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The Coming Apocalypse - Starvation in Afghanistan may obliterate Sept. 11
by Geov Parrish
Does anybody in this country get it?
Does anybody understand what the United States is on the verge of doing?
Experienced, respected food aid organizations -- Oxfam, the International
Red Cross, the Red Crescent, the United Nations -- warn that even before
the bombing of Afghanistan began on October 7, up to 7,500,000 Afghans
were, through a gut-wrenching combination of poverty, drought, war,
dislocation, and repression, at risk of starving to death this winter. The
number was only about one million before September 11, when the U.S. forced
the borders to be closed and cut off food supply lines (because it "might
help the Taliban.") When the bombing began, almost all delivery of food
from the outside world stopped. Now, while some distribution has
tentatively resumed, roads and bridges are destroyed, millions more people
are dislocated, and the snow is steadily approaching from higher elevations
and from the north.
For weeks, aid organizations, along with voices from throughout the region,
have been begging the United States to call off its bombing campaign, at
least for long enough so that aid agencies can conduct the massive transfer
of food into and throughout Afghanistan that is necessary to prevent death
on a scale the world has not seen in a long, long time.
Up to seven and a half million people at risk of dying in a matter of
months. That's three times the number of people that, by the wildest
estimates, Pol Pot took years to kill. Thirty-five times the number that
died in Hiroshima and Nagasaki, combined. If 5,000 died on September 11 (a
number that reports are now suggesting is vastly inflated), we're talking
the equivalent number of deaths to ten World Trade Centers, every day, for
150 days. Slow, painful deaths. Entirely avoidable deaths. Deaths whose
sole cause is not the United States, but most of which can still be
prevented--except that the United States is refusing to allow them to be
prevented.
It repulses me to say this, but I suspect a lot of Americans don't care.
They'd rather see the United States "get" Osama bin Laden (though there's
no actual evidence that we're any closer to that today than we were two
months ago, and probably the task is harder as he becomes more popular and
protected). An apocalypse of this scale is simply unimaginable to most of
us: no food, in a country with no roads left, no vehicles, displaced
people, lost relatives, where the winters are too cold to walk or ride a
donkey even to an adjoining village where there might be food. It's a long
way from driving to the nearest Safeway or drive-thru lane when you're
hungry. But a lot of people in this country do not even care that a
staggering number of innocent people are on the verge of being condemned to
death, or that most of the world will blame the United States. Correctly.
We should care. If the object of this war was to thwart terrorism--to bring
existing terrorists to justice, and to isolate them politically and
culturally so that others won't throw in their lot--in less than a month,
the United States has perpetrated one of the most abject failures in
military history. It still does not know where any of Al-Qaeda's leadership
even is. It is on the verge of succeeding in its goal of creating a
unified Afghanistan government--unfortunately, Afghans are uniting behind
the Taliban, as warlord after warlord sets aside long-standing differences
to stand shoulder to shoulder to fight the American invaders. Tens of
thousands more young Muslim men are lining up to cross the borders into
Afghanistan to join them. The ones that survive the experience will carry a
lifetime of hate: living, breathing proof that within a month, America
bombed a country but lost its war in spectacular fashion.
That's today. What will happen if millions of Afghans die this winter? How
much future terrorism will the dunderheads of the Bush Administration have
inspired then? If several million Islamic sisters and brothers starve to
death, innocent civilians trapped between winter and the rage of America,
how many of Islam's 1.2 billion adherants--or the five billion other people
on earth--are going to take George Bush's proclamations about eradicating
"terrorists" and "evildoers" to heart, and label him, and us, as the prime
examples?
In less than two months, the United States government has gone from the
moral high ground of being victimized by one of the most heinous crimes in
world history, to being within a week or two of quite visibly committing a
crime so much larger as to obliterate the world's memory of September 11.
Remarkably, almost nobody in the United States seems to have either
noticed, understood, or cared. While even progressives wring their hands
over the ambiguity of a war fought under the auspices of America's
legitimate right to defend itself, a situation is unfolding in which there
is absolutely no moral ambiguity at all, and for which many people will
want to hold each of us as accountable as the world held post-war Germans.
Where were you? What did you say? How could you allow this to happen? Or, a
more likely reaction in the Islamic world: Why should millions of you not
die as well? America will have set out to isolate one man, and instead
killed millions and isolated itself. And much of the world will not rest
until we are brought to our knees.
Seven and a half million people. The snowline is creeping down the
mountainsides. The food is almost gone. The infrastructure is in shambles.
There will be no "independent verification" of the body count. There wasn't
in the Holocaust or Rwanda or Cambodia, either. The judgment of the world
did not need one. The clock is ticking. Where were you?
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