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NEWS & LETTERS, April 2002 

Column: Our Life and Times by Kevin A. Barry and Mary Holmes

War, terrorism in Afghanistan, Pakistan

In March, as the war in Afghanistan entered its fifth month, reports of U.S. attacks on civilians increased. In one case three deaths of innocent civilians resulted from a U.S. "Hellfire" missile, when a villager named Tall Man Khan was observed from a distance by U.S. forces and mistaken for Osama bin Laden.

At the same time, promised improvements in the lives of ordinary Afghans, who have suffered more losses than any other from bin Laden's terrorism and the ultra-fundamentalist Taliban, have been slow to appear. For example, while women are now able to walk the streets of Kabul without male guardians and some were able to register for college, many more women remain trapped by poverty and tradition.

As the famine born of four years of drought continues, some children are being sold by their parents. For young girls, this can mean sexual slavery. The Revolutionary Association of the Women of Afghanistan declared on March 8: "The women of the world celebrate International Women's Day with spirit and enthusiasm; in Afghanistan women still don't feel safe enough to throw away their wretched burqa shrouds, let alone raise their voices in support of freedom and democracy."

Also in March, U.S. troops battled Al Qaeda holdouts in the mountains of eastern Afghanistan. Despite initial U.S. claims of a big victory, it appeared that many Al Qaeda forces had escaped, likely across the border into Pashtun areas of Pakistan.

Pakistan's Northwest Frontier Provinces, which border Afghanistan, have long been known for their fierce insistence on maintaining Pashtun customary law (Pashtunwali) and for their conservative brand of Islam. This has made the Pashtun areas on both sides of the border a fertile recruiting ground for both Taliban and Al Qaeda.

In many respects, the Taliban simply exaggerated and gave a more overtly fundamentalist form to Pashtunwali. For example, while traditional Islam grants women some limited inheritance rights, Pashtunwali gives women nothing. The traditional Pashtun term for a husband who does not beat his wife is literally "a man with no penis."

Pakistani fundamentalism is not limited to the rural Northwest, however. It has been nurtured for years, initially with U.S. support as well, by the military and the notorious Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI). It was the ISI that trained and in some cases even led the Taliban as they swept to victory in 1996. Today these elements are being sidelined, but they are not going without a fight. They enjoy some popular support due to legitimate grievances against U.S. imperial arrogance and the Indian occupation of Kashmir.

The videotaped beheading of U.S. journalist Daniel Pearl, and possibly even the more recent church bombing in Islamabad, were likely planned and executed with the help of elements of ISI. The international media cover these incidents when the victims are U.S. or European, but seldom mention the hundreds of Pakistanis who have been murdered by these state-supported fundamentalist thugs.

This is what makes Bush's statement about a terrorist "axis of evil" in Iraq, Iran, and North Korea such a lie. If Bush really wanted to undercut the prime support networks for Al Qaeda, the best places to start would be closer at hand, with the two conservative U.S. allies, Pakistan and Saudi Arabia. Concerning the latter "moderate" Arab state, on March 11, 14 girls burned to death during a fire at their intermediate school in Mecca. The reason? Religious police interfered with rescue efforts because fleeing students were not "properly" covered.

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