Afghanistan war: A bloody failure
The fighting in the south has driven 80,000 from their homes, and the civilian casualty rate has doubled over the past year: more than 200 were killed by US and other Nato troops in June alone - far more than are estimated to have been killed in Taliban attacks.
Seumas Milne
How can this bloody failure be regarded as a good war?

The western occupation of Afghanistan has brought neither peace nor development - and it fuels the terror threat, writes Seamus Milne.

Enthusiasts for the catastrophe that is the Iraq war may be hard to come by these days, but Afghanistan is another matter. The invasion and occupation that opened George Bush's war on terror are still championed by powerful voices in the occupying states as - in the words of the New York Times this week - "the good war" that can still be won.

While speculation intensifies about British withdrawal from Basra, there's no such talk about a retreat from Kabul or Kandahar. On the contrary, the plan is to increase British troop numbers from the current 7,000, and ministers, commanders and officials have been hammering home the message all summer that Britain is in Afghanistan, as the foreign secretary, David Miliband, insisted, for the long haul.

Read more...

 

ʬ†

Related Items

 

Get our e-newsletter

Email:

Lobby your MP on Afghanistan

Parliament will debate Afghanistan on Thursday 9 September. Please lobby your MP to attend the debate and to vote for all British troops to come home.

Lobby your MP here...

Anti-War Song of the Week

Masters of War by Pearl Jam
Dedicated to Tony Blair

Tackling Islamophobia

Conference: Tackling Islamophobia in the Classroom.
Details...

MPs speak against Afghan war

Video of speeches made by MPs at the Cut the War, Scrap Trident, Troops Home meeting in parliament on 28.06.10, including by Diane Abbott, Caroline Lucas, John Trickett and Eric Joyce.
Powered By Page_Cache by Ircmaxell