Pubdate: Mon, 01 Oct 2001
Source: Vancouver Courier (CN
BC)
Copyright: 2001 Vancouver Courier
Contact:
editor@vancourier.comWebsite:
http://www.vancourier.com/Details:
http://www.mapinc.org/media/474Author:
Geoff Olson
U.S. NURTURED RADICAL ISLAM, IGNORED
DRUG DEALING
Most of us have heard the mainstream media's
drill on Osama bin Laden,
chief suspect as ringleader in the terrorist
attacks on Washington and New
York. The scion of a wealthy Saudi family,
finding purpose in
fundamentalist Islam, becomes a "freedom fighter" in the
Afghan-Soviet war,
and ends up exporting terrorism a decade
later.
This tale of faith, double-dealing, and vengeance is as old as
Jericho, but
with a modern twist: boy meets religion, boy gets religion, boy
goes nuts
and blows up assets belonging to the Great Satan.
While the
outlines of bin Laden's past have received mention by Ted Koppel
and
co.-sometimes even with passing mention of the CIA's covert support for
the
mujahideen's 1979-1992 war against the Soviets-it might be instructive
to
look a closer at the historical roots of the Islamic fundamentalist
movement
in Afghanistan, and the source of the militant's fanatical hatred
of the
United States.
In 1979 the largest covert operation in the history of the
CIA was launched
in response to the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan. Working
with Pakistan's
Inter Service Intelligence-an entity midwived by American
interests-the
idea was to turn the Afghan war into a total holy war against
the Soviet
Union by all Muslim States. According to the foreign policy
journal Foreign
Affairs, "some 35,000 Muslim radicals from 40 Islamic
countries joined
Afghanistan's fight between 1982 and 1992. Tens of thousands
more came to
study in Pakistani madrasahs.
Eventually more than
100,000 foreign Muslim radicals were directly
influenced by the Afghan
jihad." Financial support for the resistance was
supplied by Saudi Arabia.
Among the supporters was the rich young financier
Osama bin Laden, who
travelled to Afghanistan to join the anti-Soviet
resistance.
Arms
supplies rose to 65,000 tons annually by 1987, accompanied by a
"ceaseless
stream' of CIA and Pentagon specialists who travelled to the
secret
headquarters of Pakistani's ISI.
The mujahideen' did not deal directly
with American intelligence, but
through the ISI instead.
Afghanistan's
CIA-funded guerrilla camps-ironically, now prime targets for
an American
counterattack-were responsible for the training of the freedom
fighters,
integrating military instruction with the teachings of Islam.
Using U.S.
marine manuals translated into Arabic, and the time-tested
principles of CIA
psychological operations, the ISI worked with peoples'
beliefs rather than
against them. Guerrillas in training were taught that
Islam was a complete
socio-political ideology, that holy Islam was being
violated by the atheistic
Soviet troops, and that the Islamic people of
Afghanistan should reassert
their independence by overthrowing the leftist
Afghan regime propped up by
Moscow.
A lesser known aspect of American involvement in the
Afghan-Soviet war were
the consequences for the global drug trade.
On
June 18, 1986, The New York Times reported that the mujahideen "have
been
involved in narcotics activities as a matter of policy to finance
their
operations.The opium warlords worked under cover of the
U.S./Saudi/Pakistani
axis that funded their arms sales and aided the
conveyance of the drugs into
the European and North American markets where
they account for 50 per cent of
heroin sales."
According to University of Wisconsin history professor
Alfred McCoy, author
of The Politics of Heroin in Southeast Asia, CIA assets
again controlled
the heroin trade in the region, as they did in Vietnam and
Laos a decade
earlier. "As the Mujahideen guerrillas seized territory inside
Afghanistan,
they ordered peasants to plant opium as a revolutionary tax.
Across the
border in Pakistan, Afghan leaders and local syndicates under
the
protection of Pakistan Intelligence operated hundreds of
heroin
laboratories." During a full decade of wide open drug dealing,
McCoy
discovered, the American Drug Enforcement Agency in Islamabad failed
to
make one major seizure or arrest.
American intelligence looked the
other way, preferring the war on
drugs-which would have run counter to
subsidies for the fighters, after
all-to be subordinated to the war on the
Soviet Union. The fallout: a
worldwide heroin epidemic beginning in the
mid-seventies, traceable in
retrospect to the Afghan-Soviet war.
More
on the "blowback" from American support for the Islamic militants
in
Afghanistan next
week.
__________________________________________________________________________