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Afghanistan Page

 

This page presents some perspectives on the situation in Afghanistan that you may not have seen. It is not intended to be comprehensive. Rather, the purpose is to bring certain things to your attention and to serve as a resource.

 

Aftermath: Post-Taliban Afghanistan

Is Afghanistan any better off now than it was before the Taliban? Has it been "liberated"? Or are the Afghan people only facing more brutality than they did before?

Abuse at U.S. prisons in Iraq mirrored at jails in Afghanistan, by R. Jeffrey Smith

Afghan warlords bigger threat than Taliban, by Duncan Campbell

Afghanistan Imperiled, by Ahmed Rashid

Afghanistan at the mercy of narco-terrorists, by Ian Traynor

Afghanistan could implode, MPs warn, by Ewan MacAskill

Afghanistan: Back to warlords and opium, by J. Alexander Thier

Aid Workers Threaten to Leave Unless Safety from Warlords Can be Guaranteed, by the Associated Press

Aid workers can't be protected in Afghanistan, by Conor Foley

Civil war fear as Afghan city falls to warlord, by James Astill

Death by fire: the agonising way out for trapped Afghan women, by Declan Walsh

Don't mention the war in Afghanistan, by Robert Fisk

Enhancing human dignity in Afghanistan?, by Jim Lobe

It's not just Guantanamo and Abu Ghuraib: Detainees in Afghanistan tortured by US troops, by Duncan Campbell and Suzanne Goldenberg

Now we pay the warlords to terrorise the Afghan people, by Isabel Hilton

Plunder goes on across Afghanistan, by James Astill

Returning Afghans were promised a new life. They have misery and death, by Nick Meo

Rule of the rapists, by Mariam Rawi

Seven die as move to oust Afghan city's warlord prompts riot, by Declan Walsh

The Brutality of Post-Taliban Afghanistan, by Robert Fisk

U.N. Report Paints Dismal Picture of Afghanistan, by Associated Press

US Afghan allies committed massacre, by David Rose

US-Backed Warlords Threaten Afghan Elections, by Jim Lobe

Violence and Repression in Western Afghanistan, by Human Rights Watch

Violence mars run-up to Afghan election, by Declan Walsh

West still failing to protect Afghan women, by Jonathan Steele

Women face misery in Nuristan, by IRIN

 

The Prisoners at Guantanamo: What Does America Think It's Doing?

The Taliban and al-Qa'ida prisoners being held in Cuba are in a legal no-man's land. If the WTC attacks were "an act of war", then shouldn't these prisoners be treated as prisoners of war? If the WTC attacks were a criminal act, then why is America at war with Afghanistan? Have these people been charged with anything other than defending their country under attack? If all people are to be held innocent until proven guilty how can the U.S. governement claim these individuals are "terrorists" and connected with the WTC attacks? And what about the torture? Wake up, America! This is wrong! It isn't justice anymore, this is acting out of vengeance.

'Even death row is preferable to this', by David Rose

A Glaring Absence of the Due Process of Law, by the Editors of the Scotsman

A Lot of People Hate the Double Standard Nation, by Molly Ivins

Afghan POWs at Guantanamo Base: Bound and gagged, drugged, caged like animals, by Patrick Martin

Al Qaeda Prisoners Entitled to Humane Treatment, by Sean Love

As Captor, U.S. Risks Dehumanizing Itself, by William Pfaff

Attorneys, Rights Groups Slam Gitmo Tribunals, by Jessica Azulay

Brits freed from X-Ray allege torture, by Antiwar.com Blog

Congratulations, America: You Have Made Bin Laden A Happy Man, by Robert Fisk

Denying Captives Rights Will Return to Haunt Us, by Mary Robinson (United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights)

Ensure that the Geneva Conventions Are Upheld, by Geoffrey Robertson

Ex-Guantanamo Bay workers claim prisoner abuse was widespread, by Julian Borger

Fact and Myth About Prisoners of War, by Rachel Giese

Follow the Geneva Convention, by Michael Ratner

Gitmo Trials Designed to Convict, by Eli Clifton

Guantanamo Britons Kept in Dark Over Rights, by Vikram Dodd

Guantanamo Detainee: They tied me up like a beast and began kicking me, by The Observer

I Know What Camp X-Ray is Like, by Charles Glass (was a hostage in Beirut in 1987)

International Injustice, by the Editors of the Guardian

International Law Forbids Trials of POW'S Before Military Commissions; Violation of Convention May Amount to War Crime, by Center for Constitutional Rights

No rights, no charges, no lawyers, by Vikram Dodd and Michael White

On What Authority?, by Stephen Gowans

Pentagon Excludes Human Rights Observers from Guantanamo Trials, by Jim Lobe

Prisoners of War at Guantanamo: Bush Policy Endangers American and Allied Troops, by Kenneth Roth

Prisoners of What?, by Geov Parrish

Red Cross Finds Detainee Abuse in Guantanamo, by Neil A. Lewis

Rumsfeld's dirty war on terror, by Seymour Hersh

Spare Us the Wild West Justice, by the Editors of the Independent

Stick to the Geneva Convention, by the Editors of the Guardian

Stop This Brutality in Our Name, by the Editors of The Mirror

Subverting the Geneva Convention, by Lawrence McGuire

Taping a bag over the heads of Afghan prisoners stops us feeling anything for them, so we can breakfast in peace, by Terry Jones

Terry Waite: US in Guantanamo Acts Like My Beirut Captors, by Vikram Dodd

The Geneva Convention, by Jude Wanniski

The Guantanamo Prisoners: Justice or Revenge?, by Terry Waite (one of the hostages held in Beirut from 1987-1991)

The Heart of Darkness Beats Clear and Steady in Guantanamo Bay, by Heather Mallick

The Missing Questions, by Alan Bock

The abuse goes on, by Clive Stafford-Smith

To hell and back, by Martin Bright, Gaby Hinsliff, Anushka Asthana and Paul Harris

Treatment of al-Qaeda and Taliban Prisoners by the United States Offends Sense of Justice, by Peter Beaumont

U.S. Cannot Ignore Prisoners' Rights, by Michael Byers

U.S. Must Treat Guantanamo Prisoners Humanely, by David A. Love

U.S. Officials Misstate Geneva Convention Requirements, by Kenneth Roth

U.S. Will Be Judged on Captives' Fate, by Charles Levendosky

US guards filmed beatings at Guantanamo, by David Rose and Gaby Hinsliff

Vietnam War Hero Condemns Camp X-Ray, by Mark Coleman

War Against Terror Is Making Villains Of Us All, by Richard Norton-Taylor

We Will Not Tolerate Abuse of War Prisoners, by Hugo Young

What the world should know about Guantanamo, by Douglas Valentine

What to do with Our 'Detainees'?, by Tom Malinowski

Why is U.S. Flouting Rules on Prisoners?, by Thomas Walkom

More articles on Guantanamo:

'Fair' Trial Will Be a Travesty in Terror Cases

Abuse led Navy to consider pulling Cuba interrogators

ACLU: President authorized torture

Afghanistan to Guantanamo Bay - the story of three British detainees

Amnesty International Takes Aim at United States in Annual Human Rights Report

Army Doctors Implicated in Abuse

At Guantanamo, a Prison Within a Prison

At war with Gitmo grilling

British judge's anger at US torture

Confess or die, US tells jailed Britons

FBI Agents Allege Prisoner Mistreatment in Guantanamo

FBI agents questioned value of harsh interrogation techniques

FBI Claims More Arab Prisoners Abused

Geriatric 'Terrorists' on Guantanamo

Gitmo Detainees Say Muslims Were Sold

Guantanamo Bay Military Reviews Ruled Illegal

Guantanamo Briton 'in handcuff torture'

Guantanamo has 'failed to prevent terror attacks'

Guantanamo jail switch planned

Indefinite Detention

Injustice in Guantanamo

Is This American?

Judge Blocks Transfer From Cuba of 13 Yemeni Detainees

Maybe None of Them are Terrorists

not the way to win hearts and minds

Orientalist garbage

Panel Ignored Evidence on Detainee

Red Cross Finds Detainee Abuse in Guantánamo

Republican Judge Takes Aim at Bush Terror Policies

Rumsfeld's dirty war on terror

some victories for the rule of law

Tales of Despair From Guantanamo

Terror detainees and America's gulag

UN Experts Cite Credible Reports of Torture at Guantanamo

Uncle Sam has His Own Gulag

US plans permanent Guantanamo jails

Videos Show Guantanamo Prisoner Abuse

We Are All Torturers Now

Who'll defend the detainees?

Plus: Read the concerns of human rights organizations like Human Rights Watch.

Also: Inside Camp X-Ray - See for yourself what it's like; from the BBC

 

The Qala-i-Jangi Massacre: War on Terrorism Turns into a War Crime

What happened at the Qala-i-Jangi fortress in Mazar-i-Sharif? Was the United States involved in the massacre of several hundred people? How can America claim to be fighting terrorism from the moral high ground and then be a party to this? What happened at Qala-i-Jangi was wrong! Americans need to learn the truth about what happened, and hold the American government responsible. Note: all of the reports linked here are by Western journalists. This can't be dismissed as Muslim "propaganda".

Afghan Prison Massacre, by Geov Parrish

How to 'Drown Rats': Eyewitness Account of Qala Jangi Slaughter Ignored, by Laura Flanders

If the U.S. Won't Protect P.O.W.s, Who Will, by Scot Lehigh

POW Atrocities: An Ugly Lesson, by Holly J. Burkhalter

Playing the Great Game: As the Afghan War Reaches a Climax, Questions About the Slaughter of Prisoners Cannot Be Brushed Aside, by Jonathan Freedland

The Castle of Death, by Justin Huggler

There is No Excuse for This Savagery: We Too Are Responsible for the Massacre at Qala-i-Jhangi Fort, by Isabel Hilton

U.S. Forces Behind War Crimes at Mazar-i-Sharif, Media Covers Up, by Stephen Gowans

War Crimes And Media Omissions, by Danny Schecter

We are the War Criminals Now, by Robert Fisk

 

Life Under Taliban Rule: What is the Truth?

What was it like in Afghanistan under the Taliban? Was it really as bad as we hear from the mass media? Below are links to some reports by outsiders who went to Afghanistan and saw for themselves. What has been lacking in the coverage of Afghanistan is objective eyewitness reporting. Read these reports and judge for yourself.

Canadian Physician Describes Healthcare in Afghanistan, by Raza M. Khan, BSc, MD, CCFP

Don't Hate the Afghans, by William T. Vollman

The Taliban are Well-Liked, by Mutsuko Murakami

Also: If you are committed to making an honest and fully-informed decision, you should read what the Taliban have to say for themselves. Hear both sides before you make a judgment. Here is an official article from the Taliban's website: The Taliban and Women. This article particularly discusses the questions of education and healthcare for women.

 

Bonus: Some reports about the war you may not have heard

Reports on civilian casualties and other consequences of the war, by Professor Marc W. Herold, Ph.D., M.B.A., B.Sc.:

Some additional commentary on civilian casualties in Afghanistan:

17 Afghan villagers killed in US bombing raids, by Rory McCarthy

Afghans are still dying as air strikes go on. But no one is counting, by Ian Traynor

All the News That's Fit to Print or Omit, by Geov Parrish

Civilian Casualties, Theirs and Ours, by William Blum

Forgotten Victims, by Jonathan Steele

Killing Innocents: Does Anyone Out There Care?, by Ed McManus

Lies, Damn Lies, and Pentagon Statistics, by Fran Shor

On the Recognition of Death, by Suren Pillay

Tears and Rage: Afghan civilian casualties make the New York Times only through the backdoor, by Laura Flanders

The Forgotten Dead, by Geov Parrish

The Others, by Howard Zinn

Trolling the Web for Afghan Dead, by Julia Scheeres

U.S. Mis-strikes in Afghanistan: Accidents or Possible War Crimes?, by David Corn

US airstrikes kill 15 Afghan children, by James Astill

We Can't Just Forget about Dead Afghan Civilians, by Robert Jensen

When Numbers Get Serious, by Jacob Sullum

When the Body Count Doesn't Count, by Scott MacLeod

Why Does U.S. Massacre Entirely Fail to Move Us?, by Vincent Browne

Why the Civilian Death Toll is Not Considered News, by Vincent Browne

 

How Many U.S. Casualties Have There Really Been? from the Institute for War and Peace Reporting - Even if you think that Afghan casualties are just the "price of war", wouldn't you at least like to know the truth about the number of American casualties? Also see Are U.S. Casualties Being Lowballed? by Laura Flanders.

 

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