![]() |
US
Taxpayers Sent Billions to Our Enemies in Afghanistan
|
|
Even
before September 11th, most Americans were well aware of the hostility
that many Middle Eastern nations have for the U.S. Our experiences
with Iran, Libya, Iraq, and now Afghanistan have understandably soured
many Americans on the entire region. Indeed, the majority of anti-American
sentiment in the post-Cold War era originates in the Middle East.
What many Americans don't realize, however, is the extent to which
their own foreign aid tax dollars are spent funding our current and
future enemies in the region. We should
recognize that American tax dollars helped to create the very Taliban
government that now wants to destroy us. In the late 1970s and early
80s, the CIA was very involved in the training and funding of various
fundamentalist Islamic groups in Afghanistan, some of which later
became today's brutal Taliban government. In fact, the U.S. government
admits to giving the groups at least 6 billion dollars
in military aid and weaponry, a staggering sum that would be even
larger in today's dollars. Bin
Laden himself received training and weapons from the CIA, and that
agency's military and financial assistance helped the Afghan rebels
build a set of encampments around the city of Khost. Tragically, those
same camps became terrorist training facilities for Bin Laden, who
uses some of the same soldiers our military once trained as lieutenants
in his sickening terrorist network. Our heroic pilots are now busy
bombing the same camps we paid to build, all the while threatened
by the same Stinger missiles originally supplied by our CIA. Once
again, the stark result of our foreign aid, however well-intentioned,
was the arming and training of forces that later become our enemy. Our
foolish funding of Afghan terrorists hardly ended in the 1980s, however.
Millions of your tax dollars continue to pour into Afghanistan even
today. Our government publicly supported the Taliban right up until
September 11. Already in 2001 the U.S. has provided $125 million in
so-called humanitarian aid to the country, making us the world's single
largest donor to Afghanistan. Rest assured the money went straight
to the Taliban, and not to the impoverished, starving residents that
make up most of the population. Do we really expect a government as
intolerant and anti-west as the Taliban to use our foreign aid for
humane purposes? If so, we are incredibly naive; if not, we foolishly
have been seeking to influence a government that regards America as
an enemy. Incredibly, in May the U.S. announced that we would reward the Taliban with an additional $43 million in aid for its actions in banning the cultivation of poppy used to produce heroin and opium. Taliban rulers had agreed to assist us in our senseless drug war by declaring opium growing "against the will of God." They weren't serious, of course. Although reliable economic data for Afghanistan is nearly impossible to find (there simply is not much of an economy), the reality is that opium is far and away the most profitable industry in the country. The Taliban was hardly prepared to give up virtually its only source of export revenue, any more than the demand for opium was suddenly going to disappear. If anything, Afghanistan's production of opium is growing. Experts estimate it has doubled since 1999; the relatively small country is now believed to provide the raw material for fully 75% of the world's heroin. How tragic that our government was willing to ignore Taliban brutality in its quest to find "victories in the failed drug war.
Ron Paul, M.D., represents the 14th Congressional District of Texas in the United States House of Representatives. |