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	Marjah Is Indeed Fallujah, General McChrystal
	 
	By Eric Walberg 
	Al-Jazeerah & ccun.org, March 1, 2010
 
  
	Marjah: ‘This is not Fallujah, says McChrystal as the US surge goes full 
	steam ahead in Marjah — a new "gentler" war. We heard this before.   
	Apart from Abu Ghraib, Fallujah is perhaps the Iraq war’s defining moment. 
	The hatred and resentment of the occupied people found a catalyst in the 
	four Blackwater mercenaries, who were killed and strung up, and no doubt 
	deserved their fate, certainly as symbols of a cynical, illegal invasion. 
	The US soldiers -- who are just as mercenary, being a professional army 
	invading a country sans provocation -- came and "destroyed the village to 
	save it."   The "success" of the blitzkrieg war in Iraq has been 
	difficult to duplicate in Afghanistan, "the heart of darkness", one British 
	commander quipped to his troops as they went into battle, despite dropping 
	far more bombs -- many of them radioactive. The unflagging resistance of the 
	Afghans, their refusal to submit to the occupiers, is that because they 
	realise the invaders are not there for their purported altruistic motives. 
	The thousands of civilians and resistance fighters who have been killed by 
	airstrikes -- none of them guilty of anything more egregious than defending 
	their homeland -- is more than ample proof, as is the craven propping up of 
	a US-imposed government, and the proliferation of US bases in the country. 
	The unapologetically un-Islamic ways of the invaders, their lack of even the 
	remotest understanding of the people they are occupying, is a constant 
	insult to a proud and ancient people.   The new exit plan, so it goes, 
	involves "clearing" all regions of Taliban -- US Marines call it "mowing the 
	grass", acknowledging that as soon as they murder one group of resisters and 
	leave, more pop up. The "new" strategy is to bring in ready-made Afghan 
	administrators and police to create a prosperous, peaceful society once the 
	"enemy" have been destroyed, "winning the hearts and minds" of the locals. 
	"We’ve got a government in a box, ready to roll in," said chief honcho 
	General Stanley McChrystal.   But wait a moment. Is it possible the 
	invaders are the enemy? And who are these newly discovered Afghan officials? 
	Are (famously corrupt) Afghan government officials and police nominally 
	loyal to NATO forces, trucked in by the invaders, going to be welcome in 
	remote villages as ready-made trusted representatives of the people? And 
	wasn’t this precisely the failed policy the US followed in Vietnam ? This 
	old "new" policy was what convinced United States President Barack Obama to 
	go along grudgingly with the Pentagon’s demands to radically increase NATO 
	force -- though on the condition that the whole operation be complete by 
	next year. He clearly was given no choice in the matter, and his "ultimatum" 
	was dismissed by US Secretary of Defence Robert Gates moments after Obama 
	made it.   Not surprisingly, NATO forces have met strong resistance in 
	Marjah as their onslaught enters its second week, from both the incredible, 
	ragtag resistance and from locals, who doubt that the postwar reality will 
	correspond remotely to the picture the invaders are painting. Tribal elders 
	in Helmand this week called for an end to the "Moshtarak" offensive, citing 
	Western troops’ disregard for civilian lives. Realising their "shock and 
	awe" bombing kills civilians and turns locals against them, the invaders 
	have reluctantly cut back, now authorising them only under "very limited and 
	prescribed conditions." Even so, over 50 civilians are among the dead so far 
	-- 27 in an airstrike in Uruzgan Province -- and "friendly fire" killed 
	seven Afghan police. Six occupiers were killed in one day alone, bringing 
	NATO losses to 18 at the time of writing.   The latest propaganda ploy 
	is to accuse the Taliban of using locals as "human shields" and of holing up 
	near civilians. But surely it is the NATO forces that are using locals as 
	human shields, invading their homes in search of the "enemy", forcing them 
	to betray their children and friends, often under torture in Afghan-run 
	prisons. Even those Afghans who collaborate with the occupiers, taking their 
	dollars, guns and uniforms, are in effect human shields for the troops. And 
	when they realise their lives are on the line, they flee their paymasters. 
	How else to explain the 25 police officers who left their posts last week 
	and "defected" to the Taliban in Chak?   But Marjah is really just a 
	microcosm for what the US is doing at this very moment around the globe -- 
	waging a veritable war on the world, in Iraq, Pakistan, expanding into 
	Yemen, Somalia, Iran, supplementing bombs and soldiers with militarised sea 
	lanes, forward military and missile bases on every continent, encircling 
	"enemies" Russia and China. The process is merely accelerating as the US 
	loses its traditional edge in the world economy, outpaced by China . It is 
	the logical next step for a deeply illogical economic system. It can’t be 
	repeated too often: the US is frantically trying to consolidate its sole 
	superpower status militarily before it loses the economic war.   
	Marjah also represents the US project of replacing the UN with NATO as the 
	world’s peacekeeper. The coalition of almost 60 nations is pursuing an 
	illegal war launched by the US , with the UN -- the only legitimate forum 
	for world peacekeeping -- now in tow solely as window dressing. Though not 
	quite. Deputy special representative of the secretary general Robert Watkins 
	said the UN will not be involved in NATO’s reconstruction plans for Marjah 
	"because we would not want to have the humanitarian activities we deliver to 
	be linked with military activity."   Today’s Russia, unhappy with the 
	Yelstin-era acquiescence to a subservient role in the US empire, is the only 
	country standing up to the US empire. The new military doctrine announced by 
	Russian President Dmitri Medvedev earlier this month is unwavering in its 
	condemnation of US plans. The fact that NATO is attempting to "globalise its 
	functions in contravention of international law" is threat Number One, 
	followed by NATO’s encirclement of Russia and US forward missile bases, now 
	rapidly being deployed around the world -- and Russia. International 
	terrorism is ninth out of 11 threats listed. Prime Minister Vladimir Putin 
	reiterated this on Tuesday, saying Russia will give priority to nuclear 
	deterrence, space and air defense in its military reforms.   The 
	Russians argue that the OSCE should have been the vehicle for European 
	security after the collapse of the Soviet Union, but instead, the US chose 
	to expand NATO. This meant not uniting Europe, but merely moving the 
	dividing line east, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said last week at 
	the Munich Conference on Security. Lavrov pointed to the bombing of 
	Yugoslavia in 1999 and the tragedy in the Caucasus in August 2008 as 
	evidence that the OSCE had failed to rise to the challenge of maintaining 
	peace in Europe . The OSCE Permanent Council knew about the Georgian 
	leaders’ preparations for a military attack but took no measures. The 
	Russia-NATO Council also failed when members blocked Russia’s request to 
	convene an urgent meeting when the military actions were at their height. 
	  Last month’s London conference on Afghanistan was presented in the West 
	as a benign effort to provide economic development and humanitarian aid. It 
	was not a UN conference, but "the international community coming together to 
	fully align military and civilian resources behind an Afghan-led political 
	strategy", graced by the UN secretary general’s presence. It was preceded by 
	two days of meetings between top military commanders of almost a third of 
	the world’s nations at NATO headquarters in Brussels, and followed by two 
	days of meetings by NATO and allied defense chiefs last week in Istanbul, 
	the latter attended by Israeli Chief of General Staff Gabi Ashkenazi.   
	The brazen involvement of Israel in a war against Islamic Afghanistan, where 
	Israeli drones have killed and continue to kill civilians and resisters, 
	suggests what this war really represents. The invaders should note that 
	their nickname "Moshtarak" (collective) derives from the same Arabic root as 
	shirk (idolatry). Though Pentagon planners don’t register such subtleties, 
	the locals surely do.   Marjah is indeed 
	Fallujah. Like Fallujah, it will become a symbol, the defining moment 
	in the war against the Afghan people. US Marines may "mow the grass", 
	eradicate the "weeds", and plant their sterile seeds of Western-style 
	democracy and economic prosperity as much as they like. However, "the 
	Taliban is the future, the Americans are the past in Afghanistan," as former 
	head of the Pakistani Inter-Services Intelligence Hamid Gul recently told 
	Al-Jazeera. This is clear to any sensible observer.   Gul angrily 
	notes that it is Afghanistan ’s neighbours, in particular, Pakistan, that 
	will be left holding the bag when the inevitable arrives. "The OIC and the 
	Muslim countries will have to come in and play their part. Then Afghanistan 
	can redeem itself." The sooner the US accepts the inevitable, the fewer will 
	be the needless deaths of both Americans, Europeans and Afghans. 
	Eric Walberg can be reached at 
	http://ericwalberg.com/  
	 
       
       
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