Azizullah, the serious-minded son of a Pakistani farmer, yearned for martyrdom, his family said. This week the Taliban made his wish come true.The zealots inspired him to jihad, trained him to shoot and dispatched him to fight the infidel Americans across the border in Afghanistan. So it was fitting that after he died last Sunday night, trapped under a hail of American firepower, that a procession of black-turbaned men brought him home.

“He always wanted to die like this, a heroic death. We are very proud of him,” said his brother, Gul Nasib, a solemn looking man with a drawn face, at their home in Bagarzai Saidan, a village on a yawning plain in Pakistan’s Baluchistan province. The Afghan border lay 30 miles north.

Azizullah died in Panjwayi, a violent district of Kandahar province where US A-10 “warthog” planes pounded a religious school filled with Taliban. The Americans claimed to have killed up to 80 fighters; yesterday a human rights group said 34 civilians perished too.

The battle was the climax of Afghanistan’s bloodiest week since 2001. A succession of firefights raged across Kandahar and Helmand, where 3,300 British troops are being deployed as part of an ambitious Nato mission. By yesterday an estimated 339 people were dead, most of them Taliban fighters like Azizullah.

But the Taliban nerve centre is allegedly 30 miles south in the provincial capital Quetta, which a British officer, Colonel Chris Vernon, recently described as “the major headquarters”.

Once a British colonial garrison town, Quetta has long been a home to spies, smugglers and fighters. During the 1980s it was a base for Afghan mujahideen battling Soviet troops inside Afghanistan.

Diverted western aid, such as American vegetable oil and United Nations sheeting, are on sale in the main bazaar. For those interested, so are guns, heroin and hashish smuggled across the border from Afghanistan.

The Taliban move through the town like a dark whisper. Yesterday morning in Pashtunibad district, small groups of young men with kohl under their eyes and silky white or black turbans on their heads strolled between the vegetable stalls and clothes traders. By midday many had pushed into the city’s mosques, where preachers dished up the usual fiery fare.

The Taliban’s true strength, however, is felt across the border. Over the past six months the insurgents have ratcheted up their campaign to overthrow President Karzai’s western-backed government – an idea that once appeared quixotic but has now acquired some potency. At least 32 suicide bombs and almost daily roadside bombs so far this year reveal an enemy that is better organised, funded and motivated than ever before

“It hasn’t been this bad since 2001,” said one westerner with several years’ experience in Kandahar. “And I think it’s going to get worse before it gets better.”

Take the time to read the whole article. This is just an excerpt. You won’t see anything like it on Fox News. You may not see anything like it in your local paper, either.

I have to wonder — when our fellow Americans have obviously concluded the process that brought our nation into further disrepute and contempt is flawed and corrupt — wouldn’t you think they’d look around a bit and seek alternative sources of information? Sources with a better reputation than lying politicians and lapdog media?

The whole world was behind us when we responded to 9/11. Now, that everyone has seen how incompetent, greedy and grasping that “solution” has been, that world reacts with revulsion to politics as usual in the US. I’m afraid that shortsighted American voters will simply accept this week’s excuses from the same crowd who led them down the path to failure in the first place.



  1. Milo says:

    Yer doin a heckofa job Bushie!

  2. Mike Voice says:

    It will be interesting to see how reporters from NATO countries see things – and report them – as compared to how the US press has reported it. [until their US audience became more interested in Iran’s “nukes”, fencing the Mexican border, and voting for “American Idol”…]

    But it is obvious that the British Government won’t be any more critical of a “partner in the War on Terror” than Dubya’s gang has been …

    Col Vernon’s allegation that Quetta was a Taliban headquarters caused Pakistani official to lodge furious complaints with the British high commission, which hurriedly issued a statement distancing itself from the officer’s “personal views”.

  3. RTaylor says:

    I have spent a lot of money battling roaches for decades. I’m sure all the poison the bug guy has sprayed has shortened our lives. Every few years they keep coming back. Orkin also blames the infestations on the neighbors.

  4. Jim W. says:

    wow,

    If acting in our own self defense, destroying a terrorist nation, removing a dictator from power, and liberating millions upon millions of people has all been a failure and ruined Americas reputation around the world, I say lets complete the process and totally trash our reputation by invading Iran and N. Korea and make the world really hate us.

    Or is having a good reputation more important than doing the right thing?

    And yes the taliban may be reorganizing, but that only makes is easier for us to find and kill them. 😉

  5. Mike Voice says:

    I wouldn’t have any problem with us …doing the right thing if we didn’t do it half-assed.

    …that only makes is easier for us to find and kill them.

    If we had done it right the first time, we wouldn’t be having this discussion.

    We haven’t finished the job in Afghanistan because we were in a hurry to spank Saddam. We haven’t finished the job in Iraq because we went in with no “post-spank” plans in place… so, we should now just waltz into Iran & N. Korea??

    Hell, why not have “training exercises” in Cuba and Venezuela first, and THEN spank those other two wack-jobs… [grin]

  6. doug says:

    #6. No oil concessions to be had in Cuba. Venezuela, OTOH …

    needs some democratizing.

  7. Mike Voice says:

    No, pedro. Not at all.

    I was trying to be facetious and/or sarcastic – [hence the “grin” at the end]. I appear to have failed, somewhat.

    I just let myself get excited by Jim’s:

    If acting in our own self defense, destroying a terrorist nation, removing a dictator from power, and liberating millions upon millions of people has all been a failure and ruined Americas reputation around the world,

    I disagree with the way he uses: self defense, destroying, terrorist nation, and liberating in that sentence.

    i.e. if we had “destroyed” the Taliban, they wouldn’t be resurgant. The Taliban government being in bed with terrorists doesn’t make the people of Afghanistan citizens of a “terrorist nation”, to my mind.

    “training excercise” just seemed like the kind of euphemism my government would use…

  8. moss says:

    As much as right-wing wackos like to prance around and play Macho Man, the realities of world politics require something more than mouth and muscle — if you actually intend to win something for longer than a couple of weeks. You can’t profit from a landscape that glows in the dark — even if it makes your dinkyness swell up for a night or two.

    Dealing with opponents whose roots are religious is more demanding than those competitors who are confident they can surpass the United States in global economic warfare. More demanding doesn’t mean impossible. The US isn’t doing well with either.

    Sadly, the political Neanderthals running the US game [and their supporters] can’t see beyond their noses, the next 2 quarters or the history of failure that trails us around — just as it did the Brits, French, Belgians, Portugese and Germans, et al. Our predecessors got smart enough to change — and sat back and watched the US of A try to revive colonialism a half-century ago. Starting with Israel.

    In fact, you may as well turn it about and say that the neo-con leadership is almost as ignorant and incompetent as their “followers”.

  9. JHS says:

    I bet you armchair strategists have trouble putting on matching socks in the morning, that is, if you wear them. What can you expect from a press that interviews itself to find out what the news is? Everybody knows what happens when you marry your cousin. Why should anyone believe these talking head who are experts at war never having fired a shot in anger. Cry about business screwing the consumer but not willing the invest their own capital to create job or ideas. Sit around playing video games instead getting involved in the local community/Government in order to make a difference.

    Get out that history book you didn’t read because you were MTV and find how the Europeans created the problem in 1919 at the Treaty of Versailles and failed to solve it in the succeeding 90 years. Maybe we should continue to follow that road map? NO ONE!! knows the answer with 100% certainty, but you can’t quit and change the plan because we didn’t fix it in the time it takes to play a video game.

  10. Jim W. says:

    When did you become a Bush-ite Moss? Last time I looked it was the Liberals who wanted to cut and run because we were failing and the Bush-ites were the ones saying we should stay and finish the job.

    As to the rest, I try and defend our brave men and women and the hard work they do on this Memorial Day Weekend and all I get is criticism. To quote the dvorak.com/blog catch phrase of the moment “cripes”.

    The only reason our troops are in disrepute is because our enemy (not to mention a large part of the news media) takes the mistakes of a few idiot soldiers and uses them as propaganda against our troops (or the President in the case of the news media) while the majority of the good they do goes under or even un reported.

    Perhaps next time I should leave out the flame bait…….nah 🙂

  11. Mike Cannali says:

    These guys make an excellent argument for a neutron bomb. No residual radiation, completely sterile afterward. They wouldn’t even have cockroaches as witnesses. The reaction:

    George Bush: Sorry, I didn’t hear a thing – was in Crawford all weekend.

    CIA: “What bomb, we don’t know anything about it. Oops – they must have screwed up making nukes in Iran or Pakistan or something”

    Russia: “Gee, look what happened to our pals from the Afghan war.

    Israel: “Perhaps it was the will of Allah to create a new Palestinian homeland – ditto CIA comment.

    China: “Lebensraum”

    Japan: “No comment”

    Germany, France, England, etal – finally a place to send our excess Moslem immigrants back too.

    Rest of Moslem world to US: “Yes Sir, most important western ally – Would you like oil at $10 a barrel now. We are offing a free case of coke with a fillup. How about that windshield……..can we throw in a free carwash.”


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