-------------------------
Via Workers World News Service
Reprinted from the Feb. 7, 2002
issue of Workers World newspaper
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PENTAGON NO FRIEND TO AFGHAN WOMEN

By Joyce Chediac

U.S. newspapers have recently printed photos of smiling 
Afghan girls on their way to school in Kabul for the first 
time since the Taliban outlawed education for girls in 1996. 
The establishment media's message is: "Thanks to the U.S. 
invasion, the women of Afghanistan are finally on their way 
to democracy and human rights."

Working people here have been told that the Bush 
administration is helping women in Afghanistan. This is not 
true. From the cities to the refugee camps, the women of 
Afghanistan are suffering greatly. No one is more 
responsible for their past and current suffering than the 
U.S. government.

U.S.-IMPOSED RULERS NO FRIENDS OF WOMEN

The Bush administration defeated the Taliban in December and 
installed the Northern Alliance in Kabul. But the Northern 
Alliance, a loose coalition, contains many groups that are 
as bad on women's rights as the Taliban.

The media here barely mention that Northern Alliance forces 
ruled Afghanistan from 1992 to 1996. According to one 
British newspaper the Northern Alliance "was a symbol of 
massacre, systematic rape and pillage. ... The Northern 
Alliance left [Kabul] in 1996 with 50,000 dead behind it. 
Now its members are our foot soldiers." (The Independent, 
Nov. 14, 2001)

Even Sima Samar, the new Afghan Minister of Women's Affairs 
and one of two women used as a fig leaf by the interim 
Afghan government, says there is no real security on the 
streets of Kabul and roads of Afghanistan. "Just because the 
Taliban are gone, it does not mean the situation is solved. 
We still have to bring a lot of changes in society," she 
said. "I keep telling people that the situation of women is 
not the product of the Taliban. It's a product of 23 years 
of war." (The Guardian [London], Jan. 17)

Tens of thousands of Afghan refugees, most of whom are women 
and children, may die of starvation and exposure before 
spring. Many of these refugees survive on UN food rations. 
The recent massive U.S. bombing, however, has destroyed many 
roads used to transport these food rations and other vital 
elements of the infrastructure.

The refugees were displaced from their homes by the recent 
U.S. invasion and by the past 23 years of war.

CIA WAR ERASED WOMEN'S GAINS

Citing statistics gathered by the U.S. Department of Defense 
itself, this newspaper has pointed out in the past that the 
only government that brought significant gains to Afghan 
women took power in 1978, and sought to build socialism in 
Afghanistan. Working under difficult conditions in one of 
the poorest countries of the world, the women and men in 
this government achieved the following: feudal laws 
restricting women were abolished; women became professors, 
attorneys, judges and government ministers; 70 percent of 
the teachers, 50 percent of the government workers and 40 
percent of the doctors were women.

But this progressive government was overthrown in 1992 after 
13 years of vicious war financed by the U.S. and organized 
by the CIA.

The establishment media has remained mum on these 
accomplishments. If it mentions some of these gains, it 
never attributes them to the socialist government. With this 
in mind, it is interesting to note what Time magazine of 
Dec. 3, toward the end of a special issue devoted to Afghan 
women, had to say about this period when there was a 
progressive government:

"[W]omen's rights were protected--even advanced to a degree 
that alienated some in Afghanistan's tradition-bound 
society. More women were introduced into government, given 
an authority that many men found unnerving."

Time says that even the person "responsible for collecting 
information on the jihad warriors" was a woman.

Opposing this government from day one, Washington courted 
the very feudal elements who found women's new authority 
"unnerving." For its own ends, Washington exploited their 
misogyny as much as their anti-communism. These rural 
rulers, with a medieval view of economic and social 
relations and of women as property, would have been swept 
into the dustbin of history had they not been given a new 
life, and over $3 billion in weapons, by the U.S. Osama bin 
Laden was a key distributor of these U.S. arms. This Saudi 
businessman helped organize the CIA's war against both the 
progressive Afghan government and the Soviet troops that it 
had invited in to try and stop the foreign-funded counter-
revolution.

Soviet intervention to aid the progressive government has 
been scorned in the press here. Nor does the media dwell on 
the fact that the 23 years of war in Afghanistan, including 
civil war among U.S.-armed groups, were funded, fueled and 
abetted by Washington. This prolonged war has hurt Afghan 
women the most.

The U.S. government has played it both ways. Beginning in 
1979, Washington used the gains made by women under a 
progressive Afghan government to agitate reactionary forces. 
Today, for domestic consumption, it claims it is "rescuing" 
Afghan women from the very same reactionary forces it armed 
and empowered.

Washington has not invaded Afghanistan to help women. U.S. 
motives are the same today as they were when Washington 
began arming feudal forces in 1979: to expand U.S. corporate 
domination in the strategic and oil-rich areas of the Middle 
East and South/Central Asia. U.S. imperialism can never be 
trusted to help any oppressed group, here or abroad.

- END -

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