The Islamic Emirate Of Afghanistan:
Rethinking Afghanistan
Shaaban 25, 1432 A.H, Thursday, July 28, 2011
In the Name of
Allah, the Most Compassionate, the Most Merciful
According to the official figures of Pentagon, 1680 American
soldiers have been killed in Afghanistan so far. Other Allied
invading forces have lost 928 soldiers. However, unofficial
estimate is manifold higher than these. Furthermore, America
spends $100 billion in Afghanistan annually, to continue the
war against the Mujahideen.
The total cost of the war in the past decade in Iraq and
Afghanistan, including the loans taken by Washington and the
interests incurred, come to the tune of $5 trillion. The
American headlong descent into the financial melt-down does
not stop here. It is still exacerbating as the time goes by.
But the question remains, is America more powerful than when
she was in 2001, at the time of invasion of Afghanistan? Is
she enjoys the same status and respect at world level as
advocate of human rights as she enjoyed a decade ago, in 2001?
Obviously, after the gross human rights violations by American
interrogators in Abu Gharib, Guan Tanamo and Bagram jails
against miserable and defenseless detainees; the drone attacks
and the nights raids by the invading American troops in which
thousands of innocent men and women have lost their lives, no
one will be ready to call America as protector of human rights
and other precious values of civilization. Then what America
has gained from her adventure of invading Afghanistan? The
pundits in Washington must re-consider this point.
Furthermore, they have imposed a corrupt government on the
people of Afghanistan. The former warlords who have hold on
the government, grip billions of dollars in corruption
annually and send the bucks abroad through the Kabul airport
and other clandestine bank accounts.
Common people are not able to get their legal grievance
redressed. Instead, they take their cases to courts set up by
the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan parallel to those of the
Kabul Administration. There, they get justice in a few days
rather than waiting for years. That too without losing time
and money in form of corruption. Still another question
arises, are the neighboring countries of Afghanistan more
secure and stable today than they were in 2001, at the time of
the reign of the Islamic Emirate? Certainly not. The ground
realities are before all. The American invasion of Afghanistan
has foisted its portion of anarchy and blight on every
neighbor. The more this war continues, the more every one will
suffer; the invaders presence in Afghanistan will add to
chaos, uprisings and disintegration in some regional
countries. Likewise, the more the Americans are intent on
denying the Afghans their right of independence, the more
their debts and casualties will keep spiraling up.
So is there any eagerness to solve these problems?
Surely, if there is willingness, the Afghan imbroglio will
come to an end but:
-- First of all, the main actors should stop the blame-game of
calling the Mujahideen as terrorists. The so-called war on
terrorism should not be used as a clout for colonialist
expansionism in Afghanistan or in the region.
-- The Afghans should be given their right of independence as
enshrined in the UN Charter.
-- The Islamic Emirate should be recognized as a political and
military power as it has already proved in the past ten years.
It should be provided conducive and normal scope to play its
role in peace and stability of Afghanistan, the region and the
world.
-- The Afghans should be given their right of
self-determination to form an Islamic government as per the
aspirations of the people of Afghanistan.
-- The Americans and all foreign invading forces should seek a
face-saving exit from Afghanistan in understanding with the
Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan.
-- The regional countries should create an environment of
cooperation and trust with the Islamic Emirate based on common
grounds of national interests of all neighbors.
-- As a responsible party and as a proven military and
political force, the Islamic Emirate will abide by its
commitments to stability of the region following the
withdrawal of foreign forces from Afghanistan.
The Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan