Strength Through Peace endorsed the following resolution
regarding the US-NATO occupation of Afghanistan prepared by the organization
“Historians Against War” (see
http://www.historiansagainstwar.org) in October of 2008:
- Whatever views we hold
on the initial US military intervention in Afghanistan in the wake of the
September 11 attacks in the US, it is now clear that the US/NATO presence in
this country has become an occupation, increasingly resented and opposed by
large sections of the population.
- Despite the relief that
met removal of the totalitarian Taliban government by US and NATO forces,
the new government, chosen under the direction of the Bush administration,
has distanced itself from the people, is rent with corruption, and barely
governs anything. Outside of Kabul, warlords and criminal elements operate
with impunity, the opium trade grows, violence -- including violence by the
occupation forces -- proliferates, and the Taliban is resurgent.
- The support for
fundamentalist warlords and the corrupt Karzai regime demonstrate that the
purpose of US policy in Afghanistan is not to support the self-determination
of the Afghan people, but to extend the bankrupt global war against terror
deeper into Central Asia, and to strengthen US geopolitical power in this
region. The US/NATO war on Afghanistan is not a "good war" in contrast to
the "bad war" on Iraq.
- The current consensus in
higher political circles, including both major party candidates for
president, that the war in Afghanistan must be escalated will only deepen
the regional crisis and suffering of the Afghan people. The historical
experience of other outside powers trying to control Afghanistan (most
spectacularly, the Soviet Union from 1979 to 1989, invading from next door
over a wide common border) suggests that even a greatly escalated US/NATO
war effort will only multiply the deaths and the suffering.
- The US and NATO should
immediately begin withdrawing their military and political assets from
Afghanistan so that the Afghan people can have room to decide their own
future. Continued US/NATO action in the country is a large part of the
problem and cannot be the solution.
- We call for regional
agreement among Afghanistan's neighbors to guarantee Afghan stability, to
preserve the ethnic and religious diversity of the country, to assure the
full participation of women in social life, and to provide space for all of
the people of Afghanistan to fully exercise their right to
self-determination.