| On
September 9, 2001 in the northern province of Takhar,
Ahmed Shah Masood, an important commander in the anti-Taliban
alliance in Afghanistan was wounded in a suicidal
bomb attack. Two days later on September 11th suicide
bombers attacked the U.S. Pentagon and destroyed the
World Trade Center in New York. Coincidence? On September
12th Masood became an obituary, and the most important
leader of the Afghan resistance in opposition to the
Taliban vanished into history. On September 13th the
Taliban government invoked an entreaty for restraint
by the United States, appealing on behalf of its suffering
people.
Terrorism is a war carried out by hijacked planes,
collapsed buildings and sundry antagonists. Time will
never overtake its remorseless misery and searing
horror. Muslims in Arab countries are circumspect
in their opinion (because it could be dangerous).
America, powerful but vulnerable, asks why the assassins
would kill themselves and others-"Isn't it un-Islamic
to kill innocent people?" Most citizens of the
United States know their government indirectly helped
arm the Afghan rebels to fight against the Taliban.
And where Afghan freedom from fear now bows to totalitarianism,
the ruling party's bigotry of all things American
is equaled only to their intolerance of all other
religious faiths…a vision out of focus with
any worldview.
Afghanistan, described as a "land of nothing,"
is landlocked by Iran along its western border and
Pakistan to the east. A mountainous country that never
proceeded far enough from the Stone Age is ruled by
a government which cannot adequately feed its people
and yet hosts a multi-millionaire, Osama bin Laden.
Like "the man who came to dinner," bin Laden
has stayed to preside over the poor, paying the government
millions for hospitality shown while drawing the wrath
of "the great Satan" upon this brittle land.
Inspired by the current cataclysm-that no new ethos
shall obtain-the Taliban enforces Afghani social behavior
by strict adherence to Islam. Then by some oxymoron,
well outside any ideological motive, condones bin
Laden's practice of killing innocent people.
But the FBI and others will carry out a confident
investigation before frisking this ironically fragile
yet rugged country for a millionaire who prefers to
prevail among withered men and vast ruins.
The rulers of Afghanistan adduce that we should trust
them. But trust, like truth, is a casualty of war,
sending a dusty population on a desperate flight from
American reprisal to the Iranian and Pakistani borders.
The Taliban argues for restraint from the US on behalf
of the aggrieved Afghanis, but makes no such appeal
to its honored guest, bin Laden the aggressor. To
plea for restraint from the victim, without insisting
upon self-control by the victimizer, is not the wisest
response.
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By Frederick Louis Richardson
DreaMerchant® All Rights Reserved.
September 20, 2001 |