Beijing Review

When ‘Might Is Right’ Prevails

- By Ong Tee Keat

While memory across the globe remains scarred by the humanitari­an disaster in Syria, another crisis looms in Afghanista­n, where the nation is devastated by widespread hunger and a collapsing healthcare system. According to the UN World Food Program, only 2 percent of the Afghan population has enough food. Over 3 million children are grappling with malnutriti­on and another 1 million are expected to die of starvation.

The internatio­nal community, under the influence of Western media, is quick to attribute the disaster to the Taliban rule following the fall of Kabul on August 15, 2021. But they remain chillingly silent on who actually crippled the Afghan economy.

Dystopian scenario

Perhaps global memory is still fresh of the speedy collapse of a U.S.-backed Kabul regime, earlier than Washington expected, last year. The return to power of the Taliban, an organizati­on that remains on the American sanction list, triggered an asset freeze on the Afghan Central Bank’s reserves of $9.5 billion, a sizeable portion of which is in accounts with the New York Federal Reserve and U.S.-based financial institutio­ns. By doing so, the new Taliban administra­tion has been denied access to Afghanista­n’s reserves. But the move in turn starved all Afghan banks used by local businesses and citizens of access to U.S. dollars, plunging the nation’s liquidity into immediate disarray.

Widespread poverty and a dire need for food and fuel amid the winter cold presented the world with a dystopian scenario. Almost the entire Afghan population now teeters on the brink of poverty. The rate of poverty is expected to soar to 97 percent by June from the already alarming 72 percent recorded last September, according to UN statistics.

The situation is now going from bad to worse. While the U.S. and its allies were determined to totally isolate the Taliban regime from the internatio­nal financial system in the name of countering human rights abuses by the regime, the Afghan people at large are made to bear the brunt of these punitive measures.

The anticipate­d humanitari­an crisis has since been unfolding under the close watch of the internatio­nal community.

In mid-January, the UN and its partners appealed for more than $5 billion for the year—the largest-ever appeal for aid for a single nation. It was proposed that some $4.4 billion of the aid would be directed to shore up the collapsing basic services, which have left 22 million people in need of assistance inside the country.

The rest would be channeled to 5.7 million refugees requiring help in neighborin­g countries like Iran and Pakistan. The appeal was made alongside assurances that funds would in no way be accessible to the Taliban authoritie­s.

However, this appeal for internatio­nal interventi­on did not convince the U.S. administra­tion to lift the asset freeze. Nor could the images of the devastated nation flashing in the internatio­nal media deter President Joe Biden from lifting the freeze for the wrong reasons.

Double retributio­n

Barely a month after the aid appeal, Biden made an executive order to have $7 billion in assets belonging to the Afghan central bank unfrozen and split into two halves. One portion is to be allocated to a proposed American-controlled trust fund in the name of humanitari­an aid to the Afghan people, and the balance be distribute­d to the families or relatives of victims of the September 11 terrorist attacks. Both allocation­s are expected to take some time to roll out as was made clear by the Biden administra­tion. In the latter, claims by the victims’ families further complicate matters as they involve lengthy judiciary processes in the U.S. But to the Afghan people, the funds’ rightful owners, the freeze lift is irrelevant as it contribute­s nothing to the alleviatio­n of the prevailing humanitari­an disaster.

Yet the White House insisted that the presidenti­al executive order is designed “to provide a path for the funds to reach the people of Afghanista­n, while keeping them out of the hands of the Taliban and malicious actors.” In reality, the conspicuou­s delay of funds reaching the Afghan people will only amplify the magnitude of their sorrow day by day.

Indeed, the decision is baffling. No volume of political rhetoric from the spin doctors in the West could ever conceal the American hypocrisy, or whitewash the ugly nature of this self-serving decision. Any sensible mind would have doubted what right Washington has in determinin­g the recipients of aid distributi­on amid the unfolding humanitari­an disaster in Afghanista­n. Furthermor­e, given the prevailing hostility between the Taliban and the U.S., any reliance on the American network of aid organizati­ons to distribute its humanitari­an contributi­ons in Afghanista­n is simply unrealisti­c. In the current perspectiv­e, the exclusion of coordinate­d internatio­nal aid, in the form of water and food, healthcare and sanitation services under the auspices of UN agencies, is glaringly baffling.

The reigning hegemon’s “might is right” philosophy further prevails when the sorrow-stricken Afghan people are made to bear the cost of compensati­ng the families of the victims of the September 11 attacks. The presidenti­al executive order, which demands $3.5 billion of the Afghan central bank reserves be paid to victims, has no clear justificat­ion. The White House has shown t he world once again how a hegemon can trample upon the needs and aspiration­s of a nation, which had fallen prey to a “regime change” with the mere stroke of a pen.

In retrospect, the Afghan people were first penalized for the wrong reason when the U.S. launched its “war on terror,” albeit Afghans were not the perpetrato­rs. The war succeeded in realizing the U.S. agenda of “regime change” by terminatin­g the Taliban rule, but the anti-terror war raged on for two more decades in Afghanista­n. This sent the country’s economy into free fall, and unleashed a humanitari­an crisis once asset freezes and economic sanctions were imposed following the collapse of the U.S.backed administra­tion.

It appears that the innocent Afghan people are destined to face retributio­n twice. The end of the “war on terror” with the botched exit of the American troops has yet to end the sorrow inflicted upon them. For the Afghans, the latest White House decision to pay the September 11 victims’ families with Afghan funds is also a form of retributio­n.

Be that as it may, the deafening silence from the internatio­nal community on the plight of Afghans seems to be endorsing the chilling connivance of the U.S.’ “might is right” philosophy under the present internatio­nal order.

This is a gross travesty of justice in modern times—more so when millions of lives are destined to perish soon under the apathetic watch of the global community.

 ?? ?? Hundreds of homes are damaged when an earthquake of 5.3 magnitude jolts west Afghanista­n on January 18; at least 26 were killed
Hundreds of homes are damaged when an earthquake of 5.3 magnitude jolts west Afghanista­n on January 18; at least 26 were killed
 ?? ?? People work at a confection­ery factory in Mazar-i-Sharif, north Afghanista­n, on January 18
People work at a confection­ery factory in Mazar-i-Sharif, north Afghanista­n, on January 18

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