Afghanistan and the Artificial US War on Terror (Anand Gopal’s New Book)
http://www.juancole.com/2014/06/afghanistan-artificial-terror.html
Afghanistan and the Artificial US War on Terror (Anand Gopals New Book)
By Juan Cole | Jun. 23, 2014
I guest-hosted a book salon over at Firedoglake on Sunday concentrating on Anand Gopals expose of the so-called war on terror in Afghanistan. Below is my review of the book. Do go to FDL to read the whole salon, where Mr. Gopal was kind enough to answer our questions about the book and the subject.
No Good Men Among the Living: America, the Taliban, and the War through Afghan Eyes
Anand Gopals No Good Men Among the Living is a deconstruction of the American War on Terror as it pertained to Afghanistan. It is an argument that the US military allowed itself to fall into chasing phantoms, put up to search and destroy missions by tribal allies mainly interested in using the Americans to settle feuds and deflect rivals. They got drawn into what anthropologists call the segmentary lineage political system of rural Afghanistan.
In short, as Gopal tells the story, there was no Taliban activity in Afghanistan to speak of by 2002, but the US military machine required an enemy, and its clients among the men on the make in Karzais Afghanistan were glad to supply alleged Taliban (sometimes even tagging as such men who had spent a decade fighting the puritanical seminarians). In the course of these betrayals and injustices, the US managed actually to create a growing Taliban resistance to its presence in the country.
The book is a 21st century Catch-22, and as with the original, is leavened by episodes of dark humor and profound irony.