Bombing at CIA base exposes weakness of U.S. occupation
By
John Catalinotto
Published Jan 7, 2010 5:05 PM
A bomb explosion in a Central Intelligence Agency camp in Khost Province of
Afghanistan on Dec. 30 resulted in the deaths of seven experienced operatives,
including the base commander. The attack struck a heavy blow against the
U.S.-led occupation. It has changed the ground rules for the U.S. spy
organization and evoked threats from U.S. President Barack Obama and CIA head
Leon Panetta.
Despite the CIA and military posturing and threats of revenge, the successful
bomb strike at an important U.S. base underlines the basic weaknesses of U.S.
imperialism in carrying out the latest war escalation and unpopular occupation
of Afghanistan.
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Afghans in Kabul protest U.S. military attacks.
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On a tactical level, the CIA camp bombing meant the loss of operatives who had
knowledge of local customs and languages and decades of experience in
Afghanistan. Strategically, it means the U.S. and NATO occupation forces will
more than ever treat every Afghan as an enemy. That will bury any possibility
of the U.S. “winning hearts and minds” of one part of Afghan
society in its attempt to divide and conquer Afghanistan.
“‘Those killed included experienced front-line officers, and their
knowledge and expertise will be sorely missed,’ said Henry A. Crumpton,
who led the CIA campaign in Afghanistan in 2001 and 2002.” (Wall Street
Journal, Jan. 2)
CIA won’t know ‘who to trust’
A Jan. 2 Reuters report described the other part of the loss, quoting a former
CIA officer: “This is a huge blow to the agency. It’s a close-knit
group. They’re not going to know who to trust now.”
U.S. officials and the corporate media often distort the truth, and more so in
a war situation. Nevertheless, reports in the Wall Street Journal, the New York
Times and the Washington Post — which involve interviews with current and
former CIA officials — indicate that something like the following may
have occurred:
The personnel at Forward Operating Base Chapman in Khost province had been
focusing on two main tasks: finding targets for the unpiloted
“drones” to launch rockets against and investigating that part of
the Afghan resistance known as the “Haqqani network,” so that U.S.
Special Forces or mercenary “contractors” could hunt them down and
kill their members and leaders. FOB Chapman used informants both in Afghanistan
and in nearby Pakistan.
Like al-Qaida, the Haqqani network was a U.S. ally in the battle against the
Soviet Union, when the Soviet Army was assisting the progressive Afghan
government from 1979 to 1989. Now, however, the Haqqani network is a Taliban
ally. Using information provided by FOB Chapman, both drones and ground forces
killed some of the Haqqani leaders throughout 2009.
The Dec. 30 bombing attack was by someone the CIA operatives knew, someone who
was considered an Afghan informant or potential informant. He was able to get
through base security and enter a room where at least 13 CIA or
“contractors,” that is, mercenaries, were present, having come to
hear the informant’s report. When the bomb exploded, the Afghan died
along with seven CIA operatives. Six others were wounded.
Resistance forces in Afghanistan and in Pakistan — which the corporate
media describe as the Afghan and the Pakistan Taliban, respectively —
have claimed credit for the attack. The Afghans see the bombing as a strong
blow against U.S. forces. These resistance statements also identify the person
who did the bombing as a “double agent.”
The CIA has not revealed the names of those who died. Leaks have provided
information that they include, besides CIA officials, a former Navy Seal who
was a “contractor” and a former Army reserve major.
Role of ‘contractors’
The CIA has not named the corporation providing the mercenaries. On Dec. 15,
however, the Afghan resistance hit a USAID base in Gardez, the capital of
Paktia Province in the southeast, killing security staff and a guard working
for Development Alternatives Inc. DAI is the major supplier of mercenary forces
to the occupation.
According to a report by North American lawyer and investigative writer Eva
Golinger, now in Venezuela, DAI is active throughout Latin America. One of
their employees is the captured U.S. agent in Cuba who was handing out illegal
materials to anti-revolutionary groups. DAI has a $40 million contract to
administer the “Cuba Democracy and Contingency Planning
Program.”
DAI is running a similar program for USAID in Venezuela. USAID has also been
expelled from two cities in Bolivia, accused of intervening. According to
Golinger, “A high-level USAID official confirmed two weeks ago that the
CIA uses USAID’s name to issue contracts and funding to third parties in
order to provide cover for clandestine operations.” (chavezcode.com)
Washington’s dependence on mercenaries to fight its colonial wars is
another sign of weakness. Not only the Pentagon — which has a problem
recruiting a mass army needed for an occupation — but the CIA and USAID
must also hire soldiers of fortune. Resistance fighters, on the other hand, are
ready to blow themselves up in order to free their country from foreign
occupation and domination.
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