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بدھ 5 نومبر 2003Wednesday, November 05, 2003
Afghan Mujahideen and Reagan
One learns something new everyday, sometimes from weblogs. Here’s an excerpt from Juan Cole about Reagan’s role in support of the Afghan Mujahideen fighting the communist Afghan government and the Soviets in the 1980s.
In fact, of course, Ronald Reagan bears substantial responsibility for September 11. He and his administration were so gung ho to roll back Communism that they funneled billions of dollars to scruffy far rightwing radical Muslim mujahidin in Pakistan and Afghanistan to fight the Soviets. Orrin Hatch even flew to Beijing for Reagan in 1985 to ask the Chinese to pressure Pakistan to allow the US to provide the Mujahidin with ever more sophisticated weaponry. Even the Pakistani military had initially balked at this crazy idea, knowing who the Gulbuddin Hikmatyars and Usama Bin Ladens really were (unlike clueless Reagan, who called them freedom fighters). But the US twisted the Pakistanis’ arms, and they gave in. Likewise, Reagan forced the timid Saudis to match US contributions to the Mujahidin. (And then after Sept. 11 the former Reagan officials who had twisted the arms of the Saudis, like Richard Perle, turned around and blamed Riyadh for spreading radical Muslim ideas!!) It was the CIA that first established terrorist training camps in Pakistan and Afghanistan, to hit the leftist government in Kabul. I wouldn’t be surprised if some of the camps used by al-Qaeda had been built originally by the Reagan administration.
I didn’t know that the US government was more enthusiastic about the Mujahideen than Pakistan or Saudi Arabia.
The Christian Coalition and other rightwing religious groups supporting Reagan even had a “biblical checklist” by which they wanted all senators and congressmen to be judged. And one of the items in the “biblical checklist” was “support for the Afghan ‘freedom fighters.’ The rightwing Christians were saying in the 1980s that if you didn’t support al-Qaeda and its Mujahidin allies, you didn’t deserve to be in Congress!
Very interesting.
Posted by Zack at November 5, 2003 4:04 PM in International Affairs
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Comments
Posted by: PhotoDude (13 comments) at November 6, 2003 11:10 AM
PhotoDude: I excerpted more from Juan Cole to give some context, but what I was surprised about was Hatch flying to Beijing to ask the Chinese to pressure Pakistan. According to Cole, this happened in 1985 which is pretty late in the game for the Mujahideen-Soviet Afghan war. I tink I’ll go back and make that part bold.
BTW, the US did support a number of Islamist leaders over the years in all kinds of places because they were the most reliably anti-communist.
Posted by: Zack (1784 comments) at November 6, 2003 9:28 PM
I thought it went down like this:
Saudis: Hey Reagan administration, you know how you’re arming Islamist radicals,er mujahadin in Afghanistan, well we could probably get a lot more to come in from all over the Muslim world and they’ll fight really hard. It’ll be good PR for us, and they’ll help you beat the Russians. What do you think?
Reagan Adm: Sounds good to me.
Is that not what happened?
Posted by: Wes (28 comments) at November 10, 2003 2:47 AM
Looking for a photo of Reagan in 1985 with Afghan Mugahideen, with Reagan pointing at the men & saying ‘These are the moral equivalent of America’s founding fathers.’ Can’t yet find the photo. Any help??? Mike
Posted by: Mike (1 comments) at May 30, 2004 12:54 PM
Mike: Sorry can’t help you there.
Posted by: Zack (1784 comments) at May 31, 2004 1:21 AM
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I think a lot of the history of the Mujahideen in Afghanistan gets mixed up, and though the specifics don’t change the aftermath, they’re worth noting.
It’s always been my understanding that there were two intentionally separate efforts to support resistance to the Soviet occupation. The US, largely via the CIA (and through Pakistan), provided material support for Afghan freedom fighters. Saudi Arabia agreed to provide support for non-Afghan resistance, the many men from many countries who came for jihad against the Soviets. Obviously, those who answered a call for jihad didn’t do it because of a fatwah from Ronald Reagan. It ought to be easy enough to track down just who did call for believers to go fight in Afghanistan in the ‘80’s.
Of course, those two efforts intermingled due to the “common cause.” And the distinction in no way excuses the aftermath, when all support (from all sources) dried up after the Soviets pulled out, leaving a vacuum that eventually created the Taliban. And a home for Al Qaeda.