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Afghanistan: The First Feminist War?

Posted: 16/03/2012 23:00

The tragedy in Afghanistan of a US soldier murdering 16 civilians has given President Obama a greater urgency in getting American troops out of that country. Yet, he finds himself in a similar situation as President Nixon during the latter days of the Vietnam War...Securing Peace (leaving) with honour.

With America's "puppet" Afghan ruler Hamid Karzai now asking NATO troops to stay in their camps, abandoning one of their main goals of winning the hearts and minds of the people...one question resonates: Why are we sill there?

Leaving Afghanistan was a main topic Obama discussed with British Prime Minister David Cameron this past week. And it's a cinch one of the talking points was that question: Why are we still there? What are our goals?

Now that Osama Bin Laden is dead and Al Qaida is opening up chapters all over the Islamic world, the only concrete answer to that question is the protection of women.

The feminist victory may be complete in America, but on the international stage it's not doing so well with three quarters of the world's women still under often-severe male domination. Afghanistan is an extreme case in point in what might be termed the first feminist war...a war that now may not be won even if Hillary Clinton dons a flack jacket and shoulders an M16 on the front lines. Still,since the Bush Administration to the present America's top foreign policy office has been held by women...women who have promised not to desert their Afghan sisters.

I say that since there has yet to be a credible explanation as to why we, and other NATO nations, are sill there, except to keep the extreme male chauvinist and misogynist Muslim Taliban from power. Our main goal of defeating Osama bin Laden's Al Qaida group and international terrorism is over...at least there.

Remember, America originally helped arm the Taliban in its fight against the Soviets. As far as anyone can tell the reason for our conflict with them, as with Iraq, is regime change. We have also accomplished that. How long Karzai remains in power after NATO leaves is questionable.

Yet, unlike Iraq, which had a strong central autocratic government, the Taliban is a theocracy made up of hill tribesmen who simply abandoned Kabul when we arrived and took the mountains and friendly villages for a protracted war against NATO.

Of course it doesn't have to be that way. If we had the money and popular support we could stay there as long as we wanted. We have maintained forces in South Korea since the end of WW2, most of that time under a cease-fire agreement with North Korea.

But, this is the main weakness with progressive democracies when pitted against stagnant theocracies. Like sharks, we have to keep moving or we eventually will perish. Many Islamic states simply exist as shellfish, going where the tide takes them, in a non-evolutionary permanent state shielded by their faith.

But, for us, as usual there's more at stake in Afghanistan than our war on terror, women being forced to wear burkas and our international reputation. There are big, big bucks in the form of natural gas and minerals. And there's one more thing...narcotics. The country's biggest cash crop is opium poppies, another battle that hasn't been going well. Because as with our similar efforts to eradicate South American cocaine, we're fighting an indigenous people's traditional work.

President Obama's original contention during the GW Bush years that we should be concentrating on Afghanistan rather than invading Iraq was good politics in the aftermath of 9/11. Our invasion of Iraq wasn't based so much on Saddam Hussein's brutality as it was on reports of his so-called weapons of mass destruction aimed at the West...a claim that has since been proven false.

So, it was left to the media to ramp the US population up for our Afghan adventure. Photos and videos of women being tortured and executed for trying to have jobs or enjoy some western music, inflamed many of us against the brutal Taliban religious fanaticism. As it should have. Develop a war on terrorism and couple this with the Taliban and nine years later we are still there with more NATO troops dying every week.

But wait! There's one more weakness progressive democracies have: We won't do what some of our enemies would do to win. We are limited by our civility, rules of warfare, the Geneva Convention, etc. That's partly why those 16 senseless civilian deaths is so difficult to stomach.

During the Korean War General Douglas MacArthur, one of the most brilliant military tacticians we have ever had was fired by President Truman because he wanted to bomb the railroads in Manchuria. That was from where China's Red Army supplies were being funneled into Korea. He felt if we broke the supply line, the Chinese offensive would collapse. Truman, however, felt such as action might bring Russia into the conflict and trigger WW3. We didn't win in Korea...but eventually bargained for a truce.

In Vietnam we tried everything except invading North Vietnam and nuclear weapons. But, those options were nixed for fear of bringing the Chinese into the war.

We are not about to nuke Afghanistan, killing everyone that isn't waiving Old Glory or even try to fight a war of attrition, which we would lose. That's possibly because we are still too nice to win. We will eventually just leave...but probably without that infamous Mission Accomplished banner.

And, hopefully we may at long last learn that our nation is best defended by guarding our own borders and fighting a never-ending battle at home for truth, justice and the American way, if anyone can recall what that way is.

 
 
 

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The tragedy in Afghanistan of a US soldier murdering 16 civilians has given President Obama a greater urgency in getting American troops out of that country. Yet, he finds himself in a similar situati...
The tragedy in Afghanistan of a US soldier murdering 16 civilians has given President Obama a greater urgency in getting American troops out of that country. Yet, he finds himself in a similar situati...
 
 
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12:43 PM on 03/18/2012
Interesting commentary regarding the concept of feminist advocacy for war.

Three of the last four U.S. Scretaries of State have been women -- Albright, Rice, and Clinton -- all among the most militaristic leaders in the nation's history. Hillary Clinton voted for the Iraq war, has also been the administration's leading advocate for military escalation in Afghanistan, increased contracting with profiteering mercenaries, organized support for violent regime change in Libya, recklessly rattled nuclear sabres at Iran, and made at least veiled threats of military intervention in Egypt, Syria, Somalia, North Korea.

The promise of women in internation leadership was that they would be more skilled at promoting peace, human rights and economic justice. Looking at deeds, the rhetoric seems hollow.
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glitterik
Mexico Daydreams ....
12:07 PM on 03/18/2012
The feminist victory is complete in the USA? That is a joke.
07:57 PM on 03/17/2012
Through the early 1970's the government of Oman, aided by Iran, Jordan, the UK and others fought a Marxist insurgency in the region of Dhofar. One aim of the Marxists was social equality between the sexes and the abolition of traditional relations. The West ensured their defeat.
03:39 PM on 03/17/2012
Strange isn't it that it took 4 years to defeat Hitler, yet we are still battling it out in Afghanistan after 10 years.
07:57 PM on 03/17/2012
And losing.
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12:45 PM on 03/18/2012
Successfully battling and wining by attrition against invaders is part of the Afghan culture since at least Alexander the Great.
03:36 PM on 03/17/2012
As far as the women in Afghanistan are concerned, they should be fighting their own war, just like women in the west have had to do. This won't happen until they actually have the will to do so. If many are still willing to wear burkas and to be under the thumb of their masters, then that is the way it will be until there is a popular feminist uprising and that probably won't happen until at least a generation has passed, maybe more. Cultures should evolve naturally. Outsiders can't force matters. That said, I don't believe that is the motive for the Afghan War anyway. There are other issue involved.
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Balthasar
Wise Man
03:35 PM on 03/17/2012
The solution is obvious: prepare Afghan women to take their war underground. Provide secret caches of teaching materials for Afghan girls, and start an underground learning network. Train Afghan women in resistance techniques. Set up an underground railroad for refugee and abused women. Teach them to teach their sons: abusing women is wrong; it is evil.

If we can't give Afghan women freedom, we might still teach them how to take it for themselves someday..
09:33 PM on 03/17/2012
No, leave them alone. It is not our business. We get all hot under the collar in this country if we think outsiders are trying to change our culture, so we should not interfere in others.
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Shreen Ayob
11:20 AM on 03/18/2012
So destroying women's lives is part of their culture? Don't be ridiculous.

Anyhow, educating Afghan women to resist - this is happening already. Lots of British, International and Afghan organisations are currently doing this, it's a bit under the radar though, but it definitely is happening. When I was a intern with Oxfam that was one of the things I was researching - the best ways to equip Afghans (esp. women) with the tools to create and define their own resistance movements.

Pretty awesome isn't it?
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vividrick
I came, I saw...I had a cup of tea!
01:59 PM on 03/17/2012
This in a way illustrates how Amnesty International for example, are reluctant of immediate withdrawl of Coalition troops, because they understandably are concerned about whether women's rights are improved & maintained that way, especially if the Taliban are still around, or are intergrated into the overall Government. And Stop The War & other peace groups want immediate troops withdrawl. While I support both causes, I hope some middle/common ground within the two can be achieved, with or without it being wishful thinking.
07:59 PM on 03/17/2012
You sum up the dilemma. If you want to fight a war for women's rights why be allied to Saudi Arabia?
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vividrick
I came, I saw...I had a cup of tea!
08:10 PM on 03/17/2012
Exactly! Because we trade masses of oil & weaponry! Don't wanna upset the apple-cart do we (Government)?
12:10 PM on 03/17/2012
Of course, that war isn't being fought to protect Afghan women, but the result of a withdrawal will be that women are thrown back into the stone age, with more burqas, stonings, floggings, unpunished brutalities because women are never seen as the victims.
09:36 PM on 03/17/2012
To repeat. It is not our business how other countries run their lives unless it impacts on our own.
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Shreen Ayob
05:36 PM on 03/19/2012
This argument that it's not our business is a total cop out.

If you give a damn about your fellow human, then yeah it's your business if you want it to be. Especially so if Afghan women are asking for assistance from NGOs either locally or globally.
10:46 AM on 03/17/2012
"There are big, big bucks in the form of natural gas and minerals. And there's one more thing...narcotics"

Pretty much sums up the reason for war, and the resultant deaths of hundreds of thousands because of it..... Enjoying your "Freedom n Democracy" soup yet?