The
20th anniversary of the so-called “war on terror”, which began with the 2001
invasion of Afghanistan, is marked by the withdrawal of United States troops
and the “return” of the Taliban to Kabul. In some ways, we are back in 2001,
and in others – there is no going back, given that the US war on terror has
killed over 800,000 people, and displaced 37 million more.
The
events of the past few days have forced on us a number of urgent questions. How
should we interpret what happened in Afghanistan? How does one express
solidarity with Afghans, and what forms of support should be abandoned?
(Perhaps, white liberal feminist tears/fears for Afghan women and girls that
still yet justify US imperial violence would be a good start.)
Do
Afghan social media campaigns to #SanctionPakistan obscure the role of US
empire and unintentionally foster white innocence? The #SanctionPakistan
campaign justifiably organises against decades of Pakistani policies of
providing material support to the Taliban, viciously racialising Afghan
refugees, and leaving its Pashtun and Baloch populations to bear the brunt of
state-sponsored Taliban violence, but does this exonerate US empire?
Of
course, the coverage of Afghanistan, by the time it arrives on your papers and
on your screens, is churned through narratives that make it familiar to people
– in other words, it has been read for Westerns. Violence appears organic to
its landscape and the character of its people and is presented as merely
another phase, one of many violent chapters.
But
the public confusion over what is going on also points to a growing desire for
the analysis of events and not a mere telling of events, which requires asking
some difficult questions and interrogating the presuppositions that underpin
prevailing paradigms on Afghanistan.
We
offer ways to understand Afghanistan differently knowing very well how fleeting
this desire to know is. As we write with Afghans, what we write now is not for
Afghans. Not only is it not what they need right now, it is nothing that
non-elite Afghans do not already know, while those in the elite are too
preoccupied with their investments and war-profiteering now being threatened to
pay attention.
As
a journalist committed to uncompromising anti-imperial analysis, and who study
the “war on terror”, stand with others in facing the daunting task of offering
critical theorising of Afghanistan today that does not add another layer of
betrayal of the Afghan population. The dominance of the geopolitics of
statecraft and development approaches coupled with the overwhelming whiteness
of Afghanistan Studies, however, contributes to what specialists consider and
experience as a longstanding deep crisis of knowledge production on
Afghanistan.
What
could we say in this moment of “emergency” that could recalibrate sensibilities
and understandings for those open to recalibration? Where were the moments of
“emergency” in the last two decades? The last four decades? Are we to believe
that the past 20 years of war and foreign occupation were only beneficial for
the Afghan people? That sovereignty only now has been lost?
The
Taliban spin the ease in which it took over Afghanistan in the last days as a
show of its popularity. Europe and the US spin it as Afghans are bad fighters
who lacked loyalty and surrendered, abandoning their weapons and vehicles so
willingly to the Taliban. Who will say that Afghans are simply tired of dying
for a war that is not, and never was their war?
We
have witnessed in the flurry a curious turn to the earlier defences for the
indefensible invasion and the “war on terror” that it initiated. A romanticised
offering of the foreign occupation provides deceptive indicators of girls in
school, women working (as if this alone indicates anything) or the joys of
listening to music, fashion or skateboarding.
Erased
in this sentimentality is how Afghans have been subjected to layers of violence
in the form of “humanitarianism”. In fact, the inaugural act of violence of the
US led-war – the invasion in October 2001- has been portrayed as an act of
care.
The
insistence on this secondary rationale for the war re-emerges in Afghan
commentators and development advocates, declaring the US withdrawal as
“betrayal” and “disappointment”. An accusation of dispensing with
responsibility betrays an internalised imperial paternalism: governing the
natives who cannot govern themselves.
To
illustrate this tangled intersection of humanitarianism, progress and violence,
one can refer to a long-term fieldwork from 2006 to 2012 which involved
accompanying widows to monthly ration distribution sites throughout Kabul.
Women
who relied on food rations were positioned to compete with one another for
scarce humanitarian “care”. The number of widows assisted was being
reduced, and ultimately phased out as neoliberal aid mandates attached to the
occupation stipulated that aid be converted to work, eventually forcing widows
to perform menial work for basic food.
In
an absurd, Kafkaesque exercise, widows had to prove their aid worthiness by
answering the same questions posed to them every single month. Over and over
again they were required to give a rushed rendering of their lives,
corroborating that they had been widowed – a monthly performance of their
widowhood.
As
the aid programmes kept reducing their numbers of beneficiaries the widows
observed that not all causes of widowhood were regarded as equal: “We figured
out that if you tell them that the Taliban killed your husband, you get
support. We are not useful and they do not care if we tell them the Soviets killed
our husbands, or if our husbands died in the Kabul wars in the 1990s, or if our
husbands died young of curable diseases, or from stress or from heroin use.
They only care if the Taliban made us widows,” the women said.
Two
women had crafted compelling even if fictive narratives about how the Taliban
killed their husbands. They asked for help in doing the math so that everything
added up – the years they claimed their husbands died coincided with the ages
of their children, etc – so the deaths of their husbands by the Taliban was
credible.
There
were seventeen years, at least, of violence and war prior to the Taliban, yet
the extent of the duration of violence Afghan women had experienced was
unimportant to imperial humanitarians as they “saved” them. Personal and social
histories of violence were erased and only violence by the Taliban was
acknowledged. Women widowed in the four decades of serial war had to alter
their intimate histories with war and violence just to be eligible enough to
benefit from an occupying power’s “care”.
This
example does not exonerates the Taliban, nor suggests that the armed group is
not an actual author of violence, or more precisely – to suggest that the
Taliban making women widows is just calculated fiction. The Taliban kills,
makes widows, and will make more. The Taliban’s violence, however, cannot be
seen as a pathology.
Its
violence is a “normal” manifestation of exceptionally abnormal global
machinations and treachery on the part of a willing bunch of actors – listing
only the most significant: the US, Saudi Arabia, Israel, Europe, and Afghan
puppet leaders and commanders, all who participated in creating the conditions
of possibility for forever incalculable violence unleashed upon Afghans.
By
unhinging the global from the origins of terror, it became possible to
provincialise it, localising culpability for terror into discrete bombable
sites/zones, as was the case for Afghanistan. The Taliban is a remnant of these
global machinations, and yet exceeds them. It is monstrous, as it materialises
the cumulative cunning of an unhinged world. Afghans certainly need not be
accountable for the Taliban, or to it.
What
is at stake is recognising how certain violence is entirely obscured, erased
even, when the Taliban is present. Widows are made to rewrite histories of
violence for survival. Communities terrorised and made collective suspects by
an occupation which treated every Afghan man as a potential militant, every Afghan
woman as needing to be saved in the banality of evil that is modern state
warfare.
Deaths
authored by the Taliban are registered by our now sedimented sensorium, as more
deathly than the deaths of Afghans by US drone strikes, air strikes, the
deaths by Afghan militias (death squads) trained and funded by the CIA, the
deaths of Afghans by the most criminal commanders, their militias and the
Afghan state that embraced them, and certainly more deathly than Afghans
dying en route crossing multiple borders, as they confront another side of the
same racialised, securitised, militarised architecture they were fleeing.
The
“toxic masculinity” of the Taliban fighters is somehow more toxic than
unrestrained white violence, Western occupation, American torture, American
drones. Theirs is a violence that is otherworldly, and unlike the West, it is
savage, intentional and remorseless. Theirs is a violence that sets the
boundaries between the barbarian and the modern, “us” and “them”.
Why
have people come to see the logic of imperial violence on the Afghan population
as more logical, instead of as (or more) illogical, as (or more)
illegitimate, as (or more) repulsive as Taliban violence?
Prevailing
theories of the Taliban are not only racialising in the ways they present the
group as a violent pathology, but also as belonging to a rural insurgency,
always returning the Talib to a rural conservative Pashtun of the South – an
unruly backward figure who prevents the nation’s progress.
It
is also a strange reverse of the romanticism of ethnocultural nationalism which
locates authenticity in those with roots in the land, here the nation is
birthed in the urban centre, where modernity, not land, has breathed life into
it.
How
does one see beyond the global war on terror’s piles of bodies? Can we? The US
empire certainly wants people to. Recent reports of war crimes by the
Australian and British armies which showed Afghanistan had become a killing
field, as Western men so desired, gesture to the continued power of Western
innocence, Western redemption and its global reach. Western violence, to borrow
from cultural anthropologist Talal Asad, is presented as unintentional and
rational, despite its murderous trail, and its overarching intent is always
just. War criminals remain heroes.
We
will mainly hear from a class of Afghans in the coming weeks whose careers have
been forged in the war industry of “care”, which gave birth to a vampiric
aid industry, both committed to maintaining Afghan dependency, even as they
speak of women’s empowerment, education and progress. Another disciplining
effect on Afghan discourse in an effort to be heard. Another symbolic violence
that silences, even as it gives Afghans a platform.
The West loves its monsters as much as it loves its own and only freedom. The war on terror is often told like a fairytale, of Muslim women as damsels in distress, and Western knights bravely fighting brutes to free them.
Monsters repel as much as they fascinate, but ultimately, they mask the violence which made them..
PALESTINA
INTERACTIVE: Palestinian Remix
Palestinian Center for Human Rights
International Solidarity Movement – Nonviolence. Justice. Freedom
Defense for Children
Breaking the Silence
BRASIL
AOS FATOS: As declarações de Bolsonaro, checadas
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