-------------------------
Via Workers World News Service
Reprinted from the Nov. 8, 2001
issue of Workers World newspaper
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WHAT KIND OF A WAR IS THIS?  
A MURDER OF INNOCENTS AND PLUNDER OF RESOURCES

By Heather Cottin

The war in Afghanistan is creating "the most serious, 
complex emergency in the world ever," according to United 
Nations official Stephanie Bunker.

Considering the many horrible tragedies that the world has 
seen in recent years, this is a calamitous warning.

"As many as 100,000 more children will die in Afghanistan 
this winter unless food reaches them in sufficient 
quantities in the next six weeks," Eric Laroche, UNICEF 
spokesperson, said in an interview with the Times of India 
on Oct. 29.

But the heavy U.S. bombing of Afghan cities and supply 
routes, as well as the deliberate targeting of food supplies 
like the Red Cross warehouse in Kabul, has choked off relief 
efforts.

Afghanistan is one of the poorest countries in the world. 
The infant mortality rate is 165 per 1,000 births. Life 
expectancy is 46. UNICEF statistics show the problem of 
stunting affects over 50 percent of all children.

"If you are a child born in Afghanistan today, you are 25 
times more likely to die before the age of five than an 
American or a French or a Saudi Arabian child," Laroche 
said. More than half the children in Afghanistan were 
already malnourished and 300,000 children died each year 
from preventable causes inside the country.

PILOTS RUN OUT OF 'MILITARY' TARGETS

The British tabloid The Mirror is usually supportive of 
British and U.S. policy. But on Oct. 29 former Mirror editor 
John Pilger wrote a scathing critique of the war. "One of 
the poorest, most stricken nations has been terrorized by 
the most powerful--to the point where American pilots have 
run out of dubious 'military' targets and are now destroying 
mud houses, a hospital, Red Cross warehouses, lorries 
carrying refugees," Pilger wrote.

While the U.S. media remain largely silent, readers in other 
countries can get some of the details of these deliberate 
war crimes.

The London Observer on Oct. 28 reported that U.S. warplanes 
hit a residential area in the Afghan capital of Kabul, 
killing at least 13 civilians and virtually wiping out one 
family.

Stephanie Bunker in Islamabad confirmed on Oct. 29 that a 
hospital had been hit in the Afghan city of Herat in an air 
raid carried out by U.S. military aircraft. Taliban 
Ambassador to Pakistan Mullah Abdul Sallam Zaeef stated 
there had been around 100 victims--doctors, nurses, and 
patients--when the hospital received a direct hit.

Every time the Afghanis claim there are civilian casualties, 
the U.S. government rejects the reports. Yet, according to 
UN officials, up to 70 percent of the populations of the 
towns of Herat and Kandahar have now fled from bombing 
raids.

According to Yusuf Hassan, speaking for the UN High 
Commissioner for Refugees, the number of refugees will climb 
to 300,000 within weeks, and may reach 1.5 million in the 
longer term.

When the snows begin and temperatures plummet to below zero, 
the situation for those who remain in their homes, as well 
as the refugees now starving and homeless, will be horrific.

Already, conditions in the villages, where poor peasants and 
workers live far from Taliban positions, have become 
nightmarish.

SMALL VILLAGES BEING BOMBED

"Not long after 7 p.m. on Sunday, Oct. 21, the bombs began 
to fall over the outskirts of Torai village. Mauroof saw a 
massive fireball rising from the ground," wrote the Times of 
London on Oct. 25 about one man who lost many family 
members. "Bombs had fallen over the little cluster of houses 
a mile away where his sister and his other relatives were 
living.

"The roll call of the dead read like an invitation list to a 
family wedding: his mother-in-law, two sisters-in-law, three 
brothers-in-law, and four of his sister's five young 
children, two girls and two boys, all under the age of 
eight."

The agony of Afghanistan is intensified by the use of 
weapons known as cluster bombs. The Times of London writes 
that Prime Minister Tony Blair "constantly parades his 
humanitarianism." This must extend to the choice of bombs. 
Of choice in the U.S./British bombing raids "is a CBU-87/B, 
containing bright yellow submunitions for attacking soft 
target areas (including human beings) with detonating 
bomblets."

Cluster bombs are anti-personnel weapons. They kill people 
without destroying property. They also serve as land mines 
and detonate later, even years later, when they are 
unearthed.

The Times noted that the U.S. lobbied at a landmine 
conference some years ago against classifying cluster bombs 
as landmines. But they serve this secondary and murderous 
purpose: "35,000 unexploded bomblets in Kosovo still kill 
one person a week," the paper noted. They are still killing 
people in Laos, 30 years after the war there ended.

The Times added, "Unexploded cluster bombs are a horror, 
[since] the bright yellow coloring of the canisters makes 
them horribly appealing to children." As reported in The 
Times, these weapons are "a killing field in a canister, 
designed to massacre anything within 100 feet."

Such a massacre took place in the village of Shakar Qala. 
The UN confirmed that eight people had been killed 
immediately when the village was attacked. A ninth person 
died after picking up the parachutes attached to the cluster 
bombs.

"He went to look at the object, touched it and it blew up," 
Stephanie Bunker said. Fourteen others were injured and 20 
of the village's 45 houses were destroyed or badly damaged.

BOMBLETS LOOK LIKE FOOD PACKETS

There is an even more insidious side to cluster bombs.

As hunger grows in Afghanistan, the U.S. has dropped 
approximately 1 million packages of food as a "humanitarian 
gesture." But these food packets are also wrapped in yellow 
packaging. Unsuspecting, starving refugees have grabbed 
yellow cluster bombs, thinking they were food. The result 
has been death and dismemberment.

Now the Pentagon tells us it is dropping pamphlets 
explaining the difference between the bomb canisters and the 
food packets. But most Afghanis are illiterate. Do the 
bombers really expect them to understand the written 
instructions, which begin, "Attention, noble Afghan people," 
and conclude with the statement, "Do not confuse the 
cylinder-shaped bomb with the rectangular food bag"?

To make the situation more ghastly, U.S planes are dropping 
the food packets into the largest minefield in the world, a 
leftover from the mining done during the 10 years of war the 
U.S. funded against the Marxist government of Afghanistan.

REFUGEES, OLD FOLKS' HOME ARE ATTACKED

The Russian newspaper Pravda, which generally supports the 
war, reported that "refugees arriving in the Pakistani city 
of Qetta yesterday claimed that a column of refugees trying 
to escape the bombing after their houses had been destroyed 
was strafed, also by American aircraft, and that 20 members 
of the column, including nine children, had been killed. The 
incident took place at Tarine Khot, near Kandahar. One 
refugee who witnessed the event stated that there were no 
Taliban bases within a radius of three kilometers from where 
the homes were destroyed."

Eyewitnesses stated that a 1,000-pound bomb had been dropped 
on Oct. 23 in a field near an old people's home near 
Kandahar. The British Ministry of Defense admitted there had 
been military activity against Taliban camps in the area on 
that day. The Pentagon has admitted bombing an old people's 
home in Herat, but claimed a "targeting error."

Although Pravda calls reports by the Taliban suspect, 
labeling the Taliban "pathological and compulsive liars," 
the paper admitted, "reports of collateral damage are true."

The weapons the U.S. is using in Afghanistan are already 
causing injuries consistent with those caused by depleted 
uranium and other weapons used in Iraq and Yugoslavia. 
Pravda noted, "Deputy public health minister, Sher Mohammad 
Abbas Stanikzai, said the government did not have testing 
facilities," and urged outside observers to view the 
injuries from the bombing attacks.

Steven Gutkin, Associated Press writer, reported Thursday, 
Oct. 25 from Korak Dana, Afghanistan of a U.S. attack on 
Kandahar which hit a bus at the city gates Thursday, killing 
at least 10 civilians in a fiery explosion.

There have been repeated attacks on a food warehouse run by 
the Red Cross. The Associated Press reported on Oct. 26, "In 
separate raids late Thursday and early Friday, F/A-18 jets 
dropped two one-ton bombs on the Red Cross warehouse 
complex." The Defense Department, which admitted the 
bombing, claimed it was an error, but it took place in broad 
daylight and a Red Cross was clearly painted on the roof of 
this building.

THE 'GREAT GAME'

The genocidal bombing and heartless devastation of the 
Afghani people is part of the "Great Game" of the 
imperialist powers and has nothing to do with "fighting 
terrorism." As Pilger points out, "The 'war on terrorism' is 
a cover for this: a means of achieving American strategic 
aims that lie behind the flag-waving facade of great power."

In his book "The Grand Chessboard," Zbigniew Brzezinski 
urged a major role for the U.S. in Central Asia and the 
Middle East. Brzezinski was Jimmy Carter's national security 
advisor and instigated the CIA's arming and training of the 
Mujahadeen in Pakistan and Afghanistan. It was his policy 
that helped to create a fundamentalist guerrilla army, 
including the Taliban, that was organized to overthrow 
Afghanistan's Marxist government and draw the USSR into a 
terrible quagmire. This policy played a part in fomenting 
the destruction of socialism in the USSR.

After the Cold War, Brzezinski wrote, "for America, the 
chief prize is Eurasia." Why? Because it contains the 
"Central Asian region and the Caspian Sea basin, known to 
contain reserves of natural gas and oil that dwarf those of 
Kuwait, the Gulf of Mexico, or the North Sea."

Brzezinski warned against "a grand coalition of China, 
Russia, and perhaps Iran" as "the most dangerous scenario." 
What country stands in the middle of those three nations? 
Afghanistan.

Brzezinski was a leading architect for the expansion of 
NATO. He wrote, "A comprehensive U.S. policy for Eurasia as 
a whole will not be possible if the effort to widen NATO, 
having been launched by the United States, stalls."

The war in Afghanistan is a continuation of the wars on 
Yugoslavia and the expansion of NATO eastward. Brzezinski 
even called Central Asia the "Eurasian Balkans," and noted 
that they are "infinitely more important as a potential 
economic prize: an enormous concentration of natural gas and 
oil reserves located in the region, in addition to important 
minerals, including gold."

John Pilger in the Mirror wrote, "The overwhelming majority 
of the Islamic peoples of the Middle East and south Asia 
have been victims of the West's exploitation of precious 
natural resources in or near their countries."

The war is one month old and a peace movement is burgeoning 
in over 20 countries. There is a growing anti-imperialist 
understanding that this war is about the profits of U.S. and 
British oil companies.

It is clear to all who look: the Great Game is based on 
murder of innocents and plunder of resources.

- END -

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