TomDispatch.com
by Tom Engelhardt
It's now a commonplace of the Afghan War. Western leaders in London, Berlin, Amsterdam, and Washington, as well as on flying visits to Kabul or even Kandahar, excoriate Afghan President Hamid Karzai for the
"corruption" of his government. In return for their ongoing support,
they repeatedly demand that he take significant action to "step
up efforts to root out crime and corruption," that he, in fact, "arrest
and prosecute corrupt officials."
Can there be any question that there is a plethora of corrupt officials to
arrest? The president's brother, Ahmed Wali Karzai, reportedly on the
CIA payroll, is also, as it's politely put in the press, a "suspected
player in the country's booming illegal opium trade." Ahmad Rateb Popal,
the president's cousin and another figure long linked to the drug trade, runs a
local security company protecting American supply convoys that, according
to Aram Roston of the Nation magazine, is involved in an
industry-wide protection scam, using American Army money to pay off the Taliban
not to attack. In addition, American arms and ammunition are clearly ending
up in Taliban hands. The recent presidential election was a
spectacle of fraud; the Afghan Army, despite years of training, may hardly
exist (as Ann Jones reported for this site in September); the ill-paid,
ill-trained Afghan police are known to operate on the principle of corruption; and a surprisingly
small percentage of foreign reconstruction funds actually
makes it out of the pockets of big private contractors and western
specialists, as well as security firms, and into Afghan hands.
And then, of course, there's Kabul's "Obama market." (In the
period when the Soviets ruled Kabul, it was the "Brezhnev market" in
honor of the Russian leader, and decades later the "Bush market.")
This "notorious bazaar" is "full of chow and supplies bought or
stolen from the vast U.S. military bases," according
to Jay Price of the McClatchy newspapers, who calls the name "a modest
counterweight to [Obama's] Nobel Peace Prize." His description includes
the following: "One shop offered an expensive military-issue sleeping bag,
tactical goggles like those used by U.S. troops and a stack of plastic
footlockers, including one stenciled 'Campbell G Co. 10th Mtn Div.' Another had
a sophisticated 'red-dot' optical rifle sight of a kind often used by soldiers
and contractors."
In other words, from the American, European, and Japanese reconstruction
boondoggle to the presidential palace, from the U.S. and Afghan military to
street-level, the country is a klepto-state. As number 179, it misses by only one place taking the rock-bottom spot in Transparency
International's latest global corruption index. Of course, what else could be
expected in a situation in which the nation's main source of funds is either
narcotics -- the country now accounts for a staggering 92% of
global opium production -- or foreign aid? To demand that President Karzai
takes "steps" to "root out crime and corruption" is, under
the circumstances, an absurdity, no matter how many special task forces to
investigate graft he forms
under Western pressure. It's like asking him -- to mix metaphors -- either to
put a gun to his head or drink the sea. Consider it a measure of Afghan realities
today that you can hardly read a piece about the country in the Western press
without the word "corruption" lurking somewhere in it, and yet the
reporting on how that system of corruption actually works has generally been
thin indeed.
If you want a peek at such a system in action, though, check out, Pratap
Chatterjee's recent piece from Kabul at TomDispatch, "Paying Off the Warlords." It offers a rare
inside look at how a pervasive system of nepotism and corruption -- involving
the country's old "warlords" from the days of the post-Soviet civil
war and its new corporate "reconstruction" raiders -- actually works.
Make no mistake, this is not a system amenable to "reform.
© 2009 TomDispatch.com
Tom Engelhardt, who runs the Nation Institute's Tomdispatch.com ("a
regular antidote to the mainstream media"), is the co-founder of the American
Empire Project and, most recently, the author of Mission Unaccomplished: Tomdispatch Interviews with American
Iconoclasts and Dissenters (Nation Books), the first collection of Tomdispatch
interviews. His book, The End of Victory Culture (University of Massachusetts
Press), has been thoroughly updated in a newly issued edition that deals with
victory culture's crash-and-burn sequel in Iraq. He is the editor of the
recently released The World According to TomDispatc: America and the Age of
Empire.