Remember MaiwandEric Margolis reflects
on some lessons from history in Afghanistan. Here is the guts of the
article:
"The death last Sunday of six Canadian soldiers in
southern Afghanistan reminds us of Santayana’s famous maxim that those who
fail to study history are doomed to repeat it.
The soldiers were killed near Maiwand, a name meaning
nothing to most Westerners. But there, on July 27, 1880, during the bloody
Second Anglo-Afghan War, the British Empire suffered one of the worst defeats in
its colonial history.
Two years earlier the Raj (Britain’s Indian
Empire) had invaded Afghanistan for a second time. The British put Afghan puppet
rulers into power in Kabul and Kandahar.
Ayub Khan, son of Afghanistan’s former emir,
rallied 12,000 Pashtun (or Pathan) tribal warriors to fight an advancing British
force whose mission was, in London’s words, to “liberate”
Afghan tribes and bring them “the light of Christian civilization.”
Today, the slogan is “promoting democracy.” The fierce Afghan tribal
warriors routed the imperial force, composed of British regulars, including the
vaunted Grenadier Guards, and Indian Sepoy troops, after a ferocious battle. Sir
Arthur Conan Doyle used a British army doctor who fought at Maiwand as his model
for Sherlock Holmes’ companion, Dr. Watson.
I recall this epic Afghan victory against British
colonialism because understanding today’s war in Afghanistan requires
proper historical context. A century and a quarter after Maiwand, Pashtun
warriors of southern Afghanistan continue to resist another mighty world power
and its allies, who have been faithfully following the imperial strategy of the
old British Raj.
What we are really seeing is a war by Western powers
seeking to dominate the strategic oil corridor of Afghanistan, directed against
the Pashtun people who comprise half that nation’s population. Another 15
million live just across the border in Pakistan. What we call the
“Taliban” is actually a loose alliance of Pashtun tribes and clans,
joined by nationalist forces and former mujahedin from the 1980s anti-Soviet
struggle.
The U.S. and NATO are not fighting
“terrorists” in Afghanistan and they are certainly not winning
hearts and minds. They are fighting the world’s largest tribal people. The
longer the Westerners stay and bomb villages, the more resistance will grow.
Such is the inevitable pattern of every guerrilla war I have ever
covered.
If 160,000 Soviet troops and 240,000 Afghan Communist
soldiers could not defeat the Pashtuns in ten years, how can 50,000 U.S. and
NATO troops do better?"
none
Posted: Wed - April 18, 2007 at 04:56 PM |
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About David M. Hart
I was born and raised in Sydney, Australia and now work for a non-profit educational foundation in the US. Before moving to the US with my family I taught modern European history at the University of Adelaide, South Australia. I have studied at universities in Australia, Germany, the US, and Britain and consider myself a citizen of the world and a supporter of no particular nation state. [More]
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Total entries in this category: Published On: Apr 18, 2007 05:20 PM |
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