Kasama

An age of information, but rarely of ideas. Let's change that.




  • Subscribe

  • Categories

  • Comments

    carldavidson on Forget Bob Dylan, remember Bob…
    carldavidson on Roberto’s question: So w…
    here on Occupy’s tear in the fab…
    Maju on Roberto’s question: So w…
    Maju on Roberto’s question: So w…
    Suprava Mondal on What is a Bandh in South …
    Dave on Forget Bob Dylan, remember Bob…
    eric ribellarsi on Urgent… today…. NO…
    PatrickSMcNally on Roberto’s question: So w…
    Red Fly on Urgent… today…. NO…
    carldavidson on Roberto’s question: So w…
    Red Fly on Roberto’s question: So w…
    carldavidson on Roberto’s question: So w…
    People2thePower on Roberto’s question: So w…
    Red Fly on Roberto’s question: So w…
  • Archives

Medea Benjamin on Afghanistan: Antiwar but Pro-Occupation?

Posted by Mike E on October 10, 2009

Medea Benjamin being arrested

This appeared on Antiwar.com under the title “Is Medea Benjamin Naive or Just Confused?” It was suggested by JP who writes:

“Note this disturbing interview with Medea Benjamin of Code Pink, who has apparently adopted humanitarian imperialism as the proper course for Afghanistan …even the libertarian host and interviewer can see the implications of occupation more clearly than Benjamin.”

* * * * *

Scott Horton: When I heard that there would be antiwar protests across the country on October 7, 2009, mourning the 8th anniversary of the start of the invasion of Afghanistan, I immediately picked up the phone to get one of the great anti-warrior women of Code Pink to join me on Antiwar Radio for the occasion.

Imagine my shock at seeing this story in the Christian Science Monitor ["Code Pink Re-Thinks Its Call for Afghanistan Pull-out."] describing the new, post-trip-to-Afghanistan-position of Code Pink’s co-founder and most famous leader, Medea Benjamin.

“’We would leave with the same parameters of an exit strategy but we might perhaps be more flexible about a timeline,’ says Benjamin. ‘That’s where we have opened ourselves, being here, to some other possibilities. We have been feeling a sense of fear of the people of the return of the Taliban. So many people are saying that, ‘If the U.S. troops left the country, would collapse. We’d go into civil war.’ A palpable sense of fear that is making us start to reconsider that.’”

“Did you just read that right?” said one half of my brain to the other. Is this reporting accurate? Has Code Pink turned pro-war?

Well, the interview took place, as scheduled [Oct. 7, 2009] and this is the result:


Scott Horton: For Antiwar.com and KAOS Radio 95.9 FM in Austin Texas, I’m Scott Horton, and this is Antiwar Radio. We’re streaming live worldwide on the internet at KAOSRadioAustin.org and at Antiwar.Com/Radio. And we’ve got an action-packed show lined up for you today. Four interviews. Starting right now with our first guest, the director, president, leader? I forget, I’m sorry, of the exact title, of Code Pink, Medea Benjamin. Welcome to the show.

Medea Benjamin: Hi. Thanks for having me on and I guess you should call me co-founder. We don’t have much of a hierarchy in Code Pink.

Horton: Oh, I see, Co-founder. Okay, there we go. But you’re the famous one.

Benjamin: Well, I’m one of the ones.

Horton: You’re the one we all know of. We’ve seen your picture in the newspaper and so-forth, right?

Benjamin: Well luckily there’re a lot of us. So some people know one person and some people know another.

Horton: Right. Well I got to meet some great ladies from Code Pink in 2005 when I was up at Camp Casey for the Cindy Sheehan protest. And to tell you the honest truth, the reason I wanted to bring you on the show today was to talk about all the antiwar protests going on around the country, and I guess I just assumed you guys would be involved with that. And yet I’m reading in the Christian Science Monitor that you’re rethinking your call for a pullout from Afghanistan, and that you’ve had your mind changed about the Afghanistan war due to a recent trip that you took there. Can you elaborate on that?

Benjamin: I don’t think that piece really reflects our thinking. We took a delegation there and just got back yesterday. And we certainly did hear some people say that they felt if the U.S. pulled out right now there would be a collapse and the Taliban might take over, there might be a civil war. But we also heard a lot of people say they didn’t want more troops to be sent in and they wanted the U.S. to have a responsible exit strategy that included the training of Afghan troops, included being part of promoting a real reconciliation process and included economic development; that the United States shouldn’t be allowed to just walk away from the problem. So that’s really our position. Not the one that was implied in the Christian Science Monitor.

Horton: Well, and you know I actually considered setting up the first question that way. This is probably sloppy reporting. I can’t imagine that you guys just flip-flop. But again, you sort of seem to be saying, well this is what the people in Afghanistan told you and now that’s your position. Is that it?

Benjamin: Well actually, there were many different opinions in Afghanistan and unfortunately because of the security situation we were very limited in who we talked to. We didn’t get out to the countryside, we didn’t talk to people who had been the targets of U.S. bombing, we didn’t talk to people who lived under Taliban control. We, in a week, got to talk to an amazing variety of people, but they were all working inside Kabul, many of them coming from outside Kabul. We are putting up on our Web site interviews with some of the women who did tell us that they thought more U.S. troops would mean more civilian casualties and more recruits for the Taliban. And they said it very clearly. One of the women is a member of parliament. She comes from Wardak province, she’s a medical doctor, and she says that this is the best way to recruit the Taliban is to send more troops, that it’s time for another approach.

Horton: Hmm… Well, I appreciate that about you’re going ahead and stating that you were basically stuck in Kabul, you weren’t allowed to go around and see what it’s like on the other side. You know, it’s interesting the way you kind of gave it… especially in your first answer… “Well, we talked to people who said this and we talked to people who said that.” And the way the Christian Science Monitor article is written is that these are all the reasons why you were convinced to change your mind to what they’re saying, when really it sort of sounds like you’re basically just reporting what you were told and then you have your own thing that you want to say that’s not necessarily – you know, [that is] separate from that in its own way. Right?

Benjamin: Well as in all discussions with people, it really depends on how you phrase the question. If you say to people, “Do you want 40,000 more troops, or would you like that money to go to economic development, healthcare, education?” They almost always said the latter. So people told us that war was not the answer. That after eight years of U.S. presence and billions of dollars being thrown into this conflict that the lives of people, especially those living outside of Kabul have virtually stayed the same, and that even women who know that the Taliban has had a very retrograde position in terms of women’s rights, even they told us that, look, the majority of Taliban are just poor villagers who don’t have another way to earn a living. We’ve got to reintegrate them into society, we’ve got to have peace talks and we’ve got to find ways other than through guns and bombs that we solve this conflict.

Horton: Well now there is a real problem here in a sense of, well, I’ll take another example from history, not too far in the past, but where, and this is the “catastrophe in waiting,” the worst case scenario, is when the Belgians pulled out of Rwanda and left a minority group that they and propped up in power all along high and dry, and the majority came and got their revenge, and it was an absolute bloody mess, and of course everybody, especially the Right wing warmongers like to say that, you know, we can’t have a repeat of Vietnam where the people that we were there to help end up being left high and dry to be slaughtered by the bad guys and that kind of thing.

But I guess my question is, whether anybody really thinks that at some point the people that we are supporting, whether outright militarily with bombings from the sky or with reconstruction money or however you phrase it; training up their troops or whatever. Aren’t we doing nothing but put off that same kind of situation? I mean ultimately whoever goes along with the Americans in Afghanistan is never going to be the majority of the country, right? Not even by a long shot.

Benjamin: There’s also the problem in that the Karzai government is very corrupt and has lost a lot of legitimacy. These last elections were horrendous and it’s also known that there are warlords who committed terrible crimes, including terrible crimes against women who are in the government. And Karzai brought back people like General Dostum so he could win some more votes. Somebody who’s responsible for the deaths of many, many people both in Northern Afghanistan as well as in Kabul. So this is a government that’s full of unsavory characters already.

So yes: the U.S. pulls out and there could be tremendous chaos because of the lack of authentic support for this government. That’s why I feel we have to have a responsible exit strategy that includes pressure on this government to get rid of people who were responsible for crimes, to build up a justice system that can actually function. People say that in the Taliban areas there’s immediate, in quotes, swift “justice” but that there’s nothing, no justice done within the Karzai government because of tremendous corruption. I don’t know that Taliban justice is the kind of justice that we or the majority of the Afghan people want to see. But the point is that there is work to be done to support institutions within Afghanistan that could then function as a real country and not just the city of Kabul.

Horton: Well Medea, as you know, America has been adopting Taliban justice and destroying our own rule of law. And I wonder how well you think that this government can export a rule of law that we’ve abandoned to a country like Afghanistan. I mean if they get rid of Dostum and the heroin dealers and the worst of Karzai’s allies, maybe even Karzai, who’s to replace them with? I mean, it’s like, you know, the coup against Diem. Well now who’s going to be the puppet dictator of South Vietnam? You know?

Benjamin: Yeah, well that’s a good question. There are a lot of great people in Afghanistan and many of them working inside the government. The women that we’ve met who are members of parliament are really extraordinary. A number of them are medical doctors, they are professionals, they are putting their lives at risk just by being members of the parliament, both by targets that they might be from the Taliban as well as targets inside the government, inside the parliament itself where…

Horton: Right. But so the question is does it make any sense to prop up a bunch of western educated female doctors to be the rulers of this country when they have no indigenous support whatsoever? It’s like this is a fantasy being played out in a sociology class somewhere in an American college or something.

Benjamin: Well, you just assume that these were western educated and didn’t have support. One of the doctors we met is from Wardak province and she said that it was actually her villagers who forced her to run, that she wasn’t interested in running. She didn’t spend a penny on her campaign and she was elected by a great majority from her area because people really wanted her to get into government. So what I’m saying is there are some good people. But your questions are good questions. What do you have when you have an outside foreign force, i.e., the U.S. and NATO that has been propping up a government that’s full of people who have in the past and continue to commit crimes, live off of drug money? You don’t have a very pretty picture and that also means that a lot of the soldiers don’t have great reasons to fight.

Horton: Right. And of course fight is just a euphemism for killing people, which is what’s been going on there for eight years now. And of course Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton are already doing their best to spread the war into Pakistan. So far they hired the prime minister there, Zadari, to start a civil war. They created three million refugees. When you talk about women’s rights, how about women with their little baby daughters in their arms being forced out of their homes by the millions, by America?

Benjamin: Well, I don’t think that war is the answer, that drones is the answer. Every time we drop a bomb we create more people who join the insurgency and want to attack us and it’s an endless vicious cycle and it’s got to end.

Horton: So we need occupation, but without soldiers.

Benjamin: Where are you getting that from?

Horton: Well, I mean I’m just trying to understand. Because you’re saying we need to build up their court system and we need to do all these things to have a proper exit… a responsible exit strategy rather than just leaving and letting them call their own shots, work out their own problems. And I just wonder how these things all go together. We’re supposed to occupy the country, but without killing anybody. And we’re supposed to have soldiers to protect women’s rights, but not to, whatever it is that they’re actually doing there, which of course has nothing to do with women’s rights in the first place. You follow me?

Benjamin: Yeah. I don’t think the soldiers are protecting women’s rights. We did hear a lot of people say that they fear the Taliban coming back in. We spoke to a lot of women who lived under the Taliban times who couldn’t go to school, who couldn’t do their jobs, were stuck inside their homes. And I think we have to recognize that. But on the other hand there is supposedly only about 5 or 10% of the Taliban that are ideologically motivated.

So my point is that we have been shoring up the Taliban with their policies of occupation, that as part of an exit strategy has to be peace talks, that women are at the table, and they have to figure out how people who have joined the Taliban out of economic desperation and joined the Taliban out of revenge because their loved ones have been killed by foreign forces, how they can be brought back into their villages and live productive lives.

Horton: Um, okay. Well, I guess, you know, I’m for that. You know, I’m an individualist and a libertarian and I believe in natural rights for all people no matter where they are. It’s just a question of, you know, who’s going to do the guaranteeing of them. And it just sort of seems far-fetched to me.

Especially at this point that somehow there’s going to be a proper nation building exercise. The very best bureaucrats in the Obama administration don’t care about those people as much as you do and wouldn’t know how to do things right. You know I talked with Jean McKenzie from GlobalPost.com. Great reporter. She’s been there for five years. And when I first talked to her she said, “Well we can’t just leave because all of our quislings will be slaughtered, you know? We can’t do it,” and whatever. I talked to her a few weeks ago and she’s throwing up her hands. She says there’s nothing that can be done except withdraw and let these people work out their own problems. So I guess back to the original question. I mean do you really think it’s possible to use American government, military, or I guess you’re saying not military, I guess State Department power or something, to build up Afghan society and include the people who are now fighting on the side of the Taliban, include enough of them in the government that somehow this becomes some sort of pluralistic, federalistic type place where we can rest assured that a civil war isn’t going to break out when we leave or something like that. Is that basically what you’re saying?

Benjamin: I don’t think we can be ever sure of what’s going to happen in a place like Afghanistan because it’s such a complex culture. But I do think that we have thrown ourselves into this quagmire and we’ve got to extricate ourselves in a way that is as responsible as possible. And that part of that is trying to support those people within Afghanistan who want to see peace talks, who want to get the other nations in the region involved and who do feel that they need a police system, they need people inside their country that are going to somehow promote justice and communities, that they don’t want to be left in chaos.

So I do think that there is something to be worked out in terms of an exit strategy. I don’t say the U.S. has to do these things or is in the position or really even has the moral authority to do it. There are other countries.

For example, when we asked who should do the training of the Afghan military, many of the answers said they should be from countries like Turkey, that are Muslim countries that are closer to their culture and more acceptable to their people. So all I’m saying is, I think as part of an exit strategy these things have to be worked out.

Horton: And you think Hillary Clinton ought to be in charge of working that out? Or Holbrooke?

Benjamin: I don’t think Holbrooke has done anything that’s useful and he certainly didn’t have a good reputation among anybody that we talked to there.

Horton: As you would have expected, right? I mean there’s nothing surprising about that. Again, we’re getting back to the thing about Code Pink doesn’t get to run the occupation and make it right. We’re dealing with, we have a world run by Democrats. You know what I mean? That’s the best we have.

Benjamin: Yeah, and unfortunately they say one thing and do another. I mean you have constantly people saying, including General Petraeus, that there is no military solution, that so much of the problem in places like Afghanistan are economic problems. And we’ve contributed to those economic problems by increasing the violence and the destruction. And yet over 90% of the money that we spend there goes to the military.

Horton: And see, I guess this is why… I don’t really want to fight with you. It seems like you and I must already agree so much that it’s just got to be a communication breakdown here somewhere or something. I mean I’m not phrasing it right.

Well, okay: Remember a few weeks ago when some locals stole a German fuel truck and the Germans called in an airstrike and the Americans blew up the fuel truck all over a bunch of civilians. A hundred or so who were lined up to get some fuel and burned them to death.

Benjamin: Mm-hmm.

Horton: I wonder how many more of those before you say, “You know what? The U.S. government must get out of Afghanistan yesterday, that’s it. And whatever happens after this, at least it won’t be our government burning little kids to death.”

Benjamin: Well I certainly say that the U.S. should stop the airstrikes and I think that the U.S. should be doing the opposite than what McChrystal says. He wants them to be out in the communities and the people that we talked to said that they aren’t able to protect Afghans, that they should be in their bases while this exit strategy and peace process is worked out. I think the only difference in what you’re saying and what I’m saying is that I did feel a palpable fear among many of the women that they don’t want the Taliban to take over again.

Horton: Yeah. Well, and see here’s the thing too though: The Taliban at this point, what does that even mean? You know what I mean? It was a very small number of people. A lot of them were killed years and years ago. It basically seems to be the NATO, U.S. government, U.S. media euphemism for anybody in Afghanistan who resists our occupation.

Benjamin: Well that’s why I think as part of the exit strategy is the peace process. And if there are 20,000 Taliban at the most, the vast majority of them are people who are not ideologically driven who want to go back to their villages, would probably much prefer to do something other than be shooting at people. And that if we gave them the opportunity for that by announcing that we were going to be leaving, that we were going to be helping to allow their community leaders to reincorporate them into society, then you would be basically taking away the strength of the Taliban.

Horton: Yeah. Well, I certainly think that’s true. We saw the same thing in Iraq where the occupation is a perpetual motion machine. In fact I was just reading a little something about American occupations in Central America, I think in, I forget if it was in Nicaragua. Way back in the day, you know, 80 years ago or something, where of course the longer they stayed the more the people resisted and that was the excuse for staying, and we can’t just leave with Nicaragua in such a mess and all these people fighting each other and whatever, when of course the occupation is the basis of in the first place. And I think, wasn’t Code Pink’s argument about Iraq not “We have to leave responsibly but we’ve got to get the hell out of there because staying there is irresponsible”?

Benjamin: Yeah, in the case of Iraq I think it was a little bit different. It was absolutely clear our troops should never been there beginning and you didn’t have a Taliban like government…

Horton: Yeah, but I mean Bin Laden and Ayman al-Zawahiri escaped eight years ago. They haven’t been in Afghanistan for eight years.

Benjamin: But you do have the Taliban in Afghanistan and you have…

Horton: Yeah, but what did the Taliban ever do?

Benjamin: Well the Taliban…

Horton: To us.

Benjamin: Huh?

Horton: What did they ever do to the United States?

Benjamin: Well see, if your perspective is just from the United States. My perspective is also from what they did to the women of Afghanistan. But if your perspective is truly from the United States, what people say is that if we allow the Taliban to take over Afghanistan then that will be a safe haven for Al Qaeda.

Horton: Yeah, but that’s no different is it than the National Review saying, you know, Saddam Hussein was really bad to the people in Iraq.

I think this is why all over Facebook today they’re saying, “Ha, ha, and again, for those tuning in late, she did say, it’s Medea Benjamin from Code Pink. She did say the Christian Science Monitor’s reporting was not altogether accurate here.

But all over Facebook they’re saying, “Ha, ha, I guess she’ll have to apologize to Condoleezza Rice now. And “Ha, ha, I guess this proves that obviously that McChrystal is right. If Code Pink and McChrystal both agree that the occupation has got to be better in order to quell the violence, then by golly we know it’s right.” Like when Bill Clinton and George Bush agree about Saddam’s weapons of mass destruction.

Benjamin: Well I think it’s just full of distortions, because what we say is we want a responsible pulling out of U.S. troops and we certainly are against what McChrystal is calling for. We’re against sending in more troops, we’re against troops being visibly present in the villages because we think their presence is more of a threat to people there and puts them at risk. And we want our troops to pull out. We just want to do it in a way that is not going to lead to a Taliban takeover that will put women back inside the home.

Horton: Alright everybody, that’s Medea Benjamin from Code Pink. And I really appreciate your time on the show today.

Benjamin: Okay, thanks for having me on.

Transcript provided thanks to A.J. Processing.

15 Responses to “Medea Benjamin on Afghanistan: Antiwar but Pro-Occupation?”

  1. I don’t know why some folks (that should know better) are surprised to hear this imperialist/humanitarian nostalgia from folks like Medea Benjamin. This is nothing new…from their work at Global Exchange (taking U.S. activists to a “third world country” for the weekend) to Code Pink. And its not just Medea but the whole NGO Industrial Complex. Seriously.

    We Want No Condescending Saviors!

  2. redflags said

    This very much seems to be a case of NGO types looking after their own, and not being too interested about their own essential connection as a “protective layer” of the capitalist system. It is the capital, as such, that this type of activism floats on. The Bay Area is drowning in it. NGOism, and here Code Pink/Global Exchange are really not the worst of it at all, is the preferred organizational form for the anti-communist, non-radical left. They want all internal democracy of mass organizations to be controlled by “funders”. They want positive solutions (see: socialism) to be removed from all discussion, and to be destroyed as an idea. It is only with the atrophy (and repression) of the radical left that such superficial “activism” even gets a hearing. And its tragic, because the masses of people don’t particularly like this moralistic leftism that has no program and doesn’t even pretend to offer substantial solutions.

    Instead, it gives the left bourgeoisie entree to manage and direct social movements from WITHIN bourgeois hegemony.

    We can struggle with basically principled people like Medea, about grotesque non-opposition to US imperialism as such – but there is no “argument” to be had with NGOs. They are constitutionally constructed to be immune to radical politics. It is what the Ford Foundation, Soros and the type use to control the left. That’s true, and it’s not up for a vote. We must build an independent pole to fight capitalism and its political representatives and leaders – not to accept their terms as if they were the realm of the real (which they most certainly are not).

  3. Jani said

    So they joined the pro-imperialist Afghan feminist group RAWA, and people are surprised? Feminism is a bourgeois ideology. ‘

    We Want No Condescending Saviors!

    Does that include middle class Maoists and university professors?

  4. Victoria said

    Feminism is not a “bourgeois ideology”. Don’t try to bring your misoginy here. I’m a Latinamerican feminist who oposses the US imperialism and it really pisses me off when I read leftist men puting the blame on feminism.
    Let’s not forget that the first victims of capitalism and war are women.

  5. 2mv said

    Agreed. Feminism is not bourgeois. Secondly, I don’t think Feminism is an ideology in as much as it is a theory. Marxism isn’t an ideology, it is theory and practice. “Marxism-Leninism-Maoism” is ideology. As the Situationists say, “Revolutionary theory is now the enemy of all revolutionary ideology.” Ideology is stultified, Theory is not. Kasama’s brand of post-Maoism is theory, not ideology.

  6. Mike E said

    [moderator note: Jani is trolling and deliberately baiting everyone. This violates our rules. After repeated friendly warnings, Jani is now on moderation -- i.e. all comments will be reviewed before posting. Please don't feed the trolls -- and help drag the discussion down by obvious provocation.]

  7. Horton is being a bit of a dick but there’s no question Medea Benjamin is conflating the Taliban and Al Qaeda.

    But I will say the hostage taking at the Pakistani army headquarters today is going to make the case for a withdrawl that much more difficult. Even if it was an “inside job” (and certainly there have always been ties between the Pakistani intelligence agencies and Islamic extremists, it still makes Pakistan look much more vulnerable.

    http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20091010/ap_on_re_as/as_pakistan

    The attack was confirmation that the militants had regrouped following the recent killing of Pakistani Taliban leader Baitullah Mehsud in a U.S. missile attack and raised fears they would respond to any offensive with stepped up attacks around the nuclear-armed country.

    Army spokesman Maj. Gen. Athar Abbas said “four or five” assailants were holding between 10 and 15 troops hostage in a building close to the main gates of the complex in Rawalpindi, a city near the capital, Islamabad. No senior military or intelligence officials were among those being held, he said.

    Rawalpindi is a bit like the Pakistani version of the Pentagon. It shouldn’t be vulnerable.

    It should make the case for withdrawl easier (why is the US destabilizing Pakistan), but it also makes it look as if the “Taliban” (which seems to be the media’s label for all Islamic extremists in the area, are moving out of the local level into being regional players).

    Now in Pakistan there are “good guys” (the Pakistani lawyer movement deserved the Nobel more than Obama did) but the country seems to be getting more and more destabilized because of the US drone attacks.

    So to Medea Benjamin: Is keeping a small space open for women in Kabul under the protection of Nato worth turning Pakistan into an Islamic fundi state?

  8. Looking back at the anti-Iraq-war movement, the problem in some ways seems to have been that it was this bizarre two headed monster.

    Imagine you were an alien dropped onto the earth into the middle of an Answer/UFPJ rally.

    On one hand it seems ultra conservative. “Support the Troops. Bring them Home.” Count every American casualty. Well, you don’t even have to be a Marxist or even a liberal (you can be a decent minded conservative) to see why this is so evil. 4000 Americans are more important then tens or even hundreds of thousands of Iraqis?

    On the other hand, you had this bizarre ultraleftism that had no chance of connecting with the mainstream at all. You had every little radical group try to hijack ever protect for his or her little agenda. You had the subterranean (unexpressed yet present and obvious) advocacy of “revolutionary defeatism” (rooting for the USA to lose without having anybody in Iraq you’d want to support). It looked like cheerleading people who were bombing whole blocks of innocent Shiites waiting in line for a job.

    No coherent critique of the occupation of Iraq ever came together.

    What’s more, the movement never found a way to express the long term evil of destroying Iraq’s economy and infastructure. Some of it would come out (as in Madeline Albright’s infamous statement about 500,000 dead children being “worth it”) but long term devestation like this is the most difficult thing to translate to a mass audience when that mass audience is far away from the actual suffering.

  9. Mister X said

    Why is no one advocating arming Afghan women? Organizing all female militias?

  10. Ardys said

    I like that arming Afghan women. Honestly, I am really hearing all of this sexism. I find it quite distressing.

  11. Killing Monsters, Dragons is not that hard, if you try.

    The dogmatist in me gushes out the question,

    “Why tear apart a woman like, Ms. Benjamin, like the skin deep libertarians at anti.war.com?” If Kasama supporters won’t come on Radio Free Kansas, when the invitation is open for all every Friday night, why not bug the shit out of Scott Horton on Anti-war Radio?

    Bourgeois democrats have gained the support from well meaning wealthy elites, and will continue to do so, like Tolstoy helped the Russian peasants, lol….

    We have no answers hard enough to make a decision, but at least we are chasing the smoke from the dragon’s breathe in the last few shows at Radio Free Kansas:

    Here a show with some journalists who did brush up with Maoists in Afghanistan:

    http://www.radio4all.net/index.php/program/36268

    And here with a woman who is making a documentary film about her experiences in Afghanistan:

    http://www.archive.org/details/RadioFreeKansaswhoWasThatWoman

    We and other callers had lengthy arguments with her about this very subject. Download them, tell us how we screwed up.

    Call block the phone line, if you’re so worried about your spoken words.

    It is time for Kasama to come out of the shadows of Maoist dogma!

    An open invite to all, every Friday night beginning at 10pm (central) 646-716-8652. I’ll put you on in a hurry.

    Ps. I like that “arming the Afghan women” too!

  12. jp said

    “Jodie Evans, a co-founder of Code Pink, paid $30,400 for a pair of tickets to the VIP dinner…”
    for full article see: “Supporters, protesters greet Obama in S.F.” at
    http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2009/10/16/MNR01A6HEF.DTL

    There have been some comments here to the effect that this shouldn’t surprise us – I disagree. While Code Pink have been, like so much of what passes for the left, unshakable in their acquiescence to the 2 party paradigm, they have been consistently, reliably and actively antiwar/anti-imperialist.

    To see their conviction slipping away, through succumbing to the siren song of “humanitarian intervention” is further evidence of the left shifting right through its ‘strategic’ alliance with Democrats.

  13. Mike E said

    JP:

    I agree, JP, when you see “evidence of the left shifting right through its ’strategic’ alliance with Democrats.”

    Two caviats:

    I don’t think that it is possible to be “consistently” or “reliably” anti-imperialist if you are “unshakable in acquiescence to the 2 party paradigm.” In fact that kind of “2 party” framework seems to me to be, at its very core, removed from any kind of anti-imperialism. In other words, I don’t see Code Pink “moving to the right” — so much as having it revealed (in the new situation) how right some of their politics was…. all along.

    Second, I really think we should probe and anticipate the possibility that this landscape gives an opening for far more radical politics. When the democrats assume the mantle of a colonialist set of wars… it is (a) demoralizing for those trapped into ‘pressuring” the Democrats, but (b) it opens the door for a whole new generation to see (grasp, feel, internalize) the imperialism of the democrats in ways that have been hard (during those long years where the Dems just seemed like a pathetically paralyzed opposition.

    Now the dems are in power, they have congress and the white house — and they are not some opposition or “paralyzed” in the face of the right. They are, in fact, carrying out THEIR program — and revealing what that program is (once it is in power at the pinnacle of this system and this empire.)

    It is an opening, i believe, for teaching what has been hidden for so many. And it is the opening (potentially!) for a much more radical regroupment in politics — to the left of and in opposition to the politics inside Obama’s tent.

  14. jp said

    Agreed on both your points. I don’t think it is actually possible to be antiwar/anti-imperialist without attacking the existing structures of power, including the overt political ones, but is has certainly been the case that many have held consistent antiwar/anti-imperialist positions in spite of their acquiescence. “Cognitive dissonance’ has become one of those in-use, overused phrases in the last few years, but it applies here.

    This, I think, is the opening you refer to – will events make people think critically about their previously unshakable presumptions? It apparently hasn’t occurred yet to Code Pink that their pro-women’s rights,antiwar agenda can’t happen here (or there).

    Still, they have attempted to actively keep the antiwar message in the public eye, cognitive dissonance or not, and sorry, I can’t help being disappointed. A revolution needs many allies, including the many people of good will who may not have subjected their analysis to much critical thought.

  15. Hope Sanford said

    Like other big, VERY loosely knit groups, Code Pink is made up of a bunch of tiny groups who agreed with the original stated purpose, which was opposing the invasion of Iraq and other countries. Hell, that’s why I joined the Houston group. Nobody asked us to vote and make Medea Benjamin god and I damn sure don’t agree with her obfuscating BS about “responsible withdrawal”(an occupation by any other name is still, well, you get it).For the record, nobody else in the Houston group agreed with her, and we told her AND Code Pink national exactly that.

Leave a Reply

Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:

WordPress.com Logo

You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. Log Out / Change )

Twitter picture

You are commenting using your Twitter account. Log Out / Change )

Facebook photo

You are commenting using your Facebook account. Log Out / Change )

Connecting to %s

 
Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 222 other followers