A recent international study finds that Afghanistan is the world’s most insecure country. What has gone wrong?
After Soviet forces quit Afghanistan in February 1989, and the Mujahedin toppled the Afghan Communist regime in 1992, Washington was in a hurry to forget war-shattered Afghanistan. That policy of neglect and abandonment of a Cold War ally was the harbinger of other policy mistakes which have led to America’s complete failure in Afghanistan.
The success of this Cold War proxy confrontation was historically significant. It accelerated the Soviet Union’s collapse and freed Eastern Europe from Communist rule.
For the Afghans, the war ended in disaster. Once the country was theirs, most resistance leaders morphed into warlords and drug barons. Murder, rape, seizure of public and private property became the hallmark of their rule.
Disgusted with that medieval, ethnic amalgam, Washington didn’t care what transpired in that physically and financially broken country.
Then UNICAL, a Texas-based oil company, got interested in building a gas pipeline from Turkmenistan through Afghanistan and Pakistan to the Indian Ocean and lobbied Washington to help end Afghanistan’s civil war. Unwilling to re-engage with Afghanistan’s feudal leaders, America subcontracted the job to Pakistan. Pakistan’s secret service (ISI) had cooperated with the CIA during Afghanistan’s war of resistance against the Soviet Union. At the war’s end, Islamabad expected to see a Pakistan-friendly regime emerge in Kabul.
When Pakistan separated from India, Afghanistan refused to recognize the Duran Line, the border that had existed between India and Afghanistan and now separates Pakistan from Afghanistan. Hence, Pakistan worried about the possibility of having to fight a two-front war. Pakistan feared that — in the event of combat with India, with which it has a disagreement over Kashmir — Afghanistan would attack it from the north. When Washington charged it to pacify Afghanistan, Islamabad realized the potential of installing in Kabul a Pakistan-subservient regime and eagerly seized the opportunity.
The Saudis, who fear Iran, were delighted to fund the enterprise, thereby to counterbalance Iran’s aggressive Shia fundamentalism with a Sunni fundamentalist regime on its eastern border.
ISI hired young Afghan men from the refugee camps, training them as fighters and future leaders for Afghanistan. Once the Taliban had overrun the resistance leaders’ chaotic reign, the Taliban’s inability to run the country guaranteed Islamabad full control over the Afghan government.
By then, Osama bin Laden crept around inside Afghanistan. Yet, Washington had had no policy for Taliban-ruled Afghanistan.
American politicians didn’t know that country and didn’t care to get to know it. They listened to the likes of Zalmay Khalilzad and the Karzais who either didn’t know better themselves or fed American policymakers with such nonsense as the Taliban have no support among the people. Give us 200 men, and we will kick them out of the country.
In their values and limited understanding of the outside world, the Taliban represented rural Afghanistan, where 80 percent of Afghans lives. Only, the Talibs (seminary students) had grown up in Pakistani refugee camps and attended Saudi-funded madrassas where they had been indoctrinated with the intolerant Wahhabi school of Islam.
The Taliban brought security to Afghanistan, something the Afghan people craved for. But by implementing strict Wahhabism, they hurled the country that already lived in the Middle Ages to some dark corner of human history for which I can’t find an equivalent.
Then, the tragedy of 9/11 burst into our hearts and minds, and America veered toward revenge. The bombing of Afghanistan began. CIA agents landed in that country’s north, carrying briefcases filled with $100 bills. In Bonn, Germany, an unruly conference was convened to form the post-Taliban government. Mr. Khalilzad was in the midst of it. He had become such a fixture in U.S. deliberations on Afghanistan that the German newspaper Die Frankfurter Allgemeine called him “President Bush’s Afghan.”
The congregation in Bonn was too disruptive for the international delegations to handle. The task of navigating the assembly fell to the Khalilzad-Karzai group. They knew how to control them with promises of American largesse or fury. Hamid Karzai was thrown to the top. The spoils were distributed among men with dirt and blood on their hands.
After Bonn, Messrs. Karzai and Khalilzad oversaw the return of warlords. The rule of law would not enter the Afghan people’s lives and America’s ultimate failure became inevitable.
• Nasir Shansab left his native Afghanistan in 1980 and became a U.S. citizen, advising the White House and Parliament on relations with his home country. Mr. Shansab’s latest book is “Silent Trees.” He maintains homes in suburban Washington, D.C., and Kabul.
Hearts and Mines – Review of Mine 9 in Boise Weekly
/in AMS Intel Page /by Allen Media StrategiesHearts and Mines
‘Mine 9’ opens Friday, July 19, at The Flicks
by George Prentice
Mine 9, a low-budget but high-octane film, does not advocate for or against America’s controversial legacy of coal mining. Instead, it lionizes the miners who do the heavy lifting in order to keep plants afire. To date, Mine 9 has had a limited theatrical release in America’s so-called coal belt, where the film has been embraced by audiences for its realism. But when Mine 9 opens Friday, July 19, at The Flicks in Boise, more than a few audience members will undoubtedly deconstruct Idaho’s own checkered past (and present) in mining. Lest anyone forget, 91 Idahoans died of carbon monoxide poisoning in the 1972 Sunshine Mine disaster in northern Idaho’s Silver Valley. In fact, the Gem State’s mining tragedies have extended far beyond the Panhandle. Records indicate that more than 600 Idahoans have been killed in explosions, cave-ins or other mining disasters in Ada, Adams, Bear Lake, Blaine, Boise, Bonner, Boundary, Butte, Caribou, Clearwater, Custer, Elmore, Gem, Idaho, Lemhi, Owyhee, Shoshone, Teton, Valley and Washington counties.
All that said, most Americans probably envision Appalachia when they think of mining; and Mine 9‘s backdrop is, quite appropriately, a small West Virginia mining town. Since the early 20th century, when 362 West Virginians were killed in a mine explosion in Monongah, the Mountain State’s portrait has been matte with coal dust. Most recently, 12 West Virginians were killed in the Sago Mine explosion of 2006, and 29 miners died in the Upper Big Branch explosion in 2010.
Mine 9 Director/Screenwriter Eddie Mensore, a native of Martinsville, West Virginia, pitched his screenplay for nearly a dozen years before finally getting permission to film some of his movie inside a real coal mine, thus giving the project intense authenticity. But a word of caution: The claustrophobic, you-are-there nature of Mine 9 is palpable. Suffice to say, theater owners might want to consider selling portable oxygen tanks at concession stands.
Official Trailer of Mine 9 – https://vimeo.com/294807332
https://m.boiseweekly.com/boise/hearts-and-mines/Content?oid=18914804
Op Ed by Nasir Shansab in The Washington Times
/in AMS Intel Page /by Allen Media StrategiesHow Afghanistan is haunted by its history of insecurity
By Nasir Shansab – – Tuesday, July 9, 2019
(Link to article – https://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2019/jul/9/how-afghanistan-is-haunted-by-its-history-of-insec/)
A recent international study finds that Afghanistan is the world’s most insecure country. What has gone wrong?
After Soviet forces quit Afghanistan in February 1989, and the Mujahedin toppled the Afghan Communist regime in 1992, Washington was in a hurry to forget war-shattered Afghanistan. That policy of neglect and abandonment of a Cold War ally was the harbinger of other policy mistakes which have led to America’s complete failure in Afghanistan.
The success of this Cold War proxy confrontation was historically significant. It accelerated the Soviet Union’s collapse and freed Eastern Europe from Communist rule.
Disgusted with that medieval, ethnic amalgam, Washington didn’t care what transpired in that physically and financially broken country.
Then UNICAL, a Texas-based oil company, got interested in building a gas pipeline from Turkmenistan through Afghanistan and Pakistan to the Indian Ocean and lobbied Washington to help end Afghanistan’s civil war. Unwilling to re-engage with Afghanistan’s feudal leaders, America subcontracted the job to Pakistan. Pakistan’s secret service (ISI) had cooperated with the CIA during Afghanistan’s war of resistance against the Soviet Union. At the war’s end, Islamabad expected to see a Pakistan-friendly regime emerge in Kabul.
When Pakistan separated from India, Afghanistan refused to recognize the Duran Line, the border that had existed between India and Afghanistan and now separates Pakistan from Afghanistan. Hence, Pakistan worried about the possibility of having to fight a two-front war. Pakistan feared that — in the event of combat with India, with which it has a disagreement over Kashmir — Afghanistan would attack it from the north. When Washington charged it to pacify Afghanistan, Islamabad realized the potential of installing in Kabul a Pakistan-subservient regime and eagerly seized the opportunity.
The Saudis, who fear Iran, were delighted to fund the enterprise, thereby to counterbalance Iran’s aggressive Shia fundamentalism with a Sunni fundamentalist regime on its eastern border.
ISI hired young Afghan men from the refugee camps, training them as fighters and future leaders for Afghanistan. Once the Taliban had overrun the resistance leaders’ chaotic reign, the Taliban’s inability to run the country guaranteed Islamabad full control over the Afghan government.
By then, Osama bin Laden crept around inside Afghanistan. Yet, Washington had had no policy for Taliban-ruled Afghanistan.
American politicians didn’t know that country and didn’t care to get to know it. They listened to the likes of Zalmay Khalilzad and the Karzais who either didn’t know better themselves or fed American policymakers with such nonsense as the Taliban have no support among the people. Give us 200 men, and we will kick them out of the country.
In their values and limited understanding of the outside world, the Taliban represented rural Afghanistan, where 80 percent of Afghans lives. Only, the Talibs (seminary students) had grown up in Pakistani refugee camps and attended Saudi-funded madrassas where they had been indoctrinated with the intolerant Wahhabi school of Islam.
The Taliban brought security to Afghanistan, something the Afghan people craved for. But by implementing strict Wahhabism, they hurled the country that already lived in the Middle Ages to some dark corner of human history for which I can’t find an equivalent.
Then, the tragedy of 9/11 burst into our hearts and minds, and America veered toward revenge. The bombing of Afghanistan began. CIA agents landed in that country’s north, carrying briefcases filled with $100 bills. In Bonn, Germany, an unruly conference was convened to form the post-Taliban government. Mr. Khalilzad was in the midst of it. He had become such a fixture in U.S. deliberations on Afghanistan that the German newspaper Die Frankfurter Allgemeine called him “President Bush’s Afghan.”
The congregation in Bonn was too disruptive for the international delegations to handle. The task of navigating the assembly fell to the Khalilzad-Karzai group. They knew how to control them with promises of American largesse or fury. Hamid Karzai was thrown to the top. The spoils were distributed among men with dirt and blood on their hands.
After Bonn, Messrs. Karzai and Khalilzad oversaw the return of warlords. The rule of law would not enter the Afghan people’s lives and America’s ultimate failure became inevitable.
• Nasir Shansab left his native Afghanistan in 1980 and became a U.S. citizen, advising the White House and Parliament on relations with his home country. Mr. Shansab’s latest book is “Silent Trees.” He maintains homes in suburban Washington, D.C., and Kabul.
Interview with award-winning author Rick Robinson
/in AMS Intel Page /by Allen Media StrategiesAn interview with the award-winning author #RickRobinson on co-authoring Landau Eugene Murphy Jr.‘s book “Landau Eugene Murphy Jr.: From Washing Cars to Hollywood Star” that debuted at #1 on theAmazon.com Jazz Book chart and his next book.
https://soundcloud.com/allenmediastrategiesllc/interview-with-rick-robinson?fbclid=IwAR1iQipBhdhBe-esOEBuq-wR6IQCTpJCLHGXWkhC02NRRI0mmJSQLKX0tLE
Theatre West Virginia Kicks Off Their 2019 Summer Season This Saturday – June 8
/in AMS Intel Page /by Allen Media StrategiesThere’s something for everyone at Cliffside Amphitheatre at Grandview this summer as Theatre West Virginia swings into action this weekend.
Theatre West Virginia, founded in 1955 in Beckley, West Virginia, produces original works and beloved Broadway musicals under the stars at Cliffside Amphitheatre at Grandview in the New River Gorge National River near Beckley, West Virginia each summer.
S
aturday, June 8, kicks off Theatre West Virginia’s 2019 season with world-class vintage rock and roll from Phil Dirt and the Dozers. Put on your bobby socks and saddle oxfords and take a stroll down memory lane with hits like Walk Like a Man, Love Me Tender and Surfer Girl. Visit www.theatrewestvirginia.org for tickets.
Leapin’ lizards! Opening Friday, June 14, is the beloved Broadway hit and Tony
Award-winning musical Annie. Transport yourself to 1933 and the rundown orphanage full of lively and mischievous little girls. Featuring lots of local talent, Theatre West Virginia’s production of Annie runs June 14 through June 29. See www.theatrewestvirgina.org for schedule and tickets.
Beatlem
ania strikes Cliffside Amphitheatre at Grandview when Rubber Soul: A Beatles Tribute invades the stage. Put on your go-go boots, your mini skirt and come let Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band take you on a Magical Mystery Tour. John, Paul, George, and Ringo take the stage for one night only Sunday, June 30, so be sure to visit www.theatrewestvirginia.org and get your Ticket to Ride.
There’s fightin’ and feudin’ in them there hills! Come see the original story of the Hatfields and McCoys and decide for yourself who’s side you’re on. First produced by Theatre West Virginia in 1970, this modern-day Romeo and Juliet will leave you wondering why so much blood was shed between these two families and rejoicing in the fact that you can always seek redemption. Hatfields and McCoys opens Friday, July 5, and runs through Sunday, July 14. See www.theatrewestvirginia.org for schedule and tickets.
All Theatre West Virginia productions take place in the beautiful 1,260 seat Cliffside Amphitheatre at Grandview in the New River Gorge National River outside Beckley, West Virginia. Performances begin at 7:30 p.m. nightly with live pre-show music at 6:45 p.m. Tickets are available online at www.theatrewestvirginia.org or by calling 304-256-6800 or by visiting the Cliffside Amphitheatre Box Office one hour before shows. For group rates or special events, please contact Theatre West Virginia at 304-256-6800.
Always Free Honor Flight of West Virginia
/in AMS Intel Page /by Allen Media StrategiesWhat an honor to play a small part in the Always Free Honor Flight of WV visit to Washington DC. Thank you WVVA News for the coverage, #DenverFoundation for making this possible, the WV Congressional delegation and staff members, and former #Drifters lead singer, veteran and client and pal #JoeBlunt now with Leonard, Coleman & Blunt (LCB) for leading our vets in honoring our country with his singing of the National Anthem at the National World War II Memorial #thanksforyourservice