Reprinted from Strategic Culture
US Army solder on a Poppy Field in Afghanistan
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Here we go again. In yet another Pentagon precision strike, a residential building in Achin district of Nangarhar province was hit as a crowd welcomed home a tribal leader returning from the Hajj.
At least 13 civilians were turned into collateral damage. The Pentagon of course does not discuss the details of counter-terror operations, but it's currently reviewing all materials related to this strike.
Nothing obviously will come out of it -- adding the civilian dead to the non-stop mounting toll of Operation Enduring Freedom (Forever).
Someone that actually is bound to endure his freedom in full splendor is former warlord, head of Hezb-i-Islami and Butcher of Kabul Gulbuddin Hekmatyar.
The Pentagon does not detain the monopoly of shelling civilians in Afghanistan. Hekmatyar also did it with relish in the early 1990s -- besides running an underground torture prison in neighboring Pakistan.
In Kabul during Taliban rule in the late 1990s, I talked to many residents during the civil war who were allied with Tajik commander and Lion of the Panjshir Ahmad Shah Massoud -- assassinated two days before 9/11 -- as they recalled Hekmatyar's forces relentlessly shelling civilian neighborhoods.
Hekmatyar has been in hiding for almost two decades now -- since 1997. He has not yet returned to Kabul. In 2002, in Kunar province in Afghanistan, I was trying to track him -- as well as Osama bin Laden -- with my Peshawar fixer, and we kept running into US Marines asking us for information. After Osama disappeared, Hekmatyar quickly became the number one dead or alive Bush II target in Afghanistan, branded as a global terrorist by Washington and blacklisted by the UN in 2003.
Now he's up to amass political power, after being pardoned by the government of president Ashraf Ghani. His outfit, Hezb-i-Islami, is a spent military force for years now. Politically it's another story. With the deal, Hezb militants will now be able to run for office.
It was a hard nut to crack. Hekmatyar has always refused to sign any deal as long as US/NATO troops de facto occupy Afghanistan. The final deal establishes Hezb and US/NATO agree to disagree -- as long as Hekmatyar refuses to support terrorism. And Ghani's people have to do the paperwork to remove Hezb-i-Islami from the UN's list of terrorist organizations.
Whether incorporating Hezb into the fragile government in Kabul will intimidate the Taliban remains an open question.
CIA rat line in effect
Afghanistan for all practical purposes continues to be occupied by foreigners; in this aspect Hekmatyar's logic happens to mirror the Taliban's logic -- even though the successors of Mullah Omar won't be admitted to the power table in Kabul.
A Western covert intel operative with knowledge of how Afghanistan was handled at the highest levels in Washington lays down the case:
Osama bin Laden was a failed CIA asset that was used as a pretext to invade Afghanistan to restart the heroin trade, which is a trillion-dollar business. Mullah Omar was our ally against the Soviets, and a most honorable man, who shut down all the heroin plantations in Afghanistan after the Taliban took over as they considered the over 300,000 dead who died from heroin overdoses per year immoral. We turned on him and betrayed him. Osama was a guest of Mullah Omar, and he merely asked for evidence of Osama's involvement in 9/11. Since there was none, as he was not involved, none could be furnished. Bush II ridiculed on television even the thought that he would be required to give evidence to a bow and arrow Mullah Omar.
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