Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

War games raging for centuries

- Georgie Anne Geyer

If the world today seems to you like a confusing or confoundin­g place, you are certainly not alone.

Sometimes it seems like a puzzle gone mad, with pieces jumping up and down on their own and leaving only a heap of unhappy and unrelated parts.

But think about it this way for a moment: The world — and particular­ly our American part in it — is actually a series of stories, and if you take those stories step by step and analyze them, those puzzle pieces can eventually fit together into something that makes sense.

A small piece of news, for instance, just jumped out at me: A respected American military officer, Army Gen. John W. Nicholson Jr., testifying that outside powers, led by Russia, have increased their interferen­ce in the 16-year-old Afghan war in the past year.

Speaking before a Senate panel, the general said that Moscow has pushed a “false narrative” to “publicly legitimize” the Taliban.

This band of bloody brothers is fighting bitterly against the Afghan government, which is supported by us and is most kindly described as “shaky,” while the war itself is said to be, at best, a “stalemate,” every day bringing higher and ever more unsustaina­ble, disproport­ionate losses for the poor Afghans.

First let’s look at the basic facts. To do that we have to go back to the Russians’ disastrous entry into Afghanista­n in 1979, an invasion that evoked mass hatred of Moscow among the Afghans and led to the Russians’ humiliatin­g defeat and retreat 10 years later.

It was mostly the Taliban, a group of rabid Islamic puritans, who drove them out and then imposed a horrid terroristi­c regime.

But where did these perfervid Taliban fighters come from? Why, they were the direct result of our forming and arming what were then called the “mujahedeen” in the 1980s.

Once the Soviets left, we left too, until we came back after 9/11 looking for the attack’s al-Qaida instigator­s.

Since then, we have been fighting the Taliban as well as the al-Qaida remnants — and now the Russians are again in the “Great Game,” as the European colonial fighters called the brutal, destructiv­e Afghan wars of the 19th century.

Let’s go back for just a moment to 1842.

That January, 4,500 British soldiers, along with 12,000 Indian camp followers and 2,000 horses, camels and cattle, were “retreating” from Kabul to Jalalabad when they were attacked by Afghan “jihadis” (yes, the term was used then) and utterly destroyed, their blood coloring the ice and snow across the mountain passes.

So now we see the Taliban, not dissimilar to those jihadis of nearly two centuries ago, having been formed by us, now fighting against us, and the Russians, who were also players in that old Great Game, now back in Afghanista­n supporting the Taliban that drove them out.

Or, as The Wall Street Journal wrote in one of the few articles on this developmen­t: “Moscow is befriendin­g the heirs of the insurgency that dealt the Soviet Union its most humiliatin­g military defeat and helped lead to its collapse.”

One has to wonder: Does this White House and this president, Donald J. Trump, understand the nature of Vladimir Putin’s “policies” or of these games you are veritably forced to play when you get into these desperate, tribal, borderless parts of the world?

There is no mystery about Putin’s intentions or actions, from Libya, to Syria, to Yemen, to Bulgaria, to Afghanista­n.

As Brian Michael Jenkins, one of the top analysts of terrorism, put it in a recent speech, Putin is “rebuilding the Russian empire by bits.”

And we? Ironically, and sadly, it is we who have provided him with every possible opportunit­y to do so.

Virtually every single one of the supposed Russian “victories” these days is built upon our foreign policy blunders. We were born as a nation protected by two great oceans.

But especially since World War II, we have crossed those natural protective barriers to play ugly games in the eternally doomed, borderless Afghanista­ns of the world, providing our enemies with opportunit­y after opportunit­y.

How many more, O Lord?

 ??  ?? Georgie Anne Geyer
Columnist
Georgie Anne Geyer Columnist

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