Ronald Reagan and Younas Khalis. |
Originally, there were four parties involved in the Afghan
conflict which are mainly responsible for the debacle in the Af-Pak region.
Firstly, the former Soviet Union which invaded Afghanistan in December 1979.
Secondly, Pakistan’s security agencies which nurtured the Afghan so-called “mujahideen”
(freedom fighters) on the behest of Washington.
Thirdly, Saudi Arabia and the rest of oil-rich Gulf states
which generously funded the jihadists to promote their Wahhabi-Salafi ideology.
And last but not the least, the Western capitals which funded, provided weapons
and internationally legitimized the erstwhile ‘freedom fighters’ to use them
against a competing ideology, global communism, which posed a threat to the
Western corporate interests all over the world.
Regarding the objectives of the Soviet invasion of
Afghanistan in December 1979, the then American envoy to Kabul, Adolph “Spike”
Dubs, was assassinated on 14 Feb 1979, the same day that Iranian
revolutionaries stormed the US embassy in Tehran.
According to recently declassified
documents [1] of the White House, CIA and State Department as reported by
Tim Weiner for The Washington Post, the CIA was aiding Afghan jihadists before
the Soviets invaded in 1979. The then American President Jimmy Carter signed
the CIA directive to arm the Afghan jihadists in July 1979, whereas the former
Soviet Union invaded Afghanistan in December the same year.
That the CIA was arming the Afghan jihadists six months
before the Soviets invaded Afghanistan has been proven by the State Department’s
declassified documents and admitted by The Washington Post, which is owned by
Jeff Bezos, the owner of Amazon. The Washington Post has a history of working
in close collaboration with the CIA as Bezos won a $600
million contract [2] in 2013 to host the CIA’s database on the Amazon’s
web-hosting service.
Fact of the matter, however, is that the nexus between the
CIA, Pakistan’s security agencies and the Gulf states to train and arm the
Afghan jihadists against the former Soviet Union was formed several years
earlier.
During the late 1970s, Pakistan’s then-Prime Minister
Zulfikar Ali Bhutto began aiding the Afghan Islamists against Sardar Daud’s government,
who had toppled his first cousin King Zahir Shah in a palace coup in 1973 and
had proclaimed himself the president of Afghanistan.
Sardar Daud was a Pashtun nationalist and laid claim to
Pakistan’s northwestern Pashtun-majority province. Pakistan’s security establishment
was wary of his irredentist claims and used Islamists to weaken his rule in
Afghanistan. He was eventually assassinated in 1978 as a result of the Saur
Revolution led by the Afghan communists.
Pakistan’s support to the Islamists with the Saudi
petro-dollars and Washington’s blessings, however, kindled the fires of Islamic
insurgencies in the entire region comprising Afghanistan, Pakistan and the
Soviet Central Asian States.
The former Soviet Union was wary that its 40 million Muslims
were susceptible to radicalism, because Islamic radicalism was infiltrating
across the border into the Central Asian States from Afghanistan. Therefore,
the Soviet Union invaded Afghanistan in December 1979 in support of the Afghan
communists to forestall the likelihood of Islamic insurgencies spreading to the
Central Asian States bordering Afghanistan.
Even the American President Donald Trump recently
admitted [3]: “The reason Russia invaded Afghanistan was because terrorists
were going into Russia; they were right to be there.” Incidentally, Trump also
implied the reason why Soviet Union collapsed was due to the economic burden of
the Soviet-Afghan War, as he was making a point about the withdrawal of
American forces from Syria and Afghanistan.
Notwithstanding, in the Soviet-Afghan War between the global
capitalist and global communist blocs, Saudi Arabia and the rest of Gulf’s
petro-monarchies took the side of the global capitalist bloc because the former
Soviet Union and Central Asian states produce more energy and consume less.
Thus, the Soviet-led bloc was a net exporter of energy whereas the Western
capitalist bloc was a net importer.
It suited the economic interests of the oil-rich Gulf
Cooperation Council (GCC) countries to maintain and strengthen a
supplier-consumer relationship with the Western capitalist bloc. Now, the BRICS
countries are equally hungry for the Middle East’s energy, but it’s a recent
development. During the Cold War, an alliance with the industrialized Western
nations suited the economic interests of the Gulf countries.
Why did Pakistan choose to join this unholy alliance against
the global Left? In order to understand this, we need to take a cursory look at
the history of Pakistan. During the British colonial rule before the
independence of the subcontinent in 1947, Pakistan’s leadership used to have a
patron-client relationship with the British imperialists.
The Indian leadership also used to have that relationship
with the British imperialists, but in the case of Pakistan, there was an
additional aggravating factor involved: the numerical weakness of the Indian
Muslims and their consequent dependence on the British imperialists against the
permanent numerical majority of the Hindus.
It’s not that the Hindu leaders were not afflicted with the
colonial mentality, but in the case of Pakistani leaders, the myth of
invincibility and infallibility of the West was cherished even more. That’s why
Pakistan’s first Prime Minister Liaquat Ali Khan declined the request of a
state visit from the former Soviet Union and went on a state visit to
Washington instead.
It wasn’t just the colonial mentality of Pakistan’s leaders
but certain geopolitical considerations also played into their thinking for
forming a strategic alliance with the Western bloc. Immediately after the
independence, India annexed the Muslim-majority state of Kashmir in violation
of the agreed-upon Partition Principle that allocated the Muslim-majority
provinces of the British India to Pakistan and the Hindu-majority regions to
India.
Then in the 1950s, India took advantage of the Kashmiri
territory, as the riverheads of Pakistani rivers are located in Kashmir, and
diverted the waters of Pakistani rivers to irrigate India’s western provinces.
The whole of Bahawalpur region in southern Punjab turned barren overnight and
the agricultural economy of the nascent state of Pakistan suffered a tremendous
blow.
With the involvement of the World Bank and the Tennessee
Valley Authority of the US, Pakistan and India signed the Indus Waters Treaty
in 1960, which allocated exclusive rights for the use of three eastern rivers
to India, and some rights such as the right to build hydroelectric projects
over the western Pakistani rivers, Jhelum and Chenab, as well.
All these incidents and Pakistan’s relative weakness
vis-à-vis India made it even more dependent on the Western military and
developmental aid. That’s why it joined the Washington-led, anti-communist
SEATO and CENTO alliances in the region during the 1950s.
So much so that when an American U-2 spy plane was shot down
in May 1960 by the Soviet Air Defense Forces while performing photographic
aerial reconnaissance deep into Soviet territory, Pakistan’s then-President
Ayub Khan openly acknowledged that the spy plane had flown from the American
airbase in Pakistan’s northwestern metropolis, Peshawar.
When Pakistan had forged such a close alliance with
Washington, it became impossible for it to stay neutral when the former Soviet
Union invaded Afghanistan in 1979. Regarding the motives of the belligerents
involved, the Americans wanted to take revenge for their defeat at the hands of
communists in Vietnam, the Gulf countries had forged close economic ties with
the Western bloc and Pakistan was dependent on the Western military aid, hence
it didn’t have a choice but to toe Washington’s policy in Afghanistan.
In the end, the Soviet-Afghan War proved to be a “bear trap”
and the former Soviet Union was eventually defeated and was subsequently
dissolved in December 1991. It did not collapse because of the Afghan Jihad but
that was an important factor contributing to the dissolution of the Soviet
Union.
Regardless, more than twenty years before the
declassification of the State Department documents as mentioned in the
aforementioned Washington Post report, in the 1998
interview [4] to the alternative news outlet The Counter Punch Magazine, former
National Security Advisor to President Jimmy Carter, Zbigniew Brzezinski,
confessed that the president signed the directive to provide secret aid to the
Afghan jihadists in July 1979, whereas the Soviet Army invaded Afghanistan six
months later in December 1979.
Here is a poignant excerpt from the interview: The
interviewer puts the question: “And neither do you regret having supported the
Islamic jihadists, having given arms and advice to future terrorists?”
Brzezinski replies: “What is most important to the history of the world? The
Taliban or the collapse of the Soviet empire? Some stirred-up Moslems or the
liberation of Central Europe and the end of the Cold War?”
Despite the crass insensitivity, one must give credit to
Zbigniew Brzezinski that at least he had the courage to speak the unembellished
truth. It’s worth noting, however, that the aforementioned interview was
recorded in 1998. After the 9/11 terror attack, no Western policymaker can now
dare to be as blunt and forthright as Brzezinski.
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