Entry details

Curzon
Author

Curzon

Date

September 6th, 2006

Tags

,

Comments

7 Comments so far.
Add yours.

Her words, not mine

When you read articles like this you can only fear what the future holds for Afghanistan

On a July morning, Taliban gunmen shot dead the province’s most powerful cleric as he walked to the main city mosque to lead morning prayers. Five months later, they executed a teacher as students watched. The following month, they walked into another mosque and gunned down an Afghan engineer, shooting him in the back as he pressed his forehead to the ground and supplicated to God. This spring and summer, the slow and methodical siege of this southern provincial capital intensified. The Taliban and their allies set up road checkpoints, burned 20 trucks and slowed the flow of supplies to reconstruction projects. All told, in surrounding Helmand Province, five teachers, one judge and scores of police officers have been killed. Dozens of schools and courts have been shuttered.

“Our government is weak,” said Fowzea Olomi, a local women’s rights advocate whose driver was shot dead in May and who fears she is next. “Anarchy has come.”

When the Taliban fell nearly five years ago, Lashkar Gah seemed like fertile ground for the United States-led effort to stabilize the country. For 30 years during the cold war, Americans carried out the largest development project in Afghanistan’s history here, building a modern capital with suburban-style tract homes, a giant hydroelectric dam and 300 miles of canals that made 250,000 acres of desert bloom. Afghans called this city “Little America.”

Today, Little America is the epicenter of a Taliban resurgence and an explosion in drug cultivation that has claimed the lives of 106 American and NATO soldiers this year and doubled American casualty rates countrywide. Across Afghanistan, roadside bomb attacks are up by 30 percent; suicide bombings have doubled. Statistically it is now nearly as dangerous to serve as an American soldier in Afghanistan as it is in Iraq.

Comments to this entry

ElamBend
September 6, 2006
2:44 am
It's especially happy fun now that Pakistan has ceded it's western half to the "Taliban.":http://blogs.abcnews.com/theblotter/2006/09/bin_laden_gets_.html


Nato/Centcom has the option of ignoring the former western Pakistan border, but our 'friend' Musharif has done us no favors by finally conceding that Pakistan has no say over Pashtunistan.
elambend
September 6, 2006
10:39 pm
Here's more on "Waziristan.":http://billroggio.com/archives/2006/09/talibanistan_the_est.php
Elizabeth
September 6, 2006
11:39 pm
Elam- Unfortunately the first link seems to be dead. Thanks for bringing that up- I seem to have missed it in the news. I wonder if this has anything to do with Bush's cozying up to India and sponsoring its nuclear ambitions at the U.N. A wonderful screw-you to the coalition and the Afghan people who live in fear.
ElamBend
September 7, 2006
3:52 am
That is the tac my step-father suggested. Surely, though, Pakistan is misjudging if they think that all mischief will be pointed west to Afghanistan.
Elizabeth
September 7, 2006
3:55 am
I don't really know, but I think that Musharraf perhaps overestimates the administration, and possibly believes that we wouldn't risk it. Anyway it's not as though we could afford anarchy in the Taliban.
Elizabeth
September 7, 2006
4:00 am
Sorry, I meant anarchy in Pakistan.
elambend
September 7, 2006
6:01 pm
Hard to tell now.