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Taken from http://www.twf.org/News/Y2000/1204-Crusade.html
Release Date: December 4, 2000
Eric Margolis, c/o Editorial Department, The Toronto Sun
333 King St. East, Toronto, Ontario, Canada M5A 3X5
Fax: (416) 960-4803 -- Press Contact: Eric Margolis
U.S.-Russian Crusade Against Osama Bin Laden
Copyright © 2000 Eric Margolis - All Rights Reserved
[Eric Margolis is a syndicated foreign affairs columnist and broadcaster,
and author of the just released War at the Top of the World - The Struggle
for Afghanistan, Kashmir, and Tibet which was reviewed in The Economist,
May 13, 2000]
NEW YORK -- The United States and Russia may soon launch a joint
military assault against Islamic militant, Osama Bin Laden, and against
the leadership of Taliban, Afghanistan's de facto ruling movement.
Such an attack would probably include US Delta Force and Navy Seals,
who would join up with Russia's elite Spetsnaz and Alpha commandos in
Tajikistan, the Central Asian state where Russia has military bases
and 25,000 troops. The combined forces would be lifted by helicopters,
and backed by air support, deep into neighboring Afghanistan to attack
Bin Laden's fortified base in the Hindu Kush mountains.
How well such a raid would succeed remains in question: US special
forces have had a dismal record of fiascos over the past quarter century.
Russia's special forces, though more capable than similar American units,
experienced some success but also many failures in the Afghan War. Assassinating
irksome Third Worlders is the specialty of Britain's very able and very
deadly SAS (Special Air Service) commandos.
In such an attack, the US would also launch cruise missile attacks,
and Russia air strikes, would pound Afghan government installations
and communications to punish Taliban.
The United States blames Bin Laden for the 1998 bombing of US embassies
in East Africa, and the October bombing of destroyer `USS Cole' in Yemen.
Washington accuses the shadowy Saudi, who fought the Soviets in Afghanistan,
of masterminding world anti-American terrorism. Bin Laden tops the FBI's
`Ten Most Wanted' list with a US $5 million price on his head.
Russia accuses Bin Laden and Taliban of aiding resistance forces in
Chechnya, whose forgotten people continue to battle Russian colonial
rule. Moscow also fears Taliban threatens the Russian - backed communist
dictators - or `Red Sultans' - of Central Asia. Russia is determined
to avenge its defeat in Afghanistan, and regain control of this vast,
resource-rich region.
Washington recently joined the `Shanghai Five,' an unofficial pact
between Russia, China, and three Central Asian states to combat `Islamic
terrorism' - meaning the region's anti-communist Islamic independence
movements. The US agreed to share intelligence with them and provide
some funding for the crusade against Islamic insurgents.
The Clinton Administration's anti-Muslim alliance with Russia is strategically
wrong and morally disgraceful. Leading human rights groups are condemning
Russia for war crimes and mass murder in Chechnya, widespread torture,
rape, looting, collective punishment, and operating concentration camps.
Russia has killed some 140,000 Chechen civilians to date and covered
that nation with millions of anti-personnel mines.
America has no business colluding with the perpetrator of these crimes,
nor with China's brutal repression of Sinkiang Muslims, nor aiding pro-Moscow
police states in Central Asia. All of Washington's new `friends' in
the anti-Islamic crusade are major violators of human rights.
America has a better case against Bin Laden, who proclaimed jihad,
or holy struggle, to `liberate Arabia and Palestine from American rule.'
He may have been behind the terrorist bombings in East Africa; perhaps,
too, of the `USS Cole.' But Washington has to date shown no real proof,
only leaks and claims by dubious `anti-terrorism experts.'
Old comrades from the war against the Soviets in Afghanistan who know
Bin Laden, tell me the US has blown him out of all proportion into a
mythical caricature, the latest of long list of Muslim bogeymen beginning
with the 19th-Cerntury `Mad Mullah.' Bin Laden's alleged attacks may
have actually been done by other Saudi extremists of the Wahabi sect.
Afghanistan's Taliban refuses Washington's demands to hand over Bin
Laden, a hero to many Muslims, until the US shows proof of his crimes
, which it has not. When Bin Laden and other mujihadin battled heroically
against the Russians in Afghanistan, the US hailed them as `freedom
fighters.' But when these `jihadis' called for liberation of Saudi Arabia
and the Gulf from US domination, they were branded `Islamic terrorists.'
In 1998, the Clinton Administration showered cruise missiles on guerilla
camps in Afghanistan and an innocuous drug plant in Sudan, killing over
100 civilians and fighters.
The US engineered a punishing Iraq-style embargo of war-ravaged Afghanistan
at a time when many of its 18 million people are starving and homeless.
Though Taliban controls 95% of the country, the US refuses to recognize
or aid the Islamic regime. Washington and the US media have launched
a fierce propaganda campaign against Taliban, accusing it of encouraging
the opium trade, harboring `terrorists,' and abusing women. The woman's
issue has resonated loudly in the west, particularly on college campuses.
All the women's groups now shrilly lamenting that Afghan women must
go veiled were silent when the Soviets slaughtered close to 2 million
Afghans - half women --from 1979-1989; silent about 500,000 Afghans
maimed by Soviet mines since then; silent about thousands of women raped
during the post-war anarchy before Taliban restored internal order.
Taliban is battling the opposition Northern Alliance in the northeast
corner of Afghanistan bordering Tajikistan. The Alliance commander,
Ahmad Massoud, is a long-time collaborator with the Russians. His cornered
forces are being increasingly aided by Russian arms, pilots, artillery,
air support, as well as covert help from Iran, India and, likely, the
US - all of them fueling the decade-old Afghan civil war.
The Clinton Administration, which shamefully financed Russia's massacre
of the Muslim Chechen, is now actually helping Russia re-enter Afghanistan,
an act of dazzling geopolitical folly that will endanger Pakistan and
further convince the Muslim world that the United States is its sworn
enemy. American money now pays for the killing of Palestinians in the
Mideast, the slaughter of the Chechen, the death of 500,000 Iraqi children
(UN figures, not mine), and now the punishment of ravaged Afghanistan
- all this under the banner of a war against terrorism.
Instead of trying to overthrow Taliban, which will surely pave the
way for a second Russian occupation of Afghanistan, the US and its allies
should recognize Taliban as the legitimate Afghan government, and work
with Kabul to curtail the opium trade, which is currently beyond anyone's
control in a nation that is starving and desperate.
The west may not like the fierce Taliban, but it is the legitimate
government of Afghanistan and the only power holding that nation together.
Taliban is also the only force blocking Russia's plans to restore its
former rule in Central Asia, and to reoccupy strategic Afghanistan.
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