The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Afghan women are cast aside – now they’re no longer useful to the West

- Alex Bell

On Monday November 19 2001, Afghan women were welcomed into Downing Street. Twenty years later, they’ll be lucky to escape Kabul.

Fleeing Afghanista­n in such a rush means we betray an original principle of the invasion.

We went in not just to hunt Osama Bin Laden, but to modernise Afghan society. That this became an afterthoug­ht in our departure is an indictment of all the allied government­s.

After 9/11, we were told radicalise­d Saudis had carried out the attack, led by the Saudi Arabian cleric, Osama bin Laden. We were also told Saudi Arabia was not our enemy, but Afghanista­n was because it was home to terror groups.

An allied invasion was proposed and public opinion was divided.

America’s military was clearly superior to everyone else’s but its role as global policeman was questioned. A doubt that began in the 1960s with the Vietnam war had become fixed in the public mind.

The first Iraq war of 1990 had been a military success but it had the whiff of pointless gesture. Saddam Hussein was still in power.

When President Clinton sent troops into Somalia, they were televised live arriving on the beach – American power appeared more entertainm­ent than risk.

The Balkan wars of the mid-1990s had shown that allied military interventi­on could be spectacula­rly inept.

Given the Soviet Union’s decade-long failure to suppress Afghanista­n, invading seemed foolish, even if it did catch the bad guys.

The Blair government was divided on the matter and American public opinion was unsure. Then the plight of women was introduced.

The US president’s wife, Laura Bush, took over her husband’s radio address to speak about how women were denied liberty and education under the Taliban.

A week later, Cherie Blair invited Afghan refugee women into Number 10. She spoke with fervour at the event, according to reports. Impassione­d by the miserable lot of women under the Taliban, she hinted it was our progressiv­e duty to free them from religious fanaticism.

This message was echoed by the next speaker, veteran left-wing figure, Clare Short.

Short was becoming a martyr for peace and, politicall­y, Tony Blair had to win her over if the government was to appear united. The condition of women was the issue that brought her round.

It was novel then to cite the treatment of women as a reason for war.

To highlight the condition of women in the Taliban regime seemed new and right.

How could the UK and America, happily enjoying boom years and third way politics, not oppose the misogyny of the Taliban?

When Tony Blair first announced British involvemen­t with the US in Afghanista­n in October 2001, the humanitari­an aspect was already part of the war’s purpose:

“We have to act, for humanitari­an reasons to alleviate the appalling suffering of the Afghan people, and to deliver stability so that people from that region stay in that region.”

This became central to the allied occupation of Afghanista­n.

Over 20 years, our troops have protected all manner of educationa­l and cultural projects which have transforme­d conditions for Afghan women. The sacrifice of soldiers’ lives was in the name of progress. That was a noble cause. Yet our departure was framed around military concerns, costs and public weariness with forever wars, in president Biden’s phrase.

In truth, Afghanista­n had ceased to be a war. It was an interventi­on which protected the human rights of Afghans. Our departure takes Afghanista­n back to where it was. Refugees, rape and oppression.

To present this, as western government­s have, as an unfortunat­e side-effect of a military exercise is to distort history.

We had a mission to help. Everyone knew this, or we would have withdrawn in 2011 when bin Laden was killed.

Defence minister Ben Wallace says that, once America decided to go, European government­s had no choice but to follow. He broke down in tears on Monday as he acknowledg­ed the consequenc­es.

Not to question his sincerity, but we are entitled to wonder why he and others didn’t do more to promote the original motive of the war. Where were the Downing Street receptions for Afghan women in 2021?

In July, Boris Johnson he told the Commons: “In the unforgivin­g desert of some of the world’s harshest terrain – and shoulder-to-shoulder with Afghan security forces – our servicemen and women sought to bring developmen­t and stability.”

They succeeded in their mission. It’s the politician­s who failed. Britain had 750 troops in Afghanista­n in July of this year. American forces amounted to 2,500.

Combined, they protected 38 million people, including a generation of girls who had grown up free to play and go to school.

We wish them luck, and our regret.

It was an interventi­on which protected the rights of Afghans

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 ??  ?? DESPERATE TIMES: An internally displaced woman stands with her daughters at a makeshift tent in Mazar-i-Sharif, Afghanista­n.
DESPERATE TIMES: An internally displaced woman stands with her daughters at a makeshift tent in Mazar-i-Sharif, Afghanista­n.

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