Sunday, April 26, 2009

Swat Is Burning




















Swat Is Burning (www.swatvalley.org/swat/index.htm) is the name of a blog/website that I came across recently, which documents the fall of the Swat district of Pakistan into the hands of Taliban control. The advancement of the Taliban into areas of Pakistan has become quite alarming recently, due to how fast events seem to be occurring. They recently moved into another district called Buner, which is about 70 miles from the capital of Pakistan, Islamabad.

The border between Afghanistan and Pakistan, the infamous Durrand Line set up under British dominion slightly over a hundred years ago, is a line which essentially means nothing to the Pashtun peoples who live on both sides of the border, and they cross over back and forth freely and regularly. This is the area of the famous Khyber Pass, notable for infamous British last stands and final defeats, as was the case as well for the Russians in the 1980's, and where I fear we may become involved militarily at some point soon. This Pashtun belt is essentially the sanctuary for the Taliban, and is the area widely regarded as the place where Osama Bin Laden is hidden; kept safe by these people and their code of Pashtunwali, in which protection of the one who asks for it is the duty of all Pashtuns.

The Pashtuns have really never been defeated by anyone, and they essentially govern themselves in the north-west parts of Pakistan in which they predominate, as the Pakistani government has never been able to establish any sort of rule over them. The problem now is that this Afghan-Pakistan Pashtun belt, initially ruled by indigenous tribal systems of government, has increasingly been taken over by the Taliban, which were essentially religious students from the madrassahs or religious schools of north-west Pakistan who, in defeating the multiple warlords of Afghanistan and establishing a sort of welcome social order, brought with them an extremist version of Islam that is particularly extreme towards women (the traditional, moderate Islam of traditional Afghanistan was not like what the Taliban eventually brought along with them).

Now, this Taliban movement is expanding further into other areas of Pakistan from its north-west base of operations. It has taken over the Swat district (please refer to the Swat Is Burning blog), and is slowly encroaching upon the Pakistani capital of Islamabad. This is bad, not only for Pakistan, but for us as well, because Pakistan is a nuclear armed nation. We cannot and would not allow nuclear arms to fall into the hands of the Taliban, so the U.S. will continue to closely watch events in Pakistan. Some say that the situation is not so extreme as it might seem; that Pakistan itself would not allow encroachments from out of the Pashtun belt into non-Pashtun areas of the country (which is the major part of the country, made up of Punjabis, Sindhis, Balochis and other groups). It is alarming though, how the Pakistani army and police have essentially given up territory, and have in some cases fled from areas in which the Taliban were moving into.

The M.O. of the Taliban in Pakistan is essentially this: they move into a district, set up a radio station, establish Shariah law (or their version of it one might say), close all girls schools, read lists of names of those already found guilty of various "crimes", and in some instances take and behead some of these individuals from the lists. This establishes terror in a district, and this is how they gain control over the citizenry.

I used to be of the opinion that cultures are all different, and regardless of how "unusual" or even "bizarre" the cultural practices of others might be, that we should respect all cultures and how they organize themselves. After seeing the beating (on the legs) of the 17 yr. old girl on TV (not sure if it was in Pakistan or Afganistan) as her legs were held down, for being in the company of a similarly aged male, not her relative (this was her crime, and she was told that she was lucky she was not stoned), I no longer believe as I once did. The Taliban, while bringing order to a chaotic Afghanistan full of rape, pillaging and robbery, has established a system too repressive wherever it has went. This is not any form of traditional Afghan culture, Pakistani culture or Islamic culture, but an aberration of culture by an extremist group that now threatens the very existence of an established, nuclear state. We would do well to keep a very close eye on both Pakistan and the advancement there of a rising Taliban.

Saturday, April 18, 2009

The Lion of the Panjshir









The above are photos of a man named Ahmed Shah Masoud. Who is that? He looks like one of those "terrorists"! Why would you write about him on your blog?

Well, he was not a terrorist. He was a freedom fighter, or mujahideen, who fought against the Soviet Union when they invaded Afghanistan (he repelled nine separate advances of the Soviet armies into the Panjshir valley of Afghanistan, his homeland, and after that fought against the Taliban as that group worked to take rule in Afghanistan. An ethnic Tajik himself of Afghanistan, he allied with Uzbeks, Hazaras, Tajiks and some Pashtuns in what was called the Northern Alliance, to resist the advancement of the predominantly Pashtun Taliban forces. In the late 1990's, Masoud was allied with the United States in the fight against the Taliban in Afghanistan.

On September 9th, 2001, Masoud received a visit from two supposed Arab journalists, documenting his fight against the Taliban. These "journalists" turned out to be agents of Osama Bin Laden, a Taliban ally, and when they set up to interview Masoud, their "cameras" exploded in tremendous blasts, killing themselves, Masoud and several others present. Bin Laden had succeeded in taking out his sworn enemy, in paving the way for other plans that Ahmed Shah Masoud would surely have attempted to respond to had he lived. His assassination was critical as a removal of a vital enemy regarding events that would occur two days later, on September 11, 2001.

His military tactical skills and ability to lead men were and are legendary (his tactics are now studied in the Russian military academies by those he defeated), yet what I find so interesting about him was that he was a poet (as so many of the Tajik-Persian peoples are), trained in engineering and interested in architecture, and who lamented the fact that his newly built home in the Panjshir contained a large library with all of his books, which he wanted to go home and read in peace after 25 years of war against Russians, warlords and Taliban. And with some, special people, his charisma shows even through that amazing face; with his hawk-like nose and eyes that are certainly those of a poet, maybe a poet who had seen too much. I wish that I would have been able to meet Ahmed Shah Masoud, the Lion of the Panjshir.

You can read more about him at Wikipedia, and in the last two chapters of Sebastian Junger's book, "Fire".

Saturday, April 04, 2009

Yellow Moon










Yellow Moon
Neville Bros. (Live Album)


Oh, yellow moon, yellow moon
Why you keep peepin' in my window?
Do you know something,
Do you know something that I don't know?

Did you see my baby
Walkin' down the railroad tracks?
You can tell me, oh
If the girl's ever coming back

Is she hid out with another,
Or is she trying to get back home?
Is she wrappped up in some other's arms
Or is the girl somewhere all alone?

Can you see if she is missing me,
Or is she having a real good time?
Has she forgotten all about me,
Or is the girl still mine all mine?

With your eye so big an' shiny
You can see the whole damn land
Yellow moon, can you tell me,
If the girl's with another man, man?

Oh, yellow moon, yellow moon, yellow moon
Have you seen that Creole woman?
You can tell me,
Oh, now ain't you a friend of mine?

With your eye so big an' shiny
You can see the whole damn land
Yellow moon, can you tell me,
If the girl's with another man, man?

Oh, yellow moon, yellow moon, yellow moon
Have you seen that Creole woman?
You can tell me,
Oh, now ain't you a friend of mine?