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Phil Hall: The Taleban are a drug cartel disguised as an Islamist movement



Truly the Taleban could have arranged as many bombings and terrorists acts as they liked in the UK. There are many Pashtun young men and women in cities in the UK who still have large extended families back in Afghanistan and who could be forced into doing something they should not. But guess what. So far there have been no attacks by Afghans on British soil. Why? It is a mystery.

News comes from Afghanistan and the recent UN report that the Taleban and the drug trade are intertwined and that now the Taleban, who are mainly Pashtun, are officially in command of an international drug cartel. 

News comes from Afghanistan that Taleban drug lords go to Dubai to live high on the hog and gamble and sleep with women and luxuriate in all the that the freedom to consume has to offer, while their footsoldiers, peasant fighters, are deluded and told that they are fighting a patriotic religious war. 

And though they are told they are fighting a religious war what really matters to them in trhe end, according to captured Taleban fighters, is, we hear, that Taleban footsoldiers are paid $400 to $500 a month. A substantial part of what these footsoldiers do is protect the drugs and arms trade. 

Now ask yourself this question. What would those poor peasants live on if they didn't get paid drug money from the Taleban cartels? They would have to scratch a poor living from the blasted soil. What could earn them an equivalent income to drugs and arms? Nothing. Not even the "saffron" that US intelligence has put forward in a half baked attempt at implanting a substitute crop.

Increasingly, what the US and British troops are facing in Afghanistan is a war against a drig cartel that hides behind a a fundamentalsit Islamic ideology, just as in the end, Sendero Luminoso was a drug cartel that hid behind Maoism. 

The real cause of the problem is not an ideological insurgency now, but it is a fight against a mafia, an expanding and powerful international drug cartel.

Look at Mexico's war against the drug cartels. Britain and the US and other western countries are disparaging about the Mexican governments possibility for success. According to them the Mexican government is being unrealistic and too heavy handed in its fight against the narcos in Mexico. But is that not exactly what NATO faces Afghanistan, with the additional, but increasingly flimsy ideological trappings.

The reason why a fight against a cartel is very hard to win is because, naturally,  the Livelihood of millions of Afghans is at stake. Remove the drug trade and you impoverish not only the Pashtuns, but everyone who benefits from the trade indirectly. Money will cease to circulate through what is already the shambles of an economy. The reason why you can't win a war against the cartels is that if you win, you consign people to abject poverty. 

This is the reason why all Obama's drones and all Obama's men will never put Afghanistan's state together again.

What has been very interesting has been the criticism of the Karzai government for corruption. Corruption itself is a bad word, but in this instance, corruption has become an embarrassing euphemism for narco-politics.

Yes, it is true that the Taleban cartel have diversified to some extent. They are also running guns from north to south in addition to the drugs they run from south to north. They are involved in other criminal activities as well. But primarily they are a drug cartel. 

Logically, if the Taleban really were out and out extremists with a desire to do damage and provoke an even bigger  "clash of civillisations" they could have done so easily. They could have damaged London and many other British, European and American cities.   But they haven't.

A territorial army man, 6 foot 6, a man of great moral fibre, got back a few months ago from Afghan where he was training the Afghan police. (There but for the Grace of God). He is going out with one of my neices. In fact, he was very reluctant to talk. But what I read into what he was saying is that drug taking in the British army and other armies, and especially in the US army, is an increasingly serious problem in Afghan at the moment. 

For a lot of bored soldiers, there is nothing much to do there except take drugs. The British, American and European way of life doesn't stigmatise drug taking really, and so, apparently, some of the squaddies are at it.

But there is another problem that will make the war agaisnt the Taleban almost unwinnable and that is the problem faced by any force that fights against a mafia. Omerta, yes, but in addition to omerta, the propensity to corruption in the occupying forces themselves. 

This is the way it is in Mexico. The closer you are to the fight against the Cartels, the more offers you get that you really can't refuse.

If we take the view that the conflict in Afghanistan is becoming, increasingly, a conflict against the Pashtun, Taleban drug cartels posing as Muslim fundementalists or using Muslim fundamentalism, then we need to reframe the way we see western countries should view Afghanistan.

Afghanistan is a dirt poor and broken country. The only way to get rid of the Taleban cartel is not by attacking them with guns, tanks, drones and planes: People will always risk death to feed their families. 

Only when Afghanistan has an infrastructure, when it has developed enough to be able to generate alternative sources of income will the problem begin to fade. We don't face the real possibility of terrorist attacks from the Taleban, we simply face the prospect of a glut in the heroin market.


Comments

DomzaNet said…
Afghanistan is a large and well-placed country with quite a large and ancient population. Afghanistan has been trying since before the overthrow of its last King to become a secular sovereign state and the Imperialists have been trying to frustrate that. There is nothing like Afghan exceptionalism. Taliban and Al Quaida are equivalent to what the Mau Mau in Kenya was while I was growing up. Real or not, they are bogies that conveniently (for some) hide what is really at stake, and has been at stake since at least the Congress of the Peoples of the East* and before that in all the colonial wars there ever were.

*http://www.marxists.org/history/international/comintern/baku/
DomzaNet said…
It worked! I never knew how to do that before.
Philip Hall said…
I take that point, but though "Afghanistan" may want to become a secular state, it has the problem of a drug Mafia linked to one ethnic group, the Pathans who form the basis of the Taleban.

Do the Taleban want a the country to become a secular state?

One thing is for sure, whatever the whole of Afghan society "wants", the problem of an entrenched drug trade is a hard one to overcome. And, anyway, who should overcome it?
Natasha Pejic said…
The Afghan people, obviously. If I were you, I would be worrying about what in the name of God my troops are doing there in the first place. They are certainly not alleviating the problem, they are only increasing it. Political activism or action begins by cleaning up the mess in your own backyard, not in the backyard of another.The latter is just terrorism.
Thanks for the excellent commentary. This is a really important issue.

Some more suggested reading on how to get the priorities right in cutting Taliban drug revenues:

http://www.atlantic-community.org/index/articles/view/The_New_Killing_Fields%3F
Thanks for the excellent commentary. This is a really important issue.

Some more suggested reading on how to get the priorities right in cutting Taliban drug revenues:

http://www.atlantic-community.org/index/articles/view/The_New_Killing_Fields%3F
Philip Hall said…
Atlantic Community:

How about the Chicago way:


Ness: How do you do it then?

Malone: You wanna know how you do it? Here's how, they pull a knife, you pull a gun. He sends one of yours to the hospital, you send one of his to the morgue. That's the Chicago way, and that's how you get Capone! Now do you want to do that? Are you ready to do that?

Ness: I have sworn to capture this man with all legal powers at my disposal and I will do so.

Malone: Well, the Lord hates a coward. Do you know what a blood oath is, Mr. Ness?

Ness: Yes.

Malone: Good, 'cause you just took one.


But Natasha is right "Political activism or action begins by cleaning up the mess in your own backyard, not in the backyard of another"
dan pearce said…
I would point out that heroin production fell dramatically under the Taliban when the US temporarily lost control. Successive US administrations have found the international drugs trade a nice little earner- both the Bush and Clinton families are known to have been deeply involved with South American cocaine and Afghan heroin trade.
But surely this is old news?
dan pearce said…
In other words I'd say the US administration is a drug cartel disguised as a democracy.
Philip Hall said…
It is old news except for the fact that the Taleban are currently treated primarily as an Islamic movement fighting for their independence and the Islamic way of life.

If it is the case that they are increasingly a major drug cartel instead, then that puts a different complexion on the question of the adviseability foreign occupation and the prospects for defeating an organisation that sustains a massive network of people through its criminal activities.

If the Taleban is primarily a cartel then the prospects for defeating it look bleak.

As for US involvement. Who knows, probably.
DomzaNet said…
The Taliban (students) were created in Madrassas in Pakistan with an ideology of independence not feudalism. After they took over they pissed off the Imperialists who had used them against the secular regime that the Soviets had supported (i.e. bourgeois-nationalists supported in accordance with the 1920 2CCI and the "Peoples of the East" Congress of the same year). The Taliban pissed off the Imperialists because they took their independence seriously, and not because they were Muslims. The common factor is independence and sovereignty. How many Afghans support the return of the King? You think that is irrelevant? Is it also irrelevant in Nepal, then? These are both anti-feudal and anti-Imperialist struggles. The struggle is the same struggle as our SA struggle, and the whole world's struggle for the last century. Britain is on the wrong side of it.

As for drugs, blood diamonds, "Golden Triangle", coca, oil credits and all the rest of it, there is nothing new in this business of smearing the anti-Imperialists with complicity in the shitty end of capitalism, of which the Imperialists are themselves the instigators. It is hypocrisy, duplicity, and really contemptible.

For the record this is my second attempt at posting a response of this kind. The one I tried to send yesterday did not get through and in my haste I had not saved it. Then the thunderstorm came. You get the picture.
DomzaNet said…
The Second Congress of the Communist International ("2CCI") decided in 1920 to support bourgeois nationalists in their struggles against colonialism and Imperialism. This decision was crucial for the course of events in South Africa, as you know. The Communist Party of South Africa was admitted to the Comintern the following year, on the basis of a broad-front anti-colonialist strategy and tactics that were already in place. This was the genesis of the NDR that we still practice here in SA.

Conversely, but I suppose it is easy to overlook this, the Imperialists set out to destroy the Popular Front or what we in SA call unity-in-action movements, and continue to do so. As a matter of fact, they support reversions to feudalism and theocracy, and any reactionary tendencies including narco-traffic, if and when it serves to undermine independent bourgeois-nationalist regimes.

This is a crucial thing for us in SA, because if we do not pay regard to it, the Imperialists will inevitably come after us. We are in the same target category as the Afghans and before them, the Iraqis, and also the Iranians and the Venezuelans. We are also habitually accused of all sorts of bad things.

Which side are you on?
Philip Hall said…
I am not on the side of the lumpen. Look at the drug trafficking organisations in Mexico, Columbia, Peru.

When did the raison d'etre stop being social justice and a new and fair classless society and when did it become the perpetration of the drug trade?

Now the Taleban, theocratic and religious, may be there to undermine the "bourgoise-nationalist" regime based in Kabul. Can you really call it that?

But when they become a fully fledged cartel then they no longer represent any threat, because their raison d'etre becomes, increasingly, to generate money from the drug trade.

What are the arguments for supporting the Mafia in Southern Italy because they undermine the bourgoise state?

I think it's a week argument. With that argument all crime in the inner cities of London and in places like south London: Peckham, Brixton, Lewisham etc become a political act against the bourgoise - imperialist UK government.

Actually, come to think of it, that last bit has always been the case: 1981 riots etc.

Crime and corruption in SA as a political expression of opposition to a bourgoise state?

Really Dom?
Philip Hall said…
The thunderstorm cam.

I do get the picture.
Philip Hall said…
Interesting links in this article:

http://www.aan-afghanistan.org/index.asp?id=306
DomzaNet said…
There's a communication breakdown here of a different kind. I think I did well enough before, most of which you seem to have ignored, so what must I do now to get through?

I think you have to start from a certain point or you can get lost. A good point to start from is 1920. I take it you would support, in principle, a class alliance against colonialism and neo-colonialism (such as we still have in SA)?

Good. Then tell me if I am mistaking you. You are telling me that the Karzai government is an anti-neo-colonialist bourgeois-democratic government? I don't believe that.

I don't believe the Taliban is a drug cartel, either. I don't support crime. You have done the dirty trick on me that is inherent in your whole approach. You smear the anti-Imperialists, then you accuse their supporters of being in favour of crime (drugs, blood diamonds, whatever).

Continued in next Comment...
DomzaNet said…
Continued:

Have you any idea of the massive pressure there is on the ANC and the SACP all the time? Of course there is crime and corruption here but we always have to fight it on two fronts, in the middle of a hail of jeers, brickbats and disgusting calumnies. Can you imagine how odious that is?

Like I said before, I grew up in Kenya during the "Mau Mau" time. I was six or seven years old when it started. The Mau Mau, a national liberation movement, was painted in colours you would not believe, yet when independence (Uhuru) came a few years later it was jubilated all over the world. I have had a lot of time to think about this. I am not a bleeding-heart liberal, I am now at last a communist. One of the reasons I was doing my "generic courses", some parts of which I posted on this blog, was precisely to help people to navigate the questions of peace and war, violence and revolution. I was wrapping it all up as an old man, Phil, nice and compact and clear. When I have got the version that I am technically happy with (I have finished with the text) I will post a link here. That should be in a few days from now. You don't have to read it but I do want you to know that I am not just grabbing at this question. I have traced the history of NDR starting from Roman times, but that is only a part of what I have done.
Philip Hall said…
OK Dom, give me a moment.
DomzaNet said…
Hi Phil.

Please take a look here

It's a good article on Counterpunch.

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