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JULY 17, 2000 VOL. 156 NO. 2
God's
Militia
A riveting chronicle of Afghanistan's Taliban
By MICHAEL FATHERS
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ALSO IN TIME
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The
promiscuous way in which the United States jumps from conflict to conflict
without considering the long-term consequences can be seen clearly and
tragically in Afghanistan, where Washington supportedand armedgroups
of simple tribesmen as they fought the might of the Soviet army. But when
Moscow pulled out in defeat in 1989, the Americans walked away, too, leaving
behind a devastated country awash with modern weapons, a traumatized population
and rival groups fighting one another for control.
From this chaos emerged a militia known as the Taliban ("Students of Islam").
They were welcomed at first by Afghans because they brought an element
of stability, but feared when they began purging the country of alien
influences and set about imposing an uncompromising regime based on their
own interpretation of Islam. So what's new? Afghan ethnic groups have
been fighting one another for hundreds of years. The difference today
is that Afghanistan's instability has spread beyond its borders and to
every other nation that has tried to intervene.
Ahmed Rashid's Taliban: Islam, Oil and the New Great Game in Central Asia
(I.B. Tauris; 216 pages) is a startling and riveting account of a religious
movement few outsiders understand and a country everyone wants to forget.
As Rashid, a leading Pakistani journalist and commentator on Central Asian
affairs, points out, the legacy of wanton foreign intervention in Afghanistan
is beginning to take its toll, especially in Pakistan, where the forces
unleashed by Islamic fundamentalism during the Afghan conflict are threatening
to tear the country apart. The Central Asian nations also worry about
a fundamentalist spillover. Even the U.S. lives in fear of Osama bin Laden
and his followers who shelter in the ruins of Afghanistan. Rashid's book
is a catalogue of missed opportunities, lost innocence, despair and awful
hubris in what has become the most dangerous country in Central Asia.
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