afghanistan

a chance to travel

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Why did you join the army?
Get away from my home town. See the world. I've always wanted to travel. I enjoy travelling.
All my brothers have got trades - plumbers, electricians and things like that. And you come back, and people say 'how was your week at work?' And they say 'Oh I've done this and done that'. And they say 'Well he's done a 6 month tour of Afghan'. And you can hold your head up high and say that. A lot of people respect you for that.

Private Kieran Connolly (20)

highlanders

world's highest opium harvests

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In six years, the occupation has wrought one massive transformation in Afghanistan, a development so huge that it has increased Afghan GDP by 66 per cent and constitutes 40 per cent of the entire economy. That is a startling achievement, by any standards. Yet we are not trumpeting it. Why not?

The answer is this. The achievement is the highest harvests of opium the world has ever seen.

AFGHANISTAN

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Afghanistan, Six Years On

by Gabriel Carlyle (Voices UK) Peace News, October 2007. No 2490. . On 7 October 2001 US and British forces invaded Afghanistan, killing thousands of civilians. But following the Taliban's “defeat” in December 2001, Afghanistan dropped out of the media, and off the anti-war movement’s agenda. Six years later, despite the mounting carnage, Afghanistan remains the establishment’s “good war”How a ‘Good War’ in Afghanistan Went Bad, New York Times, 12 August 2007, http://tinyurl.com/38pdtj, which even The Independent cannot bring itself to oppose

300,000 veterans may have PTSD

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- Approximately 18.5% U.S. service members who have returned from Afghanistan and Iraq currently have post-traumatic stress disorder or depression; and 19.5% report experiencing a traumatic brain injury during deployment. - Roughly half of those who need treatment for these conditions seek it, but only slightly more than half who receive treatment get minimally adequate care. If these numbers are representative, of the 1.64 million deployed to date... approximately 300,000 veterans who have returned from Iraq and Afghanistan are currently suffering from PTSD or major depression, and about 320,000 may have experienced TBI during deployment.

stirred-up Muslims

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Question:... do you regret having supported the Islamic [integrisme], having given arms and advice to future terrorists?
Brzezinski: What is most important to the history of the world? The Taliban or the collapse of the Soviet empire? Some stirred-up Muslims or the liberation of Central Europe and the end of the Cold War?

(Special Advisor to President Carter), quoted in Humanitarian Imperialism by Jean Bricmont.

Interview, 1998

part of the invisible genocide

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After the Americans destroyed our village and killed many of us, we also lost our houses and have nothing to eat. However, we would have endured these miseries and even accepted them, if the Americans had not sentenced us all to death. When I saw my deformed grandson, I realized that my hopes of the future have vanished for good, different from the hopelessness of the Russian barbarism, even though at that time I lost my older son Shafiqullah. This time, however, I know we are part of the invisible genocide brought on us by America, a silent death from which I know we will not escape.

quoting Jooma Khan of Laghman province, Afghanistan. Depleted Uranium: The Trojan Horse of Nuclear War

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