They just got a different tool to use than we do: They kill innocent lives to achieve objectives. That's what they do. And they're good. They get on the TV screens and they get people to ask questions about, well, you know, this, that or the other. I mean, they're able to kind of say to people: Don't come and bother us, because we will kill you. Bush - Joint News Conference with Blair - 28 July '06

Thursday, June 29, 2006

Afghanistan: Welcome back to the Great Game

Guardian

They were gathering in the poppy harvest when the British troops arrived a month ago in Helmand, the hottest, poorest and most drug-ridden province of southern Afghanistan.

The acreage of poppies is down this year, but in spite of the drought and the fighting, the yield has been good.

The total crop from the south of Afghanistanis expected to net just under $3bn, but that money will go to the warlords, the middlemen and traffickers; only tiny sums will reach the farmers.

The Taliban, with their cohorts of sharp-featured teenagers in black turbans fresh from the madrasas of the refugee communities straddling the Pakistan border, have been telling anyone who will listen in the opium villages along the Helmand river that the British have come to burn their crops and destroy their lives.

"Most of our problems come from across the border," declares the newly restored Afghan defence minister, General Abdul Raheem Wardak, a former mujahideen commander against the Russian occupation way back when. "That's where they get their good equipment, training and recruits."

The general doesn't mince his words. Some say he is likely to be the next US favourite to take over in Kabul, should the already stumbling Hamid Karzai fall in the next few months.

A British colonel who made much the same critique of the new strength of the Taliban coming from Pakistan got an official telling-off after the Guardian reported his words.

"The Taliban have been building a shadow authority here," says Lieutenant Colonel Stuart Tootal, commanding the Helmand taskforce. "There has been no security here since the Taliban regime fell four years ago, no police and no law at all."

The new Taliban is now engaged in a small war against the British-led forces in Helmand. In the past 10, they have fought two major battles, one lasting all day, at Musa Qala, in which three British soldiers have died. Read more