago, most foreign funding upon which the country was dependent for its GDP and 75% of its public funding also left. According to the UN, nearly 95% of Afghans are malnourished and children are extremely vulnerable to acute starvation. An estimated 13,000 newborns have died from malnutrition and hunger-related diseases, since January 2022.
After fleeing the country, the U.S. quickly enacted economic sanctions against the brutal Taliban government. These sanctions, inevitably borne by the Afghani people, “are on track to take the lives of more civilians in the coming year than have been killed by 20 years of warfare,” according to economist Mark Weisbrot.
Why is our news media silent on our government’s inhumane economic war there?
On Feb. 11, 2022, President Biden signed an executive order to free $7 billion of frozen Afghani assets held in the Federal Reserve in New York — savings of ordinary citizens not the Taliban government — and to split them between humanitarian aid for starving, sick Afghanis and legal fees of surviving relatives of the Sept. 11 attacks. Even the former U.S.-supported Afghan President Hamid Karzai has called on Biden to reverse his decision and to return the full $7 billion. His words: “Withholding money or seizing money from the people of Afghanistan…is unjust and unfair and an atrocity against the Afghan people.”
Half of Afghani citizens were born after the U.S.-launched war in Afghanistan. And yet, they are being punished by our homicidal economic sanctions and the subsequent theft of Afghani citizens’ savings here. Further, the Afghani people did not plan and attack the United States on 9/11. It was largely Saudi Arabian members of al-Qaeda, who hatched their plot in Germany out of anger for the U.S. setting up military bases in their country and perpetrating war in the Middle East. Why didn’t the U.S. use the CIA, noted for sleuth, entrapment, and assassination of its targets in foreign countries, to capture or, more to their habit, assassinate, Osama bin Laden?
The logical and ethical response to compensating 9/11 victims’ families would be to withhold the millions of dollars in military aid that our government gives to Saudi Arabia each year to finance their purchase of U.S. military training and equipment, and to use that “blood money” for the 9/11 victims. Doing so, our government would also limit its collusion with Saudi Arabia in the most extreme humanitarian crisis today — the military war on Yemen with its bombing of hospitals and schools and blockades of food and medical supplies. Two-thirds of the 30 million Yemeni people are in critical need of food, shelter, medicines, and health care.
And why is none of this in our news media?
Because the greatest military empire in history failed in Afghanistan?
Because poor, darker-skinned, Muslim, non-Western people on the other side of the world are of no financial or security value?
Because the 700 Congressional lobbyists for the weapons industry have turned Congressional attention to their new business opportunity — war in Ukraine?
Because the U.S. government has now subordinated its War on Terror to a testosterone-filled Great Power conflict with Russia and China, now inflamed by Russia’s threat of using nuclear weapons.
Empires destroy themselves in the effort to prove they are indestructible. Reinhold Niebuhr.
Pat Hynes, retired professor of environmental health, is a board member of the Traprock Center for Peace and Justice. Her new book, “Hope But Demand Justice,” is published by Haley’s Publishing.
