The government and the Taliban
continue to make unsubstantiated accusations of civilian deaths because
of NATO air attacks. The U.S. has become more aggressive in refuting and
debunking these claims and the official Afghan statistics still show
over 80 percent of civilian deaths are caused by the Taliban and other
outlaw groups. The false accusations have been around for years. It is
all part of an ongoing Taliban Information War effort, in collusion with
senior Afghan officials (including president Karzai himself) to use
false accusations of atrocities to generate media and diplomatic
pressure to force American troops out of areas where the Taliban and
drug gangs are taking a beating.
This use of media manipulation and
corrupt Afghan officials is one of the Taliban’s most successful
tactics. The Taliban gets away with this despite the fact that it’s
widely known and accepted in Afghanistan that 80 percent of civilian
casualties and nearly all the acts that could be described as atrocities
are carried out by the Taliban. Yet the accusations keep coming. In
response the Americans are collecting lots of evidence of who did what
to whom and using it. Karzai either ignores this or declares all of the
American evidence lies.
While public pressure has forced the Taliban to back off
attacking medical polio vaccination teams, the Taliban are still
shutting down schools. Parents are upset about both the vaccination and
school bans, but they can make other arrangements for education while
there is no alternative to the polio vaccination. Too many polio
victims, paralyzed or dead children, are around for all too see. The
Taliban tell parents that it is God’s Will but many parents believe the
vaccine is God’s Will and that the evil Taliban are trying to thwart
God’s Will. Rural opposition to the Taliban is on the increase. In a
growing number of areas the Taliban can only operate (free from constant
gunfire from hostile villagers) if they cut back on the bullying (to
dress and act in ways the Taliban clerics approve of).
Since the Taliban
are being supported (with cash, guns and drugs) by the drug gangs to
protect drug operations, more and more Taliban are concentrating on that
and leaving the civilians alone.
Another major civilian complaint against the Taliban is the
continuing to use roadside bombs.
Although directed mainly against
soldiers and police, most of the victims are civilians. Last year the
Taliban deployed nearly 15,000 of these bombs, which killed 312 foreign
soldiers and 868 Afghan civilians (and nearly as many Afghan soldiers
and police). The Taliban refuse to give up their use of roadside bombs
and this is another reason for civilians to pressure their clan and
family leadership to organize armed militias and drive the Taliban out
of their area (or at least persuade the Taliban to be less lethal to
civilians.)
The much touted (by the Taliban) “Summer Offensive” is often
to an anemic start, with NATO deaths so far this month less than half
what they were last year. Meanwhile Afghanistan is having more and more
problems with its borders (with Pakistan, Iran, Turkmenistan,
Uzbekistan, Tajikistan and China. On all of them (except China) there
are problems with drug smugglers who are armed and will fight if you try
to stop them. About 45 percent of the drug smuggling is via Tajikistan
and Uzbekistan, 35 percent through Pakistan and 30 percent through Iran.
Border guards will often, but not always, take a bribe and look the
other way. This works most of the time, except on the Iranian border,
where special units (from the Islamic Revolutionary Guard) are based and
will shoot on sight both drug smugglers and civilians coming across
looking for work. The dead civilians are a growing source of friction
between Iran and Afghanistan. The Iranians took in millions of Afghan
refugees during the 1980s and are still trying to force the last few
hundred thousand to go home. Eastern Iran has always had a better
economy than Western Afghanistan and economic refugees from Afghanistan
have always been a minor problem. But with the development of opium and
heroin production in Afghanistan during the 1990s the drugs got into
Iran and there developed a large number of drug addicts in Iran. This
led to increasingly violent Iranian efforts to halt the drug smuggling.
But the Iranian demand for drugs is too lucrative and the Afghan
smugglers keep coming.
Another problem is unarmed civilians looking for work. These
are shot at as well because the many Afghans in eastern Iran frequently
provide local supporters for the drug smugglers. Several recent
incidents of unarmed illegal migrants being killed by Iranian border
police has become a major issue in Afghanistan.
On the Pakistani border there is growing tension over Islamic
terrorists moving both ways (from bases in one country to carry out
attacks in the other) and disputes over exactly where the border is.
Afghanistan is happy where the border is currently drawn, Pakistan is
not and this had led to a growing number of clashes between border
guards from both countries.
The war against the drug gangs is showing progress. Two years
ago the drug trade was 15 percent of GDP, but now that has fallen to ten
percent. Part of the change was continued growth of the non-drug
economy, but the drug gangs are hurting. In response to these attacks
the drug gangs continue trying to establish poppy production closer to
the borders, which makes it easier to smuggle the heroin out and makes
it more difficult for the government to go after drug production. Nearly
all drug production is still concentrated in a few districts of
Kandahar and Helmand provinces down south. These areas have become
battlegrounds and it gets harder and harder to keep production going.
But the rest of Afghanistan is still quite hostile to drug production
(and any more of their young men becoming addicts). Efforts to get poppy
production going elsewhere tend to fail because local police and
warlords respond violently to that sort of thing.
May 13, 2013: The finance minister, while giving a speech in
parliament, named several members of parliament as corrupt. This drew
applause from other members, because while some corrupt practices (like
nepotism) are widely accepted, those who steal outright, especially
those who do it on a large and destructive (by crippling government
economic efforts) scale are looked down on. Government anti-corruption
efforts are now concentrating on these greedy officials who even by
Afghan standards (which tolerates a lot of what Westerners would
consider corruption) are going too far.
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