November 09, 2008 "Information Clearinghouse" -- The day after US war planes bombed an Afghan wedding party killing more than 30 women and children, I drove from Pakistan’s troubled tribal areas to the border crossing.
Feeling rather sensitive towards my own security as a white westerner who could easily be mistaken for an American, I decided to throw on an all-enveloping burka and make my way across in the anonymity this garment gives women travelers.
As I walked across the border at Torkham towards the Afghan passport control office I heard someone barking in a loud, aggressive American accent at one of the drivers held up at the US-controlled checkpoint.
I looked up and watched as a heavily armoured, helmeted soldier pointed his gun and continued screaming in a rude manner for the driver to get in line.
It obviously did not occur to him that most of the people in earshot could only understand Pashto.
I really despaired and felt sorry for those Afghans who were being greeted by this obnoxious alien in uniform as they entered their own country.
Now I know most Americans don’t do humility, but a little sensitivity should have been called for on that day … it was the day after nearly 90 wedding guests had been wiped out in yet another US airstrike.
I have now spent several days in Afghanistan as an unembedded journalist, travelling around freely without an armed or military escort.
Yes, it’s risky and at times nerve-wracking but if I want to find out what is really happening on the ground I’m not going to get it hiding in some hotel compound or army barracks being briefed by an army spokesman who knows even less than me.
So far I’ve spoken to men and women from all backgrounds, cultures and Islamic ideologies and without exception they’re hacked off with the American presence.
                                    All the                   goodwill I                   saw after                   the fall of                   the Taliban                   has been                   squandered                   by the                   military                   presence of                   the US as                   well as the                   British (no                   one really                   distinguishes                   between the                   two) and it                   is crystal                   clear they                   have                   overstayed                   their                   welcome.
                 
                 The Taliban                   are in                   control of                   large                   swathes of                   the country                   and are now                   bordering on                   Kabul having                   already                   carried out                   several                   raids on the                   capital                   where Afghan                   leader Hamid                   Karzai is                   under                   virtual                   siege.
                 
                 Since his                   installation                   as president                   he has often                   been accused                   of being a                   US puppet,                   but even he                   is                   attempting                   to break                   free from                   those in                   Washington                   pulling the                   strings.
                 
                 Without a                   doubt, the                   continued                   presence of                   US and                   British                   forces has                   swung                   violently                   from being                   regarded as                   the solution                   to becoming                   the cause of                   most of the                   problems.                   And promises                   by various                   army chiefs                   to bring in                   more troops                   to enforce a                   Baghdad-style                   surge causes                   one of two                   reactions                   depending                   your                   political                   stance.
                 
                 Peacemakers                   view the                   arrival of                   more troops                   with                   spiralling                   despair                   while the                   Taliban and                   their                   supporters                   rub their                   hands with                   glee                   reckoning a                   larger enemy                   presence                   will make an                   easier                   target.
                 
                 Of course                   moronic                   comments by                   the likes of                   Commander                   Jeff Bender,                   a US forces                   spokesman,                   don’t help.                   After the                   Kandahar                   wedding                   attack he                   said: "The                   coalition                   and Afghan                   authorities                   are                   investigating                   reports of                   non-combatant                   casualties                   in the                   village of                   Wech Baghtu.                  
                 
                 "If innocent                   people were                   killed in                   this                   operation,                   we apologise                   and express                   our                   condolences                   to the                   families and                   the people                   of                   Afghanistan."
                 
                 What does he                   mean “if                   innocent                   people were                   killed”. It                   seems this                   US                   insensitivity                   isn’t just                   confined to                   the                   uniformed                   grunts at                   the Torkham                   border.
                 
                 Does                   Commander                   Jeff Bender                   think that                   the 33 dead                   women and                   children his                   warplanes                   wiped out                   were enemy                   combatants?
                 
                 Scores of                   Afghans have                   been killed                   in American                   air strikes                   this year,                   fuelling the                   resentment                   against the                   presence of                   foreign                   troops and                   widening the                   rift between                   President                   Karzai and                   his western                   puppet                   masters.
                 
                 The only                   winners                   emerging                   from                   Afghanistan                   these days                   are the drug                   barons who                   preside over                   the world’s                   largest                   heroin trade                   and the                   pimps who                   control the                   Chinese                   prostitutes                   operating                   from the                   scores of                   bordellos                   and brothels                   which have                   emerged                   since the US                   military                   occupation.
                 
                 So there you                   have it –                   the story of                   Afghanistan                   ... a                   country in                   the grip of                   reckless                   soldiers,                   slappers and                   smack.                  
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