U.S. manipulates women’s condition to build war support

Discussion in 'Politics' started by WEB113, Aug 14, 2010.

  1. WEB113

    WEB113 Member

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    It is shocking and disturbing. Time magazine’s cover has a picture of a young Afghan woman whose nose has been cut off. The headline reads, “What happens if we leave Afghanistan.” (Aug. 9)

    Time’s story claims the Taliban ordered 18-year-old Aisha’s nose and ears cut off because she left her husband and fled abusive in-laws. She is now living in a Kabul women’s shelter run by an American nongovernmental organization, and will come to the U.S. for reconstructive surgery

    Surely, this cruel and abusive treatment of women must not be permitted anywhere. Time’s implication, however, that the U.S. occupation of Afghanistan is the only barrier preventing further horrendous treatment of Afghan women is a lie. The article is manipulating the feelings of well-meaning people, while exploiting Aisha’s plight, in order to further Washington’s genocidal war, which has hurt Afghan women the most.

    Time’s goal? Answering WikiLeaks

    The recent WikiLeaks publications showed “How coalition forces have killed hundreds of civilians in unreported incidents. ... How a secret ‘black’ unit of special forces [death squads] hunts down Taliban leaders for ‘kill or capture’ without trial. ... How the coalition is increasingly using deadly Reaper drones to hunt and kill Taliban targets by remote control from a base in Nevada,” and how there has been a steep rise in Taliban bomb attacks on NATO troops. (The Guardian, July 25)

    A separate editorial in the Aug. 9 issue of Time entitled “What’s hard to look at” admits that its cover picture and story are meant to counter the WikiLeaks publication. The magazine pitches its cover story as “emotional truth” and “something you cannot find in those 91,000 documents” of the leaked information.

    Priyamvada Gopal, professor of English at Cambridge University who specializes in women and postcolonial theory, more accurately described the strategy behind what Time is doing. The WikiLeaks documents, she writes, “reveal CIA advice to use the plight of Afghan women as ‘pressure points,’ an emotive way to rally flagging public support for the war.” (The Guardian, Aug. 3)

    Time has dropped all semblance of objective reporting. The magazine has taken the CIA’s “advice” and exploited Aisha’s plight to build war support. Truthfully, the more than 30 years of war in Afghanistan that Washington fueled and abetted has locked many rural Afghan women into the worst of both worlds: a medieval social structure and the destruction and dislocation of imperialist war.

    Afghan women’s advocate Suraya Pakzad recently described the desperate situation for women in her country and its cause. “Three decades of war, displacement, warlordism, gun trafficking and narcotics trafficking,” she said, “come together and create a really hard situation for women. When there’s no security and continuation of war, there’s no guarantee for women’s rights.” (Politics Daily, March 10)

    CIA’s war erased women’s gains

    The U.S. press gets nostalgic about the freedom women in Kabul enjoyed before the Taliban. They fail to mention 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 in the world, the women and men in this government achieved the following: Feudal laws restricting women were abolished, and women became professors, attorneys, judges and government ministers. Seventy percent of the teachers, 50 percent of the government workers and 40 percent of the doctors were women. This government also sought ways to reach out to rural Afghanistan to develop it socially and economically.

    Washington opposed this government from day one and courted the same rural feudal elements who found women’s new authority unacceptable. For its own ends, the U.S. exploited these feudalists’ misogyny as much as their anti-communism. The rural rulers who saw women as property would have been swept into the dustbin of history had U.S. imperialism not given them a new life and more than $3 billion in weapons.

    The warlords overthrew that progressive government in 1992, after 13 years of vicious war financed by the U.S. and organized by the CIA. Soviet intervention to aid the progressive government was also thwarted. Even the New York Times admits, “The mujahedeen leaders who forced out the Soviets in the late 1980s were as conservative as the Taliban in many places, keeping women at home in order to preserve family honor instead of educating them or integrating them into the government.” (July 30)

    U.S. empowered anti-women groups

    The U.S. government was not promoting Afghan women’s rights when it installed the Northern Alliance, which ruled Afghanistan from 1992 to 1996. This clique was seen as “a symbol of massacre, systematic rape and pillage.”(The Independent, Nov. 14, 2001).

    The Taliban took control of Afghanistan in 1996, but the U.S. raised no objections for five years. When the Bush administration invaded the country in 2001 and defeated the Taliban, it installed in its place the misogynist Northern Alliance. The current Kabul government still contains many members of this group, which are as reactionary on women’s rights as the Taliban.

    Meanwhile, the U.S. government has played it both ways. Beginning in 1979, Washington used the gains made by women under the progressive Afghan government to provoke reactionary forces into action against that government. Today, for U.S. domestic consumption, Washington claims it is “rescuing” Afghan women from the very same reactionary forces it armed and empowered.

    An imperialist occupying army can never improve women’s conditions in a country it occupies. The best thing for the women of Afghanistan is for the U.S. to leave completely and unconditionally and cease all covert and overt interference in this tortured nation. Only then will Afghan women and men have the chance to build a safe and stable environment where they can make their needs known and have them met.
     
  2. odon

    odon Slightly Popular

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    You forgot:

    By Joyce Chediac

    Published Aug 13, 2010 10:11 AM

    Articles copyright 1995-2010 Workers World. Verbatim copying and distribution of this entire article is permitted in any medium without royalty provided this notice is preserved.
    http://www.workers.org/2010/world/afghanistan_0819/
     
  3. TheMadcapSyd

    TheMadcapSyd Titanic's captain, yo!

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    lmao yea ok the best thing for Afghani women was if the Taliban had never been taken down. And the best thing for all Afghanis is to just withdrawl and let the country fall to shit.
     
  4. RooRshack

    RooRshack On Sabbatical

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    Would be a great argument. If it had slowed down any during our occupation.
     
  5. odon

    odon Slightly Popular

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    What is "it" ?
     
  6. wa bluska wica

    wa bluska wica Pedestrian

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    the resurgence of the taliban is the only argument we have for staying

    but i think our asinine strategy is one of the reasons they have come back

    [time for a coin toss]
     
  7. gardener

    gardener Realistic Humanist

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    The exploitation and brutalization of women or any other vulnerable segment of the population.
     
  8. gardener

    gardener Realistic Humanist

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    When did this war become about the Taliban? I thought we went over to wipe out al qaeda and Bin Laden.

    A little history lesson for some of you:

    http://www.thirdworldtraveler.com/Afghanistan/Afghanistan_CIA_Taliban.html

     
  9. wa bluska wica

    wa bluska wica Pedestrian

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    well, since the taliban were providing aid and comfort . . .

    plus, they're just a collosal pain in the ass

    [much like their american cousins]
     
  10. gardener

    gardener Realistic Humanist

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    But our intervention during the Soviet occupation created them.
     
  11. WEB113

    WEB113 Member

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    wont be the last creation either
     
  12. wa bluska wica

    wa bluska wica Pedestrian

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    clearly this was a mistake

    though i tend to think the whole cold war was a mistake
     
  13. WEB113

    WEB113 Member

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    if you think the cold war was a mistake. wait til usa starts world war 3
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MouUJNG8f2k"]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MouUJNG8f2k
     
  14. TheMadcapSyd

    TheMadcapSyd Titanic's captain, yo!

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    The enemy of my enemy is my friend. Kind of hard to predict what is going to happen 25 years down the road.
     
  15. deleted

    deleted Visitor

    happy Ramadan everybody..
     
  16. JackFlash

    JackFlash Senior Member

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    I think the world needs to worry more about China. The poison tooth paste, poison pet food and other toxic consumables along with the shoes that last for about a block or so, might give one pause to wonder just what their intentions are. I mean, do you really sell your friends tooth paste with anti-freeze in it? This could be a test to see how far a biological agent might pass through the distribution system of a nation and how many people might be affected and where.

    You're making a lot of predictions here with a sort of arrogant confidence.

    If you can give me the lottery numbers for Georgia this week, you will have my undivided attention.

    .
     
  17. wa bluska wica

    wa bluska wica Pedestrian

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    right back at ya

    eid mubarak!
     
  18. WEB113

    WEB113 Member

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    first step for america starting world war 3. propganda. and your messenger today is jack flash.

    on the other side of the imperialist propaganda is.

    $700 billion annual military budget. 800 military bases. use your common sense.

    track record- korea, viet nam, iraq, afganistan, drone attacks pakistan, kosovo. cia black budget.

    usa destabilisation efforts- supporting regimes- pinochet, suharto, sadam, bin laden, taliban. (im only stating the most obvious ones)


    and all you got is poisoned tuth paste. nice try.
     
  19. TheMadcapSyd

    TheMadcapSyd Titanic's captain, yo!

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    News flash, China has the world's largest standing military and 2nd largest military budget that is rapidly growing.
     
  20. JackFlash

    JackFlash Senior Member

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    Sorry, but your rebuttal does not translate to WW III, only an interest in controlling certain aspects of world affairs.

    You forgot to address China's test runs on sending poisoned products around the world to test the economic system for a biological attack. Are you afraid to talk about that one? And how about addressing China's support for N. Korea having nuclear weapons and their slaughter of peaceful people.

    You evidently haven't read many of my posts here. I'm no fan of war and I don't agree with my government concerning it's foreign affairs policies. On the other hand, you do seem to be China's Butt Boy sent here to distribute propaganda.

    I'd like to hear your explanation for "Tank man" and Tiananmen Square, and acts of genocide against Buddhists in Tibet. I'm guessing you are not allowed to address those issues.

    .
     
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