Apr 022010
 

It seems that virtually every time we ‘save the people’ of a country, especially in the Muslim world, we commit the same error, over and over again.  We keep feeding rabid dogs.  They keep biting our hands.  Let’s remember that the CIA gave Osama $30 million to form Al Qaeda to commit terrorist acts against the USSR or that Donald Rumsfeld brokered the original deal that gave Saddam chemical weapons to use against Iran.  Now the latest dog in the kennel is not happy with us.

bush-and-karzai Hamid Karzai, the Afghan president, delivered extraordinarily harsh criticism on Thursday of the Western governments fighting in his country, the United Nations, and the British and American news media, accusing them of perpetrating the fraud that denied him an outright victory in last summer’s presidential elections.

Just days after meeting with President Obama, Mr. Karzai, who has increasingly tried to distance himself from his American backers, said the coalition troops risked being seen as invaders rather than saviors of the country.

The speech, later broadcast on local television, seemed a measure of Mr. Karzai’s mood in the wake of Mr. Obama’s visit, in which Mr. Obama rebuked the Afghan president for his failure to reform election rules and crack down on corruption. At points in the speech, Mr. Karzai used inflammatory language about the West.

“There is no doubt that the fraud was very widespread, but this fraud was not committed by Afghans, it was committed by foreigners,” Mr. Karzai said. “This fraud was committed by Galbraith, this fraud was committed by Morillon and this fraud was committed by embassies.” Mr. Karzai was referring to Peter W. Galbraith, the deputy United Nations special representative to Afghanistan at the time of the election and the person who helped reveal the fraud, and Philippe Morillon, the chief election observer for the European Union.

Later in the speech he accused the Western coalition fighting against the Taliban of being on the verge of becoming invaders — a term usually used by insurgents to refer to American, British and other NATO troops fighting in Afghanistan.

“In this situation there is a thin curtain between invasion and cooperation-assistance,” said Mr. Karzai, adding that if the perception spread that Western forces were invaders and the Afghan government their mercenaries, the insurgency “could become a national resistance.”

On Wednesday, Mr. Karzai suffered a political defeat when the lower house of Parliament rejected a revision of the election law that would have allowed him to appoint all the members of the agency that investigates election irregularities. Currently the United Nations appoints three of the five members.

The American Embassy and the United Nations mission in Kabul had no comment on Mr. Karzai’s speech… [emphasis added]

Inserted from <NY Times>

We should not be surprised that Karzai is thoroughly corrupt.  He was appointed President to represent US corporate interests, because he was a Unocal employee.  Also, had he the slightest shred of integrity, GW Bush would never have made him our designated puppet.

I have long said that a foreign policy that respects the cultures and includes the well-being of the people, not corporate economic exploitation, is the only path to peace.  Mohammed ElBaradei echoes my view.

ElBaradei Western governments risk creating a new generation of Islamist extremists if they continue to support repressive regimes in the Middle East, the former head of the UN nuclear watchdog, Mohamed ElBaradei, has told the Guardian.

In his first English-language interview since returning to Cairo in February, the Nobel peace prize-winner said the strategy of supporting authoritarian rulers in an effort to combat the threat of Islamic extremism had been a failure, with potentially disastrous consequences.

"There is a need for re-evaluation … the idea that the only alternative to authoritarian regimes is [Osama] Bin Laden and co is a fake one, yet continuation of current policies will make that prophecy come true," he said. "I see increasing radicalisation in this area of the world, and I understand the reason. People feel repressed by their own governments, they feel unfairly treated by the outside world, they wake up in the morning and who do they see – they see people being shot and killed, all Muslims from Afghanistan, Iraq, Somalia, Sudan, Darfur."

ElBaradei said he felt vindicated in his cautious approach while head of the International Atomic Energy Authority. He revealed that all his reports in the runup to the Iraq war were designed to be "immune from being abused" by governments. "I would hope that the lessons of Iraq, both in London and in the US, have started to sink in," he said.

"Sure, there are dictators, but are you ready every time you want to get rid of a dictator to sacrifice a million innocent civilians? All the indications coming out of [the Chilcot inquiry] are that Iraq was not really about weapons of mass destruction but rather about regime change, and I keep asking the same question – where do you find this regime change in international law? And if it is a violation of international law, who is accountable for that?"

ElBaradei, who has emerged as a potential challenger to the three-decade rule of Egypt’s president, Hosni Mubarak, said western governments must withdraw the unstinting support for autocrats who were seen to be a bulwark against extremism.

"Western policy towards this part of the world has been a total failure, in my view. It has not been based on dialogue, understanding, supporting civil society and empowering people, but rather it’s been based on supporting authoritarian systems as long as the oil keeps pumping."

The 67-year-old added: "If you bet on individuals, instead of the people, you are going to fail. And western policy so far has been to bet on individuals, individuals who are not supported by their people and who are being discredited every day."… [emphasis added]

Inserted from <Common Dreams>

The war in Afghanistan is just the tip of this iceberg.  The cost of trying to impose the will of US corporations on captive peoples is too high.  If the US is to be a world leader, and we should be, we mist lead by example, not by fiat.

Share

  6 Responses to “The Problem With US Foreign Policy”

  1. A simple low tech 9 grams of lead through his forehead would be one solution. The Taliban could claim responsibility. Our intelligence (oxymoron) services are not amateurs at this sort of thing.

  2. If coalition forces were not present, I am sure Karzai would point fingers to that being the cause of corruption…

    He is just playing off popular sentiments to stay in power. It is much like Glenn Beck and the rotating cast at Fox News playing off the fears of Americans to try and damage the reputation of this administration in order to regain power… Karzai wants to stay in power and the Obama administration is willing to hold him accountable (to a degree), which of course is a conflict of interest for Karzai, and he does not like that, so the solution is to blame those around you while absolving yourself of your sins…

  3. Karzai has always been a puppet of the US – we knew that as soon as Bush appointed him that he was corrupt just by being associated with him. TWM is right; I would prefer to do this the legal way (through elections), but we’ve already seen how he tainted those as well in order to stay in power. Let him whine about the corruption being caused by other people; we all know who’s really responsible.

    And Iraq is permanently f’ed up because of us – it may never be right again I feel for those people as well as the Afghans. I hope that Bush and his whole cabal pay for what they’ve done to those people.

    • Sadly, Lisa, that does not look likely. And the ridiculous thing is that, if the roles were reversed, the GOP would use every trick in the book to try to put Obama in prison. Look at Clinton. They made getting a BJ a capital offense.

Sorry, the comment form is closed at this time.