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Questions and Answers  
 
6 October 2001
 
How can one analyse the evolution of Afghanistan since the 
Soviet 
invasion and the victory of the Taliban? 
 
The PDPA (the Peoples Democratic Party of Afghanistan - Afghan 
Communist Party) which had a strong base in the army and air 
force, carried
out a coup d'etat in 1978, toppling the corrupt regime of Daoud. The
people welcomed the change. The PDPA was initially popular. It 
pledged important
social reforms and democracy. But the latter promise was never 
upheld even
though important educational reforms were pushed through such as 
free 
education and schools for girls. In the cities girls and boys began 
to 
attend the same schools. Medical care was improved as well, but a 
bitter
factional struggle led to the victory of a Pol-Pot faction led by 
Hafizullah Amin who embarked on a campaign of massive 
repression. Meanwhile
the United States decided to destabilise the regime by arming the 
ultra-religious tribes and using the Pakistan Army as a conduit to 
help
the religious extremists. The Americans were laying a bear-trap 
and the Soviet
leadership fell into it. They sent the Red Army to topple Amin and 
sustain
the PDPA regime by force. This further exacerbated the crisis and 
the 
United States gave the call for a jihad against communism. The 
Pakistani
military thought it would help the jihad if a Saudi prince came to 
lead
the struggle, but volunteers from that quarter were not forthcoming. 
Instead
the Saudi regime suggested Ossama Bin Laden to the CIA. He 
was approved,
recruited, trained and sent to Afghanistan where he fought well. In 
one 
action Bin Laden led his men to attack a mixed school (boys and 
girls) and
kill all the teachers. The US watched this approvingly. The rest is 
history. The Soviet Union was defeated and withdrew its forces in 
1989. A
civil war followed and a coalition government consisting of forces 
loyal
to Iran, Tadjikistan and Pakistan came to power. Instability reigned. 
Then 
Pakistan hurled the Taliban (students) it had trained in special
seminaries into the battle with open support from the Pakistan 
Army. Kabul was 
captured and gradually the regime extended its rule to the rest of 
the 
country. American think-tanks till a few months ago were talking of 
using
the Taliban to further destabilize the Central Asian Republics! Now 
the US
and Pakistan are waging war to topple a regime they created. Who 
said that
history had ceased to be ironical?
 
.       What is specific about the Islamism of the Taliban? 
 
It is a virulent, sectarian, ultra-puritanical strain heavily influenced
by Wahhabism---the official state religion of Saudi Arabia. It was 
Saudi 
religious instructors who trained the Taliban. They believe in a 
permanent
jihad against infidels and other Muslims (especially the Shias). Bin
Laden, too, is a staunch Wahhabi. They would like a return to what 
they imagine
was Islam in the 7th century, during the leadership of Mohammed. 
What they
don't understand is that Mohammed was a very flexible prophet-
politician
as Maxime Rodinson explains in his excellent biography.
 
.       What was the strategic aim of the United States in basing 
themselves on
the most hard-line wing of the Islamic resistance to the USSR, and 
more 
generally groups such as that of Bin Laden in the Arab-Muslim 
world? 
 
Throughout the Cold War the United States used Islam as a 
bulwark against
communism and revolution. This occurred everywhere in the 
Islamic world,
not just in South Asia. So we can say that the Islamism we 
witness is a 
product of imperialism and modernity.
 
.       The key to what will happen in the region is Pakistan. What 
sort of 
regime is it, what are its goals and what are the contradictions it
faces? 
 
It is a military regime, but not a vicious one like its predecessor. It 
is
a regime which wants to supervise neo-liberalism in Pakistan. The 
Army, of
course, is divided, but the exact strength of pro-Taliban currents 
inside
the Army is a matter of dispute. It could be anything between 15 - 
30 
percent. The Islamists are very weak in Pakistani society as a 
whole. Its
important to understand this fact. In successive elections, less 
people 
have voted for zealotry in Pakistan than in Israel. That's why the
Pakistan Taliban decided to make 'entryism' inside the Army. If the 
United States
spills too much blood in Afghanistan then the consequences could 
be dire
within the Pakistan Army in a year's time.
 
.       For the moment President Musharraf seems to want to line up 
alongside
the US. Is it possible that Pakistan would be a logistical support to 
an 
American intervention against Aghanistan? 
 
Pakistan has agreed to give logistical support. In fact the Pakistan 
Army
is necessary for the whole operation. The United States planes and 
troops
will be stationed in the Gwadur base in Baluchistan which they built
during the Cold War. Don't forget that Pakistan was a cold war ally 
of the United
States from 1954-1992. Both sides know each other well. The 
Pakistani
elite is delighted that the country's debt (36 billion dollars) has 
been 
cancelled and more money has been pledged. In return for this 
they are 
prepared to see the Taliban defeated and disarmed. Trouble will 
begin if
too many bearded men are killed. In my opinion one reason for the 
delay in
action is that the Pakistan Army is trying to make sure that the 
Taliban
do not resist the United States. The advice being given to the 
faithful is:
shave your beards and keep your powder dry. The West will go 
away and then
we'll see. Islamabad detests the Northern Alliance which it 
defeated via
the Taliban when it took Kabul. I cannot stress enough that the 
Taliban is
sustained on every level by Pakistan. What is switched on can 
also be 
switched off. The problem for Pakistan is that a wing of the Taliban 
defected to Bin Laden and his praetorian guard of Arab anarcho-
Islamists.
These guys will probably fight back whatever the odds.
 
·       If the conflict becomes regional what effects would this have on 
the 
situation in the region and the attitude of countries like India, China
and Russia? 
 
All three countries are delighted by the 'war against terrorism'. They 
are
all Americans now! India wants to crush the opposition Kashmir. 
The
Turkish military wants to a final solution to the 'Kurdish problem'. 
Putin has 
already destroyed Chechynia. China has the green light to do what 
it
wants. So it suits them all, but a great deal depends on how this 
adventure ends.
Are we witnessing yet another boost in and acceptance of US 
world hegemony
or is the Empire about to triumph itself to death?
 
Tariq Ali 
http://www.zmag.org/aliqa.ht
m 
 
  
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