U.S. Is Again Interfering in Afghanistan’s Internal Affairs.

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To the Honorable John Kerry

Afghanistan
Afghanistan

 

Secretary, U.S. Department of State
Washington D.C.
 
RE: Now U.S. Is Again Interfering in Afghanistan’s Internal Affairs.
 

It is Selecting Afghanistan’s Cabinet Ministers. I ask you, how shameful is that?

Dear Secretary Kerry:

Once again the Unites States government is interfering in Afghanistan’s internal affairs. First, it “selected” Ashraf Ghani as the puppet leader, who is a communist and one of the architects of the Bonn Conference in 2001, which caused Afghanistan to become the most corrupt country and the leading narco state in the world. Now, it appears that the government in Washington D.C. is “selecting” Afghanistan’s cabinet ministers. I ask you, how shameful is that?

3I have heard from many reliable sources that the U.S. gave fifty percent (50 %) of the minister positions ( the most important ones such as defense, national security, foreign affairs and education) to the Northern Alliance war lords and drug traffickers. The Uzbek communist war criminal, Rashid Doshtum, received four ministries for the Uzbek minority. The Hazara minority were also given four. The communists war criminals were given minister positions.

In your so-called “national unity” government, the Afghan majority, the native Pashtuns and Afghan Muslims were not included. Is this really a national “unity” Afghan government “elected” by the Afghan majority? No, this is a “disunity” puppet government of minorities, war lords, drug traffickers, and communist war criminals “selected” by the U.S. government.

This is an Afghan puppet government, which is controlled by the U.S. government for its own goals which are: (1) to control and have long term direct access over the Afghans’ vast untapped deposits of Rare Earth Elements (REEs) such as lithium, which are worth trillions and crucial to technology and defense systems; (2) to have nine (9) permanent U.S. military bases in Afghanistan, the Heart of Central Asia, which are located at the United States’ post-Soviet, new outer defense perimeter; and (3) for other geopolitical reasons such as U.S. control of the highly profitable illicit drug trafficking business. There is evidence that it is not about the U.S. government “stopping” the drug trafficking, but just the opposite.

2

In order to achieve its goals, the U.S. government had to have a Bilateral Security Agreement signed to make its permanent military presence in Afghanistan appear legal. Surprise, surprise, what did the U.S. have its slaves do on Day One? It had them sign a bilateral security agreement, which only benefits the U.S. and its namoos-selling war profiteers/puppets/slaves. Hanif Atmar, who is a known former KHAD member and one of the worst communist war criminals from the 1980s, signed the Bilateral Security Agreement ( see the attached RAWA article in Dari. ) As the article highlights , this communist war criminal is responsible for many crimes against Afghans especially the raping of young Afghan girls in the 1980s .

The United States talks about helping Afghan women. But is the U.S. support of this communist war criminal helping Afghan women? The Afghan women ,who were his victims and are still alive, must now have their old wounds ripped open seeing this communist war criminal selected by the U.S. for a high position. I just talked with an Afghan woman, who is one of his victims. I cannot even believe that the U.S. ambassador sat with this communist war criminal and did such a thing. How shameful and hypocritical is that! Is this freedom for Afghan women? Is this justice for Afghan women?

4

Based on what has occurred the past thirteen plus years, it appears that in order to achieve its goals the U.S. government has to eliminate the native population, the Pashtun, who is fighting for its independence.The U.S. government is trying to eliminate the Pashtun tribe, which is the largest native tribe in the world . Anyone, who has with knowledge about what is happening on the ground, knows that the Pashtun tribal leaders , Pashtun intellectuals and religious leaders are being killed and eliminated by the U.S. and its puppets with their weapon of choice being drones. The Pashtun villagers are being raped, killed and forced out of their homes after their villages are bulldozed or bombed, especially in the Helmand region because the Pashtun’s land contains the largest untapped REEs worth trillions. The U.S. and its puppets are destroying their villages, killing those who defend themselves, raping the women and children and forcing them to leave. These tactics sound really familiar to me.

I believe history does repeat itself. This U.S. imperialistic campaign of genocide against the native Pashtun tribe and the theft of the Pashtun’s home land and REEs is exactly what the United States has done to the Native American tribes in the U.S. in the past centuries. The U.S. tactics of killing the leaders of the Native American tribes, who resisted occupation, is being implemented today in the Pashutn villages. The U.S. tactics of forced relocation , theft of the native tribe’s land rich in valuable resources, and divide and conquer are being implemented against the native Pashtun tribe, who pose the only threat to the United States’ achievement of its three goals.

It reminds me of the forced relocation of the Cherokee Native American tribe , who resisted the U.S. invader/occupier in the 19th century. In 1824-25, the U.S. killed the Cherokee leaders, seized the valuable Cherokee land, and forced the Cherokees to relocate to undesirable, strange land called the “Indian territory.” This war crime is referred to as the “Trail of Tears”. Does this sound familiar? Now, a few greedy Afghan puppets are signing agreements with the U.S., Pashtun land rich in REEs is being seized with villages destroyed , Pashtun tribal leaders are being killed, and Pashtuns are being forcefully relocated to “tribal” territory.

History has shown that Afghanistan is the grave yard of the superpowers because the Native Afghans, who are the majority, cherish their freedom and never surrender when foreign troops are on their soil. I hate violence and war. I only want true peace in Afghanistan and an end to war, but I honestly I do not see that happening as long as the U.S. continues with its present policy of divide and conquer and exclusion of the Afghan majority. The United States’ “selected” leader from the outside, Ghani, will not be accepted by the Afghan majority, who will not talk peace with the puppet or his selected cabinet. Unfortunately with the new puppet government of ethnic minorities, war lords, communist war criminals and drug traffickers it will just be more of the same- corruption, drug trafficking, the stealing of the Afghans REEs, violence and war. Four decades of suffering is enough for the Afghan people. I hope that the U.S. government changes its policy in Afghanistan.

Sincerely,

Abdul Kadir Mohmand

Former Representative of the Afghan Freedom Fighter for North America in the 1980s

http://pz.rawa.org/70/70hanif_atmar_khadi.htm

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Abdul Kadir Mohmand was born in Kabul, Afghanistan. He currently resides at Kalamazoo, Michigan. He graduated from Kabul High School. On an UNESCO scholarship, Mr. Mohmand studied at Sofia University, Bulgaria from 1976 until 1978 when his studies were interrupted by the Communist seizure of power in Afghanistan. The new Afghan Communist government ordered the Bulgarian government to return him to Afghanistan because he was anti-communist. Mr. Mohmand requested political asylum. With the help of the United Nations and the U.S. Embassy, he arrived to Italy and then the United States in 1979. Mr. Mohmand returned to his studies and earned his B.S. in 1983 from Western Michigan University. He found employment in various positions in the engineering business. For many years, he worked for BFI and was country operations manager for BFI Italia. Currently, Mr. Mohmand owns a shopping center and develops commercial properties. During the 1980s, Mr. Mohmand was the Representative of the Afghan Mujahideen for North America. During the 1980s, Mr. Mohmand returned to Afghanistan to fight as a freedom fighter against the Soviets and Afghan communists. Through an arrangement with Borgess Hospital in Kalamazoo, Michigan, Mr. Mohmand would bring back wounded Afghan children and Mujahideen for medical treatment at Borgess and recuperation in his home in Kalamazoo. He formed and was president of a nonprofit, Aid for Afghanistan. In the 1980s, Mr. Mohmand also worked with the Committee for a Free Afghanistan in Washington D.C to bring wounded Afghans to the United States for medical treatment. For the past four decades Mr. Mohmand has dedicated his life to working to achieve true peace and stability in Afghanistan. A few years ago, Mr. Mohmand organized educated Afghans intellectuals across the world who drafted a comprehensive plan for peace. Presently, he has united many different Afghan peace organizations under one umbrella. The goal of this network is to unite Afghans to bring true peace in and the independence of Afghanistan. This network wants to be the bridge between the Afghan freedom fighters and the silent Afghan majority, and the Western World in any peace negotiations. Mr. Mohmand wants true peace and stability in Afghanistan. As a veteran of war, Mr. Mohmand hates war.