http://www.rawstory.com/news/2006/Musharraf_blames_U.S._West_for_extremism_0913.html
9/14/2006 12:14:57 AM
The enemy of our enemy is our friend...and eventually our enemy.
9/14/2006 12:28:36 AM
How quickly and conveniently we forget.
9/14/2006 12:33:08 AM
It's only a minority view because the majority is completely ignorant of history. Any basic study of afghan history will lead to Musharraf's conclusion. It's not even political -- it's a simple statement of fact that can exist without a value judgement.
9/14/2006 12:37:03 AM
Suffice it to say that it's not a highly acknowledged or widely discussed element of the debate over the origins of Al Qaeda.
9/14/2006 12:46:23 AM
ah yes, the sloppiness of arrogance
9/14/2006 12:48:13 AM
Didn't Musharraf just surrender to the Taliban last week?
9/14/2006 12:50:53 AM
pryderi doesn't need porn as long as there's:1) the opposite party in power2) intense suffering somewhere as a result of thatfwapfwapfwapfwap
9/14/2006 12:54:19 AM
So is one of the prices we are paying for defeating the soviets is perpetual muslim terrorism?
9/14/2006 1:06:16 AM
I don't know.Does it have to be?
9/14/2006 1:10:26 AM
It would have been a huge disaster if the soviets were able to take over afghanistan!!!!!!
9/14/2006 1:18:54 AM
think of the US as the King, Israel is the Queen (it can pretty much do what the fuck ever it wants)UK is the Knight (it leaps over/past continental Europe's paralyses)the ROW (rest of world) is a Bishop (always plays with a slant)India is the rook (the world's largest democracy--no other player moves straighter than that)To avoid a check, plz see the following: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Castling
9/14/2006 1:22:54 AM
^^ That's nice. What exactly can be done about that today?Right, nothing.My question was directed at EarthDogg. Does one of the prices we pay for defeating the soviets have to be perpetual Muslim terrorism?^ Brilliant model. Incomplete, but chessboards are very useful. For instance, I disagree with assigning the ROW exclusively to the Bishops.
9/14/2006 1:24:00 AM
9/14/2006 2:03:36 AM
I'm going to disagree with your interpretation of history.Musharraf states that Pakistan has “paid a big price for being part of the coalition that fought the Soviet Union.” I would argue that Pakistan is paying a big price for geographical location. Being located next to Afghanistan, Pakistan had a very large self-interest in supporting resistance against the Soviets to ensure that Pakistan itself was not next to be targeted by the Soviets. Pakistan sought and received aid both from the West (namely the US and UK) and the Middle East (Saudi Arabia). Pakistan didn't just happen to get caught up in Afghanistan as a coalition member; they were a key participant in and facilitator of Afghan resistance.Also, while it is certainly true that al Qaida itself has its roots in Afghanistan and received substantial training and materiel support from the US, their brand of extremism was not forged in Afghanistan. Modern Muslim extremism towards the west has it's roots further back, most recently Iran in the 50's and Israel's post-war formation. You could probably go further back to British dealings in the Middle East in the early 1900's. bin Laden's fatwah cites the US "occupation" of Saudi Arabia during Gulf War I--not US operations in Afghanistan--as a major reason for his group's actions against the West. Violent Muslim-Muslim extremism/conflict (e.g. Shia-Sunni) goes back to the formation of Islam itself. Wahhabism, of which bin Laden is a part, is several centuries old.Finally, Western involvement in Afghanistan needs to be viewed in the context of the Cold War. The Soviet Union uses political unrest in Afghanistan as a reason to invade. What do you do? Do you do nothing and hope the Soviets stop there? That's not a chance Pakistan was willing to take. Do you intervene directly with military force--i.e. do Western troops directly confront Soviet troops, possibly leading to wider conflict? Or do you intervene indirectly by supporting the Afghan resistance, even though you know that many of the fighters are not big fans of the West? Obviously, both Carter (who began US support) and Reagan (who continued it) judged the Soviets to be a larger threat, and it could certainly be argued that the Soviet's eventual failure contributed to the Soviet Union breakup.I will agree that everyone simply leaving in 1989 was a bad idea. However, I'm at a loss to come up with a politically viable way to intervene in a conflict the West had no direct involvement in.
9/14/2006 10:42:45 AM
In some ways, I agree with Musharraf's speech: I do think that a lot of the modern Islamic terrorism that we face today was in large part, our fault. Following the Cold War, we were so caught up in celebrating the fall of the Soviet Union and the return of international "peace" that we didn't bother to clean up the messes we left. Messes like Afghanistan where we supported groups in driving out the Soviet Union and then failed to make any serious attempt to rebuild the country afterwards. If the Cold War had gone for just a few more years, I imagine that the United States and her western allies would have made much more aggressive efforts to establish some sort of stable regime in Afghanistan to counter Soviet influence in the region (afterall, how could resist such a strategic position right against the Soviet border?). Unfortunately for the Afghanis, the Berlin Wall fell the same year as their liberation, and the West decided to simply decided to abandon them, allowing the chaos to fester and become a breeding ground for extremists.Think about it, it's not as if the Taliban came into power right after we left or that al Qaeda quickly turned on us right after Afghanistan or even the Gulf War. It took nearly seven years of instability and constant warfare in Afghanistan to beat people down enough to accept an ideology as crazy as the Taliban or accept training camps for then-fringe groups like al Qaeda.Perhaps it was the naive assumption that once Soviet influence disappeared, that her client states overthrew their Communist-backed governments, all the troubles of the world would automatically resolve themselves and peace will reign. "The End of History" and all that nonsense. Instead, we've left pockets of instability that have and will come back to bite us in the ass: Afghanistan, Somalia, Gaza, and the Democratic Republic of Congo (Zaire) to name just a few. Now we have Iraq which, if we're not careful, is going to become an even bigger problem for us than it already is...
9/14/2006 11:22:11 AM
durka durkas were blowing shit up long before we helped the afghanis fight off the sovietsthey always blame what we've done lately as their reasoning for their terrorism and you liberals jump right in and agree with them instead of admitting that they just like to blow shit up that isn't muslimthe national geographic show about Ali Muhamed was interesting and didn't dispel any notions I already had... it did make me realize that YEARS of bureacracy eventually led to what we have now
9/14/2006 11:35:24 AM
^^ You bring up an excellent example with the Congo. With the Congo, and especially Rwanda, the French and the Belgians granted independence by simply leaving the country after little to no meaningful government transfer. In the case of Rwanda, the country slipped into genocidal warfare withing days of the Belgian's departure. Fine examples of the downside of power vacuums, and certainly a lesson which should have been applied to Afghanistan and should be applied to Somalia.
9/14/2006 11:59:05 AM
9/14/2006 4:20:55 PM
RedGuard got my point on the first try.It's historically egregious to suggest the power vacuum left in Afghanistan in the time Musharraf is referring to didn't significantly influence and empower Al Qaeda into the globalized, technologically, and operationally capable organization that it is today. The substantial training and material support which you correctly admit we gave them in the context of the Cold War (and so did I) is precisely what permitted this organization to flourish after 1989.The effects of that cannot be understated, even in the context of the Cold War. We effectively created an Islamic extremist intelligence agency operationally indistinguishable from our own in order to help fight the Soviets, and then abandoned them. Presuming once the Communist threat was diffused, they would simply dissipate.Within three years Al Qaeda was claiming responsibility for bombings in Yemen.Within four years Ramzi Yousef, most probably not yet an Al Qaeda member, masterminded the bombing the World Trade Center.Within twelve years Al Qaeda brought the damn thing down.In this case it took a Head of State, a military dictator, and tenuous ally in the War on Terror to point the finger at the West. I'll be more than curious to see how the United States State Department responds to the charge...
9/14/2006 7:05:50 PM
http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20060913/ts_alt_afp/usattackseurope
9/14/2006 7:50:38 PM
as a general rule, democracies do not attack other democracies
9/14/2006 9:09:22 PM
Palestineans in Gaza kidnapped Israeli soldiers triggering a war between Israel and Lebanon. Does the Gaza's act of war count as an example to the contrary?I know it's pretty rare.[Edited on September 14, 2006 at 9:16 PM. Reason : ...]
9/14/2006 9:15:14 PM
I'm not downplaying or dismissing the role of 70's/80's Afghanistan in the rise of al Qaida. I'm simply saying that al Qaida, the organization, was created there. Islamic extremism existed prior to Afghanistan; it was not conceived there and it was not the result of US actions in Afghanistan (though US action certainly influences extremism). I also think that you are downplaying Pakistan's role in removing the Soviets from Pakistan.
9/14/2006 9:21:14 PM
I'm not at all. They were clearly our allies in the Soviet-Afghan conflict. Just as the Saudis were our allies in Gulf War I. I just don't particularly see the relevance.As for the debate over historical punctuation, I understand your point. I just think it's a little unfair to suggest that though Al Qaeda formed in Afghanistan during that conflict, it is not a credible place to punctuate the history of anti-Western extremism at all. That's where our intelligence services armed and trained these organizations. We taught them their most dangerous capacities: namely the concept of decentralized intelligence. Inarguably, that made the organization more deadly in terms of its capabilities. That was expressly why we trained them that way, after all.Another point worth punctuating, would be the 1989 pullout.Again, neither Musharraf nor I have suggested Islamic extremism didn't exist before the conflict. That was Raw Story's headline for the article. I noted already that the tone was irrelevant to the substance which was significant.
9/14/2006 9:57:52 PM
9/14/2006 10:10:04 PM
umm... it been going on since before there ever was a USAcheck out the national geographic show about Ali Muhamed
9/14/2006 10:19:27 PM
Yeah, it has. But it isn't inherent to the religion. It was spawned by the Crusades, and is a legacy of that.
9/14/2006 10:21:36 PM
^^^ from my earlier post
9/14/2006 10:27:36 PM
Certainly not. The causes of terrorism, and especially the current extremism centering from Islamic organizations, are complex and involve a long history, and plenty of other state actors as well as the United States. The intimate involvement of the United States in Al Qaeda's propulsion from the loosely armed radicals in the Mujahideen into an effective, operational, intelligence-like organization in Al Qaeda is what think Musharraf's referring to.
9/15/2006 3:01:00 AM
The book salesman hits the Daily Show on his publicity circuit...http://www.cnn.com/2006/SHOWBIZ/TV/09/27/musharraf.dailyshow.ap/index.html
9/27/2006 12:05:03 PM
I love it when leaders of foreign nations bash our leaders on our own shores!1!
9/27/2006 1:20:32 PM
if you actually read up on your history of the non-western world, you notice that there has been, in their minds, a constant struggle going on against the west ever since the first incursions into their territories. just read about (pick one) the crusades, early colonialism (spain, portugal, britain, france, holland), the slave trades, high colonialism (france, britain, germany, belgium, united states), involvement of the colonies in WWI, the Japanese Greater East Asian Co-Prosperity Sphere (which invokes quite a few of the same ideas being spoken of by Musharraf here), the Southeast Asian conflicts, the Latin American civil wars, the African revolutions, I could go on...in our age, its taking the form of an islamic-backed struggle against the west. in past generations, it was nationalist-backed, or communist-backed. the beat goes on...at the same time, while western incursion can be blamed for extremism/violence in many historical cases, it is important to treat each instance separately.[Edited on September 27, 2006 at 1:29 PM. Reason : .]
9/27/2006 1:27:25 PM
^ A-greed.
9/27/2006 1:37:32 PM
9/27/2006 1:49:27 PM
We gave them that right already. The UN is on our shores for a historically establishable reason, right? What reasons are they?
9/27/2006 1:53:59 PM
I don't care how Bush has fucked up etc etcI do care about leaders of foreign countries that do not extend the same privilidges to their citizens coming over here and making a mockery of us
9/27/2006 2:25:05 PM
Yeah. That's an cultural extension of Tom Friedman's Lexus / Olive Tree concept come to life within the confines of media. Our government allows it. Our capitalism encourages it. Voila.
9/27/2006 2:30:01 PM
yep... so there ya have it
9/27/2006 2:36:24 PM