Tag Archives: Afghanistan

Lavrov Accused The Biden Admin Of Wanting To Return US Military Infrastructure To Afghanistan

Guest Post by Andrew Korybko

This should be seen only as a signal that Russia is aware of this plot, not as anything deeper such as it expecting Trump to follow through on Biden’s plans or hinting that ties with Pakistan might become troubled in that event.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov told Putin during their Security Council meeting on the same day as Trump’s inauguration and while reviewing regional conflicts that “Let us not forget Afghanistan, where the Americans are also trying to restore their presence to some extent, using neighbouring countries for this and thinking about returning their military infrastructure there. I am saying all this in terms of the policies carried out by the previous administration.” His accusation is worthy of further analysis.

The US’ most realistic access point to Afghanistan is Pakistan, which had passively assisted its two-decade-long military occupation of that neighboring country but at the same time also clandestinely backed the Taliban against foreign forces and the Afghan National Army alike. April 2022’s post-modern coup against former multipolar Prime Minister Imran Khan was meant to improve ties with the US and facilitate what Russia just accused it of but was deprioritized due to the ongoing proxy war in Ukraine.

Even so, the US still attempted to cultivate influence in the broader region, including in Central Asia. This never amounted to anything significant due to the moderating effect that Russia and China had on the potential plans that some in those countries might have been cooking. Their policymakers ultimately realized that it’s better not to provoke either of them through enhanced security partnerships with the US than to go through with the aforesaid at the possible expense of regional stability and bilateral trade.

Pakistan went a different way than they did, however, since its post-coup regime continued holding out hope of restoring their traditional role in aiding US military operations in Afghanistan in exchange for personal (including financial) benefits. This explains why it kept kowtowing to the US on everything apart from symbolically voting against Russia at the UNGA, which it was allowed by the US to do in order to keep open the possibility of having Russia modernize Pakistan’s resource industry instead of China.

Readers can learn more about this rationale here, which covers the Machiavellian ways in which the US is attempting to adapt to the emerging Multipolar World Order, but Pakistani-US ties have recently become troubled as was shortly thereafter explained here. In brief, Pakistan’s long-range ballistic missile program made the US suspect that it has illegal proliferation motives or possibly even hostile ones, while its brutal crackdown on the opposition goes far beyond what the US approved.

These greatly reduced its attractiveness to the US as an entry point to Afghanistan since policymakers apparently thought that Pakistan would leverage its logistical assistance to the American military there to continue with those two courses of action that recently prompted the US’ concern. In that event, the first might eventually lead to security risks while the second could risk further instability that might result in a national crisis which turns Pakistan into more of an American liability than a regional asset.

Having explained the larger context within which Lavrov made his latest remarks about Afghanistan, which hint at Russia’s suspicions that Pakistan wants to facilitate the return of US military infrastructure there, it’s now time to discuss what this could mean for their impressively close bilateral relations. As proven by Russia continuing to sell energy to the EU despite the bloc arming Ukraine, there’s no precedent to speculate that it’ll curtail or possibly cancel cooperation with much friendlier Pakistan.

In this particular case, Pakistan could passively assist the US in fostering Afghan-emanating security challenges (primarily unconventional/terrorist ones) along its southern “strategic borders” in Central Asia, but this is nowhere near as threatening as what the EU is currently doing in Ukraine. It’s also unclear whether Trump would be interested in turning a blind eye to the US’ two new concerns with Pakistan in order to return US military infrastructure to Afghanistan with all the risks that it entails.

Getting bogged down in Afghanistan once again isn’t something that he’s interested in, let alone in putting US troops’ lives on the line in the same conflict zone where Biden disastrously withdrew from and which provoked harsh criticism from Trump at the time, so nothing might come of this. Moreover, his administration is considered to be very Indophilic and might accordingly push back against any move in that direction since it could worsen ties with India, which is now the US’ top regional partner.

For these reasons, Lavrov’s latest remarks about Afghanistan and their innuendo about Pakistan conspiring to return US military infrastructure there should be seen only as a signal that Russia is aware of this plot, not as anything deeper. While some Russian policymakers might be disappointed that Pakistan is even considering this, others might be motivated to redouble Russia’s rapprochement with Pakistan in the hopes that it’ll be dissuaded or to capitalize on its potentially worsening ties with the US.

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War, What Was it Ever Good For? Or Better Yet Who is it Good For?

RIP…

Stories like the one I’m about to share with you HERE disgust me as an American and as a believer in Jesus Christ. However facts are facts and the truth can be ugly. America has needed to face these ugly truths for quite some time. The war in Afghanistan has been the longest in American history and yet you hardly hear a peep about it on the news. Now supposedly there’s peace on the horizon between the Afghan government, the USA and the Taliban.

This “peace process” is nothing more than the US trying to get out without anymore casualties while trying also save face. The national government that they put into place won’t be able to stand without the US backing them up. According to this story the Taliban aren’t really obligated to much other than letting the US leave without more casualties. I suppose they (the US) also want some guarantees the opium will continue to flow uninterrupted. How that works out remains to be seen but it has been a huge cash cow for black ops.

You see the opium trade was almost wiped out under the Taliban. They wanted nothing to do with it due to their version of Sharia law. Once the USA went in there back in 2001 the opium trade started to explode once again. Once that began some US combat troops where assigned to watch over acres of poppy fields. Very little of that news was able to trickle out but then along came Pat Tillman. He was a star NFL defensive player but decided to give that up to serve his country after 9-11. He was killed by “friendly fire” and the US Army has changed it’s story multiple times. The rumor is that he was going to expose what was really going on in the “war on terror” in Afghanistan and the Bush administration wasn’t going to let that happen. You can watch his story HERE and decide for yourself if you’re not familiar with it.

Getting out of Saigon 1975

Now here we are 18 years later and we have to ask ourselves what did we accomplish? It’s almost a mirror image of 1975 as the North Vietnamese were closing in on Saigon. The videos of the US helicopters taking off with people hanging off the skids are still haunting to this day. Now we are seeing history repeat itself in Afghanistan. The videos maybe won’t be as dramatic but we’re going to be leaving behind a war torn nation that will be worse off than when we came. The Taliban will overrun the national government in short order, probably weeks. The status quo from before the US went in will be re-established and all of it will have been for nothing. The Afghans aren’t better off and now they will be abandoned by the world once again. The US has spent billions of taxpayer dollars and lost over 3,400 lives with many more wounded and maimed for life. The cost continues at 22 veteran suicides and counting daily.

The only ones who will have benefited from all of this war will have been the military industrial complex, the bankers, the spooks (CIA,MI6 ETC) the contractors and of course the drug lords. Everyone else loses in war. Everyone. It always takes the highest toll from the civilian population both in blood and in coin. We in the US are paying the price in not just taxes but a crumbling infrastructure and a rapidly decaying social structure. We stand on the precipice of possible civil war whereas 18 years ago on 9-11 we were supposedly united. How ironic, dontcha think?

I rambled on a bit more than I thought I would but it’s time we face the hard truth about this war and others like it. The US has no right to keep imposing it’s will on everyone else and face no repercussions. You can bet your bottom dollar that those repercussions will be coming. God is not mocked. He will repay the US and others (Israel, Saudi Arabia) for their war crimes and other numerous crimes against humanity. I’m not looking forward to that day and I mourn for the USA I used to know. Yes I know it was the great “experiment” but it’s too bad it didn’t last. Now the US has become a police state in every sense of the word and this “war on terror” hasn’t benefited anyone but those in charge.

God bless and stay prayed up and prepped up! The King of Kings and Lord of Lords return is soon at hand! Revelation 3:3.