Darkhawk28
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- Dec 22, 2000
 
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Originally posted by: tommywishbone
"Optimism grows in Iraq" LOL. That's a good one! Thanks for the laugh.
Kind of like "A Tree Grows in Brooklyn"
Originally posted by: tommywishbone
"Optimism grows in Iraq" LOL. That's a good one! Thanks for the laugh.
Originally posted by: TastesLikeChicken
Yes, historical perspectives can be used for both sides, like the left ignoring the growing and expanding threat of fundy Islam (and sometimes apologizing for it or rationalizing it, but mostly turning a blind eye to it). Much like the US ignored the growing Nazi and fascist threat until it was almost too late.
I find that lack of historical perspective disturbing...to say the least.
You mean during his 8 ineffective years warning Clinton?Originally posted by: BBond
Originally posted by: TastesLikeChicken
Yes, historical perspectives can be used for both sides, like the left ignoring the growing and expanding threat of fundy Islam (and sometimes apologizing for it or rationalizing it, but mostly turning a blind eye to it). Much like the US ignored the growing Nazi and fascist threat until it was almost too late.
I find that lack of historical perspective disturbing...to say the least.
But it wasn't "the left" who ignored advisors like Richard Clarke as well as repeated warnings about al Qaeda prior to 9/11 until it WAS too late, was it chicken?
Originally posted by: TastesLikeChicken
You mean during his 8 ineffective years warning Clinton?Originally posted by: BBond
Originally posted by: TastesLikeChicken
Yes, historical perspectives can be used for both sides, like the left ignoring the growing and expanding threat of fundy Islam (and sometimes apologizing for it or rationalizing it, but mostly turning a blind eye to it). Much like the US ignored the growing Nazi and fascist threat until it was almost too late.
I find that lack of historical perspective disturbing...to say the least.
But it wasn't "the left" who ignored advisors like Richard Clarke as well as repeated warnings about al Qaeda prior to 9/11 until it WAS too late, was it chicken?
All the more reason the Bushwhackos should have paid attention. If they thought the Clinton administration was so wrong about so many things, you'd think they'd try to learn from the mistakes of the past, instead of latching onto them to support their own perverse agenda.Originally posted by: TastesLikeChicken
You mean during his 8 ineffective years warning Clinton?
Ah, someone hasn't read Against All Enemies nor read Clinton's letter to the Propagandist re:national security when he left office.Originally posted by: TastesLikeChicken
You mean during his 8 ineffective years warning Clinton?Originally posted by: BBond
But it wasn't "the left" who ignored advisors like Richard Clarke as well as repeated warnings about al Qaeda prior to 9/11 until it WAS too late, was it chicken?Originally posted by: TastesLikeChicken
Yes, historical perspectives can be used for both sides, like the left ignoring the growing and expanding threat of fundy Islam (and sometimes apologizing for it or rationalizing it, but mostly turning a blind eye to it). Much like the US ignored the growing Nazi and fascist threat until it was almost too late.
I find that lack of historical perspective disturbing...to say the least.
Who helped build that "fundy Islam" army? Hmmm??Originally posted by: TastesLikeChicken
Yes, historical perspectives can be used for both sides, like the left ignoring the growing and expanding threat of fundy Islam (and sometimes apologizing for it or rationalizing it, but mostly turning a blind eye to it). Much like the US ignored the growing Nazi and fascist threat until it was almost too late.
I find that lack of historical perspective disturbing...to say the least.
Pssst. Fundy Islam has been around and spreading for at least a couple hundred of years. I doubt any of your lefty talking point websites would let you in that fact though, because there's no way they can find to blame America for it.Originally posted by: conjur
Who helped build that "fundy Islam" army? Hmmm??Originally posted by: TastesLikeChicken
Yes, historical perspectives can be used for both sides, like the left ignoring the growing and expanding threat of fundy Islam (and sometimes apologizing for it or rationalizing it, but mostly turning a blind eye to it). Much like the US ignored the growing Nazi and fascist threat until it was almost too late.
I find that lack of historical perspective disturbing...to say the least.
Let me give you a hint.
The President's name at the time sounded like ray-gun.
Pssst. That "fundy Islam" army wasn't well-armed until who armed them, using them as an ally? Do you need me to give you another hint?Originally posted by: TastesLikeChicken
Pssst. Fundy Islam has been around and spreading for at least a couple hundred of years. I doubt any of your lefty talking point websites would let you in that fact though, because there's no way they can find to blame America for it.Originally posted by: conjur
Who helped build that "fundy Islam" army? Hmmm??Originally posted by: TastesLikeChicken
Yes, historical perspectives can be used for both sides, like the left ignoring the growing and expanding threat of fundy Islam (and sometimes apologizing for it or rationalizing it, but mostly turning a blind eye to it). Much like the US ignored the growing Nazi and fascist threat until it was almost too late.
I find that lack of historical perspective disturbing...to say the least.
Let me give you a hint.
The President's name at the time sounded like ray-gun.
Originally posted by: Engineer
Originally posted by: charrison
Originally posted by: Engineer
Originally posted by: charrison
Originally posted by: Engineer
Originally posted by: Red Dawn
Yep it seems like we have quite a mess on our hands of our own doing. The longer it takes the more pissed Americans are going to get about it.Originally posted by: charrison
Also a majority of American beleive that we should finish the job in the Iraq as well.
Shows in the poll trends.
THe trends show that a large majority wants us to finish the job in iraq.
We don't have a choice now. Stuck in that hellhole for years or decades to come. *blah*
Borrow a few extra billion each day to play in Iraq. Didn't help us one damn bit.
On that we will have to disagree. If we are successful in Iraq andafghanistan, the middle east is going to be a much nicer place. But I guess we are going to have to disagree there.
Hasn't happened in thousands of years. I don't think it's going to happen on this note. The ends didn't justify the means. IMO.
Originally posted by: charrison
Hasn't happened in thousands of years. I don't think it's going to happen on this note. The ends didn't justify the means. IMO.
Oh please do.Originally posted by: conjur
Pssst. That "fundy Islam" army wasn't well-armed until who armed them, using them as an ally? Do you need me to give you another hint?Originally posted by: TastesLikeChicken
Pssst. Fundy Islam has been around and spreading for at least a couple hundred of years. I doubt any of your lefty talking point websites would let you in that fact though, because there's no way they can find to blame America for it.Originally posted by: conjur
Who helped build that "fundy Islam" army? Hmmm??Originally posted by: TastesLikeChicken
Yes, historical perspectives can be used for both sides, like the left ignoring the growing and expanding threat of fundy Islam (and sometimes apologizing for it or rationalizing it, but mostly turning a blind eye to it). Much like the US ignored the growing Nazi and fascist threat until it was almost too late.
I find that lack of historical perspective disturbing...to say the least.
Let me give you a hint.
The President's name at the time sounded like ray-gun.
Someone's gotten their panties in a bunch. What's the matter, TLC? Tired of me calling you out on being a fake liberal? Come on, tell us how you're a liberal. All I see is an apologist for the Propagandist.Originally posted by: TastesLikeChicken
Oh please do.Originally posted by: conjur
Pssst. That "fundy Islam" army wasn't well-armed until who armed them, using them as an ally? Do you need me to give you another hint?Originally posted by: TastesLikeChicken
Pssst. Fundy Islam has been around and spreading for at least a couple hundred of years. I doubt any of your lefty talking point websites would let you in that fact though, because there's no way they can find to blame America for it.Originally posted by: conjur
Who helped build that "fundy Islam" army? Hmmm??Originally posted by: TastesLikeChicken
Yes, historical perspectives can be used for both sides, like the left ignoring the growing and expanding threat of fundy Islam (and sometimes apologizing for it or rationalizing it, but mostly turning a blind eye to it). Much like the US ignored the growing Nazi and fascist threat until it was almost too late.
I find that lack of historical perspective disturbing...to say the least.
Let me give you a hint.
The President's name at the time sounded like ray-gun.
Tell me all about the origins of the Muslim Brotherhood, Islamic Jihad, and Wahhabism.
Then tell me once again how you aren't one of Chomsky's minions, blaming anything and everything on the US without a clue, you ignorant troll.
Of course he did. It's well known. Now tell me how the limited support from the US 25 years ago that has anything significant to do with the Islamic militants today. Tell me what it has to do with the militants in Thailand, Phillipines, Indonesia, Bangldesh, a large percentage of African countries, and many countries in the former USSR. Tell me what it had to do with establishing Islamic militants in the first place?Originally posted by: conjur
Someone's gotten their panties in a bunch. What's the matter, TLC? Tired of me calling you out on being a fake liberal? Come on, tell us how you're a liberal. All I see is an apologist for the Propagandist.Originally posted by: TastesLikeChicken
Oh please do.Originally posted by: conjur
Pssst. That "fundy Islam" army wasn't well-armed until who armed them, using them as an ally? Do you need me to give you another hint?Originally posted by: TastesLikeChicken
Pssst. Fundy Islam has been around and spreading for at least a couple hundred of years. I doubt any of your lefty talking point websites would let you in that fact though, because there's no way they can find to blame America for it.Originally posted by: conjur
Who helped build that "fundy Islam" army? Hmmm??Originally posted by: TastesLikeChicken
Yes, historical perspectives can be used for both sides, like the left ignoring the growing and expanding threat of fundy Islam (and sometimes apologizing for it or rationalizing it, but mostly turning a blind eye to it). Much like the US ignored the growing Nazi and fascist threat until it was almost too late.
I find that lack of historical perspective disturbing...to say the least.
Let me give you a hint.
The President's name at the time sounded like ray-gun.
Tell me all about the origins of the Muslim Brotherhood, Islamic Jihad, and Wahhabism.
Then tell me once again how you aren't one of Chomsky's minions, blaming anything and everything on the US without a clue, you ignorant troll.
Now, back to the topic, tell me you're not that ignorant and don't know that Reagan funded and trained bin Laden and the Mujahedeen in Afghanistan.
I never said it had anything to do with the creation of the jihadists. I said the U.S. helped them become a well-armed and well-trained force. But, that was lost on you in your transparent attempt to avoid debate and focus on attacking me.Originally posted by: TastesLikeChicken
Of course he did. It's well known. Now tell me how the limited support from the US 25 years ago that has anything significant to do with the Islamic militants today. Tell me what it has to do with the militants in Thailand, Phillipines, Indonesia, Bangldesh, a large percentage of African countries, and many countries in the former USSR. Tell me what it had to do with establishing Islamic militants in the first place?Originally posted by: conjur
Someone's gotten their panties in a bunch. What's the matter, TLC? Tired of me calling you out on being a fake liberal? Come on, tell us how you're a liberal. All I see is an apologist for the Propagandist.
Now, back to the topic, tell me you're not that ignorant and don't know that Reagan funded and trained bin Laden and the Mujahedeen in Afghanistan.
Since I know you won't answer, I will answer for you -- It has absolutely sh!t to do with it, and you know it. If you don't know it, then you should read your history.
Originally posted by: Riprorin
I'm providing a rational counterbalance to the propaganda you and your buddies spew here.
Originally posted by: Engineer
Originally posted by: Riprorin
I'm providing a rational counterbalance to the propaganda you and your buddies spew here.
Calling me Anti-American or Anti-Military is rational?
for you and your entire kind!!! :|
Loser!
P.S. Nobody, and I mean nobody, spews more sh!t on these boards than you do and WE ALL KNOW IT!
Three soldiers and a Marine who have recently returned from Iraq talk about their time fighting the deadly insurgency.
Originally posted by: conjur
Excerpt from Soldiers' Stories
http://www.pbs.org/newshour/video
Three soldiers and a Marine who have recently returned from Iraq talk about their time fighting the deadly insurgency.
The US provided very little aid to bin Laden in Afghanistan back then.Originally posted by: conjur
I never said it had anything to do with the creation of the jihadists. I said the U.S. helped them become a well-armed and well-trained force. But, that was lost on you in your transparent attempt to avoid debate and focus on attacking me.Originally posted by: TastesLikeChicken
Of course he did. It's well known. Now tell me how the limited support from the US 25 years ago that has anything significant to do with the Islamic militants today. Tell me what it has to do with the militants in Thailand, Phillipines, Indonesia, Bangldesh, a large percentage of African countries, and many countries in the former USSR. Tell me what it had to do with establishing Islamic militants in the first place?Originally posted by: conjur
Someone's gotten their panties in a bunch. What's the matter, TLC? Tired of me calling you out on being a fake liberal? Come on, tell us how you're a liberal. All I see is an apologist for the Propagandist.
Now, back to the topic, tell me you're not that ignorant and don't know that Reagan funded and trained bin Laden and the Mujahedeen in Afghanistan.
Since I know you won't answer, I will answer for you -- It has absolutely sh!t to do with it, and you know it. If you don't know it, then you should read your history.
Please, do tell me about that, conjur. I'd love to hear your take on it.And if you don't know how our removal of support at the end of the Iran/Iraq war has led to greater unrest then you're really quite ignorant of the whole situation.
How he turned a jihadist into a terrorist kingpin.
By Fred Kaplan
Posted Thursday, June 10, 2004, at 4:34 PM PT
Earlier this week, I cited recently declassified documents to show that Ronald Reagan did indeed play a major role in ending the Cold War. Now it's time to note that a similar set of documents shows that Reagan also played a major role in bringing on the terrorist war that followed?specifically, in abetting the rise of Osama Bin Laden.
Once again, the story concerns the fascinating relationship between Reagan and Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev.
Gorbachev took the helm as the reform-minded general-secretary of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union in March 1985. Within months, he had decided privately to pull Soviet troops out of Afghanistan. One of his predecessors, Leonid Brezhnev,* had invaded Afghanistan in 1979, and the move was proving a disaster. Tens of thousands of Soviet troops had died; military morale was crumbling; popular protest?unheard of, till then, in Communist Russia?was rising. Part of the Soviet failure in Afghanistan was due to the fact that the Reagan administration was feeding billions of dollars in arms to Afghanistan's Islamic resistance. Reagan and, even more, his intensely ideological CIA director, William Casey, saw the battle for Afghanistan as a titanic struggle in the war between Eastern tyranny and Western freedom. (Jimmy Carter and his national security adviser, Zbigniew Brzezinski, had started assisting the resistance, but with not nearly the same largess or ambition.)
At a Politburo meeting of Nov. 13, 1986, Gorbachev laid his position on the table: The war wasn't working; it had to be stopped:
People ask: "What are we doing there?" Will we be there endlessly? Or should we end this war? ... The strategic objective is to finish the war in one, maximum two years, and withdraw the troops. We have set a clear goal: Help speed up the process, so we have a friendly neutral country, and get out of there.
In early December, Gorbachev summoned President Najibullah, the puppet leader of Afghanistan, to give him the news: The Soviet troops would be leaving within 18 months; after that, he was on his own.
Two months later, on Feb. 23, 1987, Gorbachev assured the Politburo that the troops wouldn't leave right away. He first had to foster a stable environment for the reigning government and to maintain a credible image with India, the Soviet Union's main ally in the region. The exit strategy, he said, would be a negotiated deal with Washington: The Soviets pull out troops; the Americans stop their arms shipments to the rebels.
However, within days, Gorbachev learned to his surprise that Reagan had no interest in such a deal. In a conversation on Feb. 27 with Italy's foreign minister, Giulio Andreotti, Gorbachev said, "We have information from very reliable sources ? that the United States has set itself the goal of obstructing a settlement by any means," in order "to present the Soviet Union in a bad light." If this information is true, Gorbachev continued, the matter of a withdrawal "takes on a different light."
Without U.S. cooperation, Gorbachev couldn't proceed with his plans to withdraw. Instead, he allowed his military commanders to escalate the conflict. In April, Soviet troops, supported by bombers and helicopters, attacked a new compound of Islamic fighters along the mountain passes of Jaji, near the Pakistani border. The leader of those fighters, many of them Arab volunteers, was Osama Bin Laden.
In his magisterial book, Ghost Wars (possibly the best diplomatic history written in the past decade), Steve Coll recounts the fateful consequences:
The battle lasted for about a week. Bin Laden and 50 Arab volunteers faced 200 Russian troops. ? The Arab volunteers took casualties but held out under intense fire for several days. More than a dozen of bin Laden's comrades were killed, and bin Laden himself apparently suffered a foot wound. ? Chronicled daily at the time by several Arab journalists ? the battle of Jaji marked the birth of Osama bin Laden's public reputation as a warrior among Arab jihadists. ? After Jaji he began a media campaign designed to publicize the brave fight waged by Arab volunteers who stood their ground against a superpower. In interviews and speeches ? bin Laden sought to recruit new fighters to his cause and to chronicle his own role as a military leader. He also began to expound on expansive new goals for the jihad.
Had Gorbachev thought that Reagan was willing to strike a deal, the battle of Jaji would not have taken place?and the legend of Bin Laden might never have taken off.
Reagan can't be blamed for ignoring the threat of Osama Bin Laden. Not for another few years would any analyst see Bin Laden as a significant player in global terrorism; not till the mid-1990s would his organization, al-Qaida, emerge as a significant force.
However, Reagan?and those around him?can be blamed for ignoring the rise of Islamic militancy in Afghanistan and for failing to see Gorbachev's offer to withdraw as an opportunity to clamp the danger. Certainly, the danger was, or should have been, clear. Only a few years had passed since the Ayatollah Khomeini rose to power in Iran?the shah toppled, the U.S. Embassy employees held hostage, the country turned over to the mullahs, the region suddenly destabilized. Reagan beat Jimmy Carter so decisively in the 1980 election in part because of the hostage crisis.
Gorbachev had accepted that Afghanistan would become an Islamic country. But he assumed that Reagan, of all people, would have an interest in keeping it from becoming militantly, hostilely, Islamist.
In September 1987, after the previous spring's escalation failed to produce results, Soviet Foreign Minister Edvard Shevardnadze met with Secretary of State George Shultz to tell him that Gorbachev planned to pull out of Afghanistan soon. He asked Shultz for help in containing the spread of "Islamic fundamentalism." Shultz had nothing to say. Most Reagan officials doubted Gorbachev would really withdraw, and they interpreted the warnings about Muslim radicals as a cover story for the Soviet Union's military failure.
By this time, Reagan and Gorbachev had gone some distance toward ending the Cold War. The dramatic moment would come the following spring, during the summit in Moscow, when Reagan declared that the U.S.S.R. was no longer an "evil empire." At the same time, though, the U.S. national-security bureaucracy?and, in many ways, Reagan himself?continued to view the world through Cold War glasses.
After the last Soviet troops departed, Afghanistan fell off the American radar screen. Over the next few years, Shevardnadze's worst nightmares came true. The Taliban rose to power and in 1996 gave refuge to the?by then?much-hunted Bin Laden.
Ten years earlier, had Reagan taken Gorbachev's deal, Afghanistan probably still wouldn't have emerged as the "friendly, neutral country" of Gorby's dreams. Yet it might have been a neutral enough country to preclude a Taliban takeover. And if the Russian-Afghan war had ended earlier?if Reagan had embraced Gorbachev on the withdrawal, as he did that same autumn on the massive cutback of nuclear weapons?Osama Bin Laden today might not even be a footnote in history.
Correction, June 11: Leonid Brezhnev was general-secretary of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union at the time of the Afghanistan invasion, not Yuri Andropov as the article originally stated. (Return to the corrected sentence.)
First, thanks for backing up my previous post nicely.Originally posted by: BBond
If you want to read something about bin Laden, read this...
Reagan's Osama Connection
How he turned a jihadist into a terrorist kingpin.
By Fred Kaplan
Posted Thursday, June 10, 2004, at 4:34 PM PT
Earlier this week, I cited recently declassified documents to show that Ronald Reagan did indeed play a major role in ending the Cold War. Now it's time to note that a similar set of documents shows that Reagan also played a major role in bringing on the terrorist war that followed?specifically, in abetting the rise of Osama Bin Laden.
Once again, the story concerns the fascinating relationship between Reagan and Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev.
Gorbachev took the helm as the reform-minded general-secretary of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union in March 1985. Within months, he had decided privately to pull Soviet troops out of Afghanistan. One of his predecessors, Leonid Brezhnev,* had invaded Afghanistan in 1979, and the move was proving a disaster. Tens of thousands of Soviet troops had died; military morale was crumbling; popular protest?unheard of, till then, in Communist Russia?was rising. Part of the Soviet failure in Afghanistan was due to the fact that the Reagan administration was feeding billions of dollars in arms to Afghanistan's Islamic resistance. Reagan and, even more, his intensely ideological CIA director, William Casey, saw the battle for Afghanistan as a titanic struggle in the war between Eastern tyranny and Western freedom. (Jimmy Carter and his national security adviser, Zbigniew Brzezinski, had started assisting the resistance, but with not nearly the same largess or ambition.)
At a Politburo meeting of Nov. 13, 1986, Gorbachev laid his position on the table: The war wasn't working; it had to be stopped:
People ask: "What are we doing there?" Will we be there endlessly? Or should we end this war? ... The strategic objective is to finish the war in one, maximum two years, and withdraw the troops. We have set a clear goal: Help speed up the process, so we have a friendly neutral country, and get out of there.
In early December, Gorbachev summoned President Najibullah, the puppet leader of Afghanistan, to give him the news: The Soviet troops would be leaving within 18 months; after that, he was on his own.
Two months later, on Feb. 23, 1987, Gorbachev assured the Politburo that the troops wouldn't leave right away. He first had to foster a stable environment for the reigning government and to maintain a credible image with India, the Soviet Union's main ally in the region. The exit strategy, he said, would be a negotiated deal with Washington: The Soviets pull out troops; the Americans stop their arms shipments to the rebels.
However, within days, Gorbachev learned to his surprise that Reagan had no interest in such a deal. In a conversation on Feb. 27 with Italy's foreign minister, Giulio Andreotti, Gorbachev said, "We have information from very reliable sources ? that the United States has set itself the goal of obstructing a settlement by any means," in order "to present the Soviet Union in a bad light." If this information is true, Gorbachev continued, the matter of a withdrawal "takes on a different light."
Without U.S. cooperation, Gorbachev couldn't proceed with his plans to withdraw. Instead, he allowed his military commanders to escalate the conflict. In April, Soviet troops, supported by bombers and helicopters, attacked a new compound of Islamic fighters along the mountain passes of Jaji, near the Pakistani border. The leader of those fighters, many of them Arab volunteers, was Osama Bin Laden.
In his magisterial book, Ghost Wars (possibly the best diplomatic history written in the past decade), Steve Coll recounts the fateful consequences:
The battle lasted for about a week. Bin Laden and 50 Arab volunteers faced 200 Russian troops. ? The Arab volunteers took casualties but held out under intense fire for several days. More than a dozen of bin Laden's comrades were killed, and bin Laden himself apparently suffered a foot wound. ? Chronicled daily at the time by several Arab journalists ? the battle of Jaji marked the birth of Osama bin Laden's public reputation as a warrior among Arab jihadists. ? After Jaji he began a media campaign designed to publicize the brave fight waged by Arab volunteers who stood their ground against a superpower. In interviews and speeches ? bin Laden sought to recruit new fighters to his cause and to chronicle his own role as a military leader. He also began to expound on expansive new goals for the jihad.
Had Gorbachev thought that Reagan was willing to strike a deal, the battle of Jaji would not have taken place?and the legend of Bin Laden might never have taken off.
Reagan can't be blamed for ignoring the threat of Osama Bin Laden. Not for another few years would any analyst see Bin Laden as a significant player in global terrorism; not till the mid-1990s would his organization, al-Qaida, emerge as a significant force.
However, Reagan?and those around him?can be blamed for ignoring the rise of Islamic militancy in Afghanistan and for failing to see Gorbachev's offer to withdraw as an opportunity to clamp the danger. Certainly, the danger was, or should have been, clear. Only a few years had passed since the Ayatollah Khomeini rose to power in Iran?the shah toppled, the U.S. Embassy employees held hostage, the country turned over to the mullahs, the region suddenly destabilized. Reagan beat Jimmy Carter so decisively in the 1980 election in part because of the hostage crisis.
Gorbachev had accepted that Afghanistan would become an Islamic country. But he assumed that Reagan, of all people, would have an interest in keeping it from becoming militantly, hostilely, Islamist.
In September 1987, after the previous spring's escalation failed to produce results, Soviet Foreign Minister Edvard Shevardnadze met with Secretary of State George Shultz to tell him that Gorbachev planned to pull out of Afghanistan soon. He asked Shultz for help in containing the spread of "Islamic fundamentalism." Shultz had nothing to say. Most Reagan officials doubted Gorbachev would really withdraw, and they interpreted the warnings about Muslim radicals as a cover story for the Soviet Union's military failure.
By this time, Reagan and Gorbachev had gone some distance toward ending the Cold War. The dramatic moment would come the following spring, during the summit in Moscow, when Reagan declared that the U.S.S.R. was no longer an "evil empire." At the same time, though, the U.S. national-security bureaucracy?and, in many ways, Reagan himself?continued to view the world through Cold War glasses.
After the last Soviet troops departed, Afghanistan fell off the American radar screen. Over the next few years, Shevardnadze's worst nightmares came true. The Taliban rose to power and in 1996 gave refuge to the?by then?much-hunted Bin Laden.
Ten years earlier, had Reagan taken Gorbachev's deal, Afghanistan probably still wouldn't have emerged as the "friendly, neutral country" of Gorby's dreams. Yet it might have been a neutral enough country to preclude a Taliban takeover. And if the Russian-Afghan war had ended earlier?if Reagan had embraced Gorbachev on the withdrawal, as he did that same autumn on the massive cutback of nuclear weapons?Osama Bin Laden today might not even be a footnote in history.
Correction, June 11: Leonid Brezhnev was general-secretary of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union at the time of the Afghanistan invasion, not Yuri Andropov as the article originally stated. (Return to the corrected sentence.)
During Reagan's 8 years in power, the CIA secretly sent billions of dollars of military aid to the mujahedeen in Afghanistan in a US-supported jihad against the Soviet Union. We take a look at America's role in Afghanistan that led to the rise of Osama bin Laden's al Qaeda with Pulitzer prize-winning journalist Steve Coll, author of Ghost Wars: The Secret History of the CIA, Afghanistan, and Bin Laden, from the Soviet Invasion to September 10, 2001. [Includes transcript] The body of former president Ronald Reagan arrived in Washington yesterday for America's first state funeral in three decades. After landing at Andrews Air Force base, Reagan's flag-draped coffin was taken on a final parade through Washington to the Capitol Rotunda. As many as 150,000 people are expected to view his casket before being returned to California tomorrow's state funeral.
Vice President Dick Cheney opened the 34-hour period of Reagan's lying in state by saying, "It was the vision and the will of Ronald Reagan that gave hope to the oppressed, shamed the oppressors and ended the evil empire."
What Cheney along with the corporate media failed to mention yesterday was the Reagan administration's role in financing, arming and training what was destined to become America's worst enemy in the Middle East and Asia.
During most of the 1980's, the CIA secretly sent billions of dollars of military aid to Afghanistan to support the mujahedeen - or holy warriors - against the Soviet Union, which had invaded in 1979.
The U.S.-supported jihad succeeded in driving out the Soviets but the Afghan factions allied to the US gave rise to the oppressive Taliban and Osama bin Laden's al-Qaeda.
Today we take a look at America's role in Afghanistan and the roots of 9/11 with Pulitzer prize-winning journalist Steve Coll. He is the managing editor of the Washington Post and the author of "Ghost Wars: The Secret History of the CIA, Afghanistan, and Bin Laden, from the Soviet Invasion to September 10, 2001." Steve Coll joins us on the phone from his home in Washington.
* Steve Coll, Puliter Prize-winning journalist and managing editor of the Washington Post. He is the author several books, his latest is Ghost Wars: The Secret History of the CIA, Afghanistan, and Bin Laden, from the Soviet Invasion to September 10, 2001
RUSH TRANSCRIPT
AMY GOODMAN: Steve Coll joins us on the line from Washington, DC. Welcome to Democracy Now!.
STEVE COLL: Thank you, Amy. Good morning.
AMY GOODMAN: Very good to have you with us. You write that the CIA, the KGB, Pakistan's ISI and Saudi Arabia's General Intelligence Department all operated directly and secretly in Afghanistan. They primed Afghan factions with cash and weapons, secretly trained guerrilla forces, funded propaganda and manipulated politics. In the midst of the struggles, Bin Laden conceived and built his global organization. Can you give us a thumbnail sketch of this history which you to say the least, very comprehensively deal with in "Ghost Wars?"
STEVE COLL: Well, it of course begins in 1979 when the Soviets invaded during the Carter administration, and it really swelled between 1981 and 1985. Essentially, under Bill Casey, the CIA created a three-part intelligence alliance to fund and arm the Mujahadeen, initially to harass Soviet occupation forces and eventually they embraced the goal of driving them out. The three-way alliance in each of the parties had a distinct role to play. The Saudi, their intelligence service primarily provided cash. Each year the congress would secretly allocate a certain amount of money to support the CIA's program. After that allocation was complete, the US Intelligence liaison would fly to Riyadh and the Saudis would write a matching check. The US role was to provide logistics and technological support as well as money. The Saudis collaborated with Pakistan's intelligence service, ISI, to really run the war on the front lines. It was the Pakistani army, in particular the ISI, that picked the political winners and losers in the jihad, and who favored radical Islamist factions because it suited the Pakistan's army goal of pacifying Afghanistan, a long-time unruly neighbor to the west, whose ethnic Pashtun nationalism the army feared. The army saw Islam not only as a motivating force in the anti-Soviet jihad, but as an instrument of Pakistan's regional policy to control Afghanistan. The US acquiesced with all of this in part because they thought that the only purpose that brought them to the region was to drive the Soviets out, and they didn't really care about local politics. But also because after Vietnam, the generation of CIA officers involved in this program were scarred by their experiences in Southeast Asia, and they essentially operated under a mantra of no more hearts and minds for us. We're not good at picking winners and losers in a developing world. Let's let the Pakistanis decide who carries this jihad forward. That's how the favoritism of the radical Islamic factions was born and nurtured.
JUAN GONZALEZ: Steve, at what point in this process did the Mujahadeen basically turn their guns around, and was the United States aware at the point in which their allies had become now -- had begun to target them for their next jihad?
STEVE COLL: Yeah. That's a good question. It happened gradually in the late 1980's. Certainly, there were people in the early 1980's involved in the program who were aware that many of America's favorite clients were fundamentally anti-American in their outlook. But it was only in the late 1980's as the amounts of money and guns and really the success of the jihad began to swell that clients such as Gulbuddin Hekmatyar and Abdul Sayyaf, who were two of the most vehemently anti-American leaders of the jihad began to explicitly turn their propaganda pamphlets, at least their rhetorical efforts, against the United States as well as against the Soviet Union. As that began to happen, to the second part of your question, there were individuals inside the US bureaucracy, at the state department, elsewhere, who began to warn that the United States needed to change its political approach to this covert action program, that they needed now to start getting involved in the messy business of Afghan politics and to start to promote more centrist factions and to negotiate compromise with the Soviet-backed communist government in Kabul to prevent Islamist extremists from coming to power as the Soviets withdrew. These warnings, when you look at them with the benefit of hindsight, are quite prescient and certainly were strongly given, but they languished in the middle of the bureaucracy and were largely ignored by both second term Reagan administration and the first Bush administration, Bush 41.
AMY GOODMAN: We're talking to Steve Coll. He is managing editor of the Washington Post, and he has written a book, Ghost wars -- The Secret History of the CIA, Afghanistan and Bin Laden, from the Soviet Invasion to September 10, 2001. Can you talk about the role of Kashmir in all of this as the conflict in Kashmir?
STEVE COLL: After the Soviets withdrew in 1988, the Pakistan army and intelligence service interpreted this victory as essentially providing them a model for combating their neighbor to the east, India, a country with much larger standing army, much greater industrial potential and a much larger population base, but threatened, at least in the Pakistan army's view, Pakistan's national existence. As a spontaneous indigenous rebellion against corrupt Indian rule began in Kashmir in 1989, the Pakistan army and intelligence service began to pour in support for Islamism factions using not only the model of the anti-soviet jihad in Afghanistan, but also many of the training camp facilities that had been built up to support the Afghanistan war. They also used same Muslim brotherhood influence networks to essentially take over the Kashmir rebellion and try to turn it into an instrument of Pakistan's national policy, an effort in which they were partially successful by the mid 1990's. So, what it means as a practical matter, looking at al-Qaeda, is that as Bin Laden began to use the sanctuary of Afghanistan to develop his global ambitions and his global organization, he found indirect and sometimes direct support from the Pakistan army which sought to use his infrastructure to run their own jihad in Kashmir. The Pakistan army's purpose in Kashmir was to support what they viewed as the liberation of an occupied territory, but sometimes more cynically, they thought to tie down the Indian army in Kashmir, and they succeeded. They tied down 600,000 Indian troops by running the cross-border Islamist jihad they rehearsed, in effect, in Afghanistan.
JUAN GONZALEZ: Steve, I'd like to ask you, to what degree was the US policy in supporting the Mujahadeen, or its policy in Pakistan an aberration and to what degree was it a continuation of policy in the Middle East. I don't know if you have read the book by Tariq Ali, The Clash of Fundamentalisms where he posits that this has been a historical pattern in the Middle East, that the British and United States have supported right wing or religious or -- or organizations and groups covertly or sometimes overtly to stop modernist governments such as Nasser in Egypt or Gandhi in India as well as a leftist oriented governments in the region. Has this been a historical pattern?
STEVE COLL: Yes. I think there is a pattern of that kind. It's not comprehensive, but it's certainly prevalent through the history that you refer to. In the Cold War period, I think there was a real belief, certainly by Bill Casey, who was a devout catholic and by the Saudi royal family, that the support of religious networks and organizations against soviet supported either communist or leftist governments was not only good tactics, but it was also righteous. It was the battle of the faithful against the godless was really, I think, at some personal level, how Casey and some of the Saudis saw it. As you say, that wasn't spontaneous idea. It was rooted in approaches that governments had taken, the British and the United States, when secular socialist governments had risen in the Middle East earlier. The British certainly supported the Muslim Brotherhood as an instrument of challenge against Nasser once they were concerned about Nasser's ambitions. At the same time, the Muslim Brotherhood had been born as an anti-colonial, anti-British force, so the pendulum swung both ways. During the 1980's, it's generally agreed now, though a lot of the details are not available, that the Israelis supported Hamas covertly as an instrument of sort of a covert program to create a rival movement within the Palestinian community against the PLO. Now presumably they regret that strategy as well.
AMY GOODMAN: How did the Reagan administration -- how did President Reagan describe what was happening in Afghanistan during the time? What awareness did Americans have of what was going on in the 1980's in Afghanistan and the US support for the Mujahadeen?
STEVE COLL: It's interesting to go back and look at the public discourse about this. During the Reagan years in particular, it was a very superficial, certainly, Reagan often used the terminology of his, you know of freedom. These were freedom fighters. These were noble freedom fighters. I don't want to overstate this, but the Afghans were regarded with some distance almost as noble savages in some sort of a state of purity fighting for an abstract idea of freedom. The idea that Afghanistan was a messy place filled with complexity and ethnicity and tribal structures and all of the rest of what we now understand about Afghanistan was it was generally not part of American public discourse. By contrast, the covert wars in Central America were much richer controversies in the United States, and they were often discussed in much greater detail and nuance in Congress and elsewhere. Of course, the support for the Contras became a raging controversy by the second term of the Reagan administration. Afghanistan never became such a program. It attracted bipartisan support and a general quietude throughout. In part because it was so far away, in part because the war was one between an occupied people and the soviet army. This is not a -- this is not proxies on both side. This is a direct invasion that was generally regarded at unjust across the developing world. Also, the United States didn't play a very direct role on the front lines of the jihad. There were not Americans in tennis shoes generally standing up on the paths getting shot or creating episodes. This was a war in which the United States acted as quartermaster and let the Pakistani intelligence service run things on the front lines.
AMY GOODMAN: Steve Coll, I want to thank you very much for being with us. Steve Coll is the author of Ghost Wars -- The Secret History of the CIA, Afghanistan and Bin Laden from the Soviet Invasion to September 10, 2001. He's the managing editor of the Washington Post.
If only people who were in the CIA didn't conflict with Coll's claims:Originally posted by: BBond
Or this...
Ghost Wars: How Reagan Armed the Mujahadeen in Afghanistan
During Reagan's 8 years in power, the CIA secretly sent billions of dollars of military aid to the mujahedeen in Afghanistan in a US-supported jihad against the Soviet Union. We take a look at America's role in Afghanistan that led to the rise of Osama bin Laden's al Qaeda with Pulitzer prize-winning journalist Steve Coll, author of Ghost Wars: The Secret History of the CIA, Afghanistan, and Bin Laden, from the Soviet Invasion to September 10, 2001. [Includes transcript] The body of former president Ronald Reagan arrived in Washington yesterday for America's first state funeral in three decades. After landing at Andrews Air Force base, Reagan's flag-draped coffin was taken on a final parade through Washington to the Capitol Rotunda. As many as 150,000 people are expected to view his casket before being returned to California tomorrow's state funeral.
Vice President Dick Cheney opened the 34-hour period of Reagan's lying in state by saying, "It was the vision and the will of Ronald Reagan that gave hope to the oppressed, shamed the oppressors and ended the evil empire."
What Cheney along with the corporate media failed to mention yesterday was the Reagan administration's role in financing, arming and training what was destined to become America's worst enemy in the Middle East and Asia.
During most of the 1980's, the CIA secretly sent billions of dollars of military aid to Afghanistan to support the mujahedeen - or holy warriors - against the Soviet Union, which had invaded in 1979.
The U.S.-supported jihad succeeded in driving out the Soviets but the Afghan factions allied to the US gave rise to the oppressive Taliban and Osama bin Laden's al-Qaeda.
Today we take a look at America's role in Afghanistan and the roots of 9/11 with Pulitzer prize-winning journalist Steve Coll. He is the managing editor of the Washington Post and the author of "Ghost Wars: The Secret History of the CIA, Afghanistan, and Bin Laden, from the Soviet Invasion to September 10, 2001." Steve Coll joins us on the phone from his home in Washington.
* Steve Coll, Puliter Prize-winning journalist and managing editor of the Washington Post. He is the author several books, his latest is Ghost Wars: The Secret History of the CIA, Afghanistan, and Bin Laden, from the Soviet Invasion to September 10, 2001
RUSH TRANSCRIPT
AMY GOODMAN: Steve Coll joins us on the line from Washington, DC. Welcome to Democracy Now!.
STEVE COLL: Thank you, Amy. Good morning.
AMY GOODMAN: Very good to have you with us. You write that the CIA, the KGB, Pakistan's ISI and Saudi Arabia's General Intelligence Department all operated directly and secretly in Afghanistan. They primed Afghan factions with cash and weapons, secretly trained guerrilla forces, funded propaganda and manipulated politics. In the midst of the struggles, Bin Laden conceived and built his global organization. Can you give us a thumbnail sketch of this history which you to say the least, very comprehensively deal with in "Ghost Wars?"
STEVE COLL: Well, it of course begins in 1979 when the Soviets invaded during the Carter administration, and it really swelled between 1981 and 1985. Essentially, under Bill Casey, the CIA created a three-part intelligence alliance to fund and arm the Mujahadeen, initially to harass Soviet occupation forces and eventually they embraced the goal of driving them out. The three-way alliance in each of the parties had a distinct role to play. The Saudi, their intelligence service primarily provided cash. Each year the congress would secretly allocate a certain amount of money to support the CIA's program. After that allocation was complete, the US Intelligence liaison would fly to Riyadh and the Saudis would write a matching check. The US role was to provide logistics and technological support as well as money. The Saudis collaborated with Pakistan's intelligence service, ISI, to really run the war on the front lines. It was the Pakistani army, in particular the ISI, that picked the political winners and losers in the jihad, and who favored radical Islamist factions because it suited the Pakistan's army goal of pacifying Afghanistan, a long-time unruly neighbor to the west, whose ethnic Pashtun nationalism the army feared. The army saw Islam not only as a motivating force in the anti-Soviet jihad, but as an instrument of Pakistan's regional policy to control Afghanistan. The US acquiesced with all of this in part because they thought that the only purpose that brought them to the region was to drive the Soviets out, and they didn't really care about local politics. But also because after Vietnam, the generation of CIA officers involved in this program were scarred by their experiences in Southeast Asia, and they essentially operated under a mantra of no more hearts and minds for us. We're not good at picking winners and losers in a developing world. Let's let the Pakistanis decide who carries this jihad forward. That's how the favoritism of the radical Islamic factions was born and nurtured.
JUAN GONZALEZ: Steve, at what point in this process did the Mujahadeen basically turn their guns around, and was the United States aware at the point in which their allies had become now -- had begun to target them for their next jihad?
STEVE COLL: Yeah. That's a good question. It happened gradually in the late 1980's. Certainly, there were people in the early 1980's involved in the program who were aware that many of America's favorite clients were fundamentally anti-American in their outlook. But it was only in the late 1980's as the amounts of money and guns and really the success of the jihad began to swell that clients such as Gulbuddin Hekmatyar and Abdul Sayyaf, who were two of the most vehemently anti-American leaders of the jihad began to explicitly turn their propaganda pamphlets, at least their rhetorical efforts, against the United States as well as against the Soviet Union. As that began to happen, to the second part of your question, there were individuals inside the US bureaucracy, at the state department, elsewhere, who began to warn that the United States needed to change its political approach to this covert action program, that they needed now to start getting involved in the messy business of Afghan politics and to start to promote more centrist factions and to negotiate compromise with the Soviet-backed communist government in Kabul to prevent Islamist extremists from coming to power as the Soviets withdrew. These warnings, when you look at them with the benefit of hindsight, are quite prescient and certainly were strongly given, but they languished in the middle of the bureaucracy and were largely ignored by both second term Reagan administration and the first Bush administration, Bush 41.
AMY GOODMAN: We're talking to Steve Coll. He is managing editor of the Washington Post, and he has written a book, Ghost wars -- The Secret History of the CIA, Afghanistan and Bin Laden, from the Soviet Invasion to September 10, 2001. Can you talk about the role of Kashmir in all of this as the conflict in Kashmir?
STEVE COLL: After the Soviets withdrew in 1988, the Pakistan army and intelligence service interpreted this victory as essentially providing them a model for combating their neighbor to the east, India, a country with much larger standing army, much greater industrial potential and a much larger population base, but threatened, at least in the Pakistan army's view, Pakistan's national existence. As a spontaneous indigenous rebellion against corrupt Indian rule began in Kashmir in 1989, the Pakistan army and intelligence service began to pour in support for Islamism factions using not only the model of the anti-soviet jihad in Afghanistan, but also many of the training camp facilities that had been built up to support the Afghanistan war. They also used same Muslim brotherhood influence networks to essentially take over the Kashmir rebellion and try to turn it into an instrument of Pakistan's national policy, an effort in which they were partially successful by the mid 1990's. So, what it means as a practical matter, looking at al-Qaeda, is that as Bin Laden began to use the sanctuary of Afghanistan to develop his global ambitions and his global organization, he found indirect and sometimes direct support from the Pakistan army which sought to use his infrastructure to run their own jihad in Kashmir. The Pakistan army's purpose in Kashmir was to support what they viewed as the liberation of an occupied territory, but sometimes more cynically, they thought to tie down the Indian army in Kashmir, and they succeeded. They tied down 600,000 Indian troops by running the cross-border Islamist jihad they rehearsed, in effect, in Afghanistan.
JUAN GONZALEZ: Steve, I'd like to ask you, to what degree was the US policy in supporting the Mujahadeen, or its policy in Pakistan an aberration and to what degree was it a continuation of policy in the Middle East. I don't know if you have read the book by Tariq Ali, The Clash of Fundamentalisms where he posits that this has been a historical pattern in the Middle East, that the British and United States have supported right wing or religious or -- or organizations and groups covertly or sometimes overtly to stop modernist governments such as Nasser in Egypt or Gandhi in India as well as a leftist oriented governments in the region. Has this been a historical pattern?
STEVE COLL: Yes. I think there is a pattern of that kind. It's not comprehensive, but it's certainly prevalent through the history that you refer to. In the Cold War period, I think there was a real belief, certainly by Bill Casey, who was a devout catholic and by the Saudi royal family, that the support of religious networks and organizations against soviet supported either communist or leftist governments was not only good tactics, but it was also righteous. It was the battle of the faithful against the godless was really, I think, at some personal level, how Casey and some of the Saudis saw it. As you say, that wasn't spontaneous idea. It was rooted in approaches that governments had taken, the British and the United States, when secular socialist governments had risen in the Middle East earlier. The British certainly supported the Muslim Brotherhood as an instrument of challenge against Nasser once they were concerned about Nasser's ambitions. At the same time, the Muslim Brotherhood had been born as an anti-colonial, anti-British force, so the pendulum swung both ways. During the 1980's, it's generally agreed now, though a lot of the details are not available, that the Israelis supported Hamas covertly as an instrument of sort of a covert program to create a rival movement within the Palestinian community against the PLO. Now presumably they regret that strategy as well.
AMY GOODMAN: How did the Reagan administration -- how did President Reagan describe what was happening in Afghanistan during the time? What awareness did Americans have of what was going on in the 1980's in Afghanistan and the US support for the Mujahadeen?
STEVE COLL: It's interesting to go back and look at the public discourse about this. During the Reagan years in particular, it was a very superficial, certainly, Reagan often used the terminology of his, you know of freedom. These were freedom fighters. These were noble freedom fighters. I don't want to overstate this, but the Afghans were regarded with some distance almost as noble savages in some sort of a state of purity fighting for an abstract idea of freedom. The idea that Afghanistan was a messy place filled with complexity and ethnicity and tribal structures and all of the rest of what we now understand about Afghanistan was it was generally not part of American public discourse. By contrast, the covert wars in Central America were much richer controversies in the United States, and they were often discussed in much greater detail and nuance in Congress and elsewhere. Of course, the support for the Contras became a raging controversy by the second term of the Reagan administration. Afghanistan never became such a program. It attracted bipartisan support and a general quietude throughout. In part because it was so far away, in part because the war was one between an occupied people and the soviet army. This is not a -- this is not proxies on both side. This is a direct invasion that was generally regarded at unjust across the developing world. Also, the United States didn't play a very direct role on the front lines of the jihad. There were not Americans in tennis shoes generally standing up on the paths getting shot or creating episodes. This was a war in which the United States acted as quartermaster and let the Pakistani intelligence service run things on the front lines.
AMY GOODMAN: Steve Coll, I want to thank you very much for being with us. Steve Coll is the author of Ghost Wars -- The Secret History of the CIA, Afghanistan and Bin Laden from the Soviet Invasion to September 10, 2001. He's the managing editor of the Washington Post.
