The Afghanistan war is due for a recycling, but it may not go the way the U.S. has planned.
 
Begun under dubious circumstances, more as a demonstration war to set the stage for the real drama of Iraq, Afghanistan has almost always been more useful as a proxy war, fought by others, rather than a direct war, fought by Americans.
 
But 9-11 changed all that, and today, 9 years later, Barack Obama is beginning to resemble, more and more, another congressman who became a president: Lyndon B. Johnson.
 
What makes that resemblance all the more remarkable is Johnson’s inheritance of the Vietnam War, and his decision to escalate it.
 
We may never know exactly why he felt forced to escalate troops even as he secretly knew it was a lost cause, but comments made to congressional leaders in the bloody aftermath of the 1965 U.S. armed intervention in the Dominican Republic revolt gives us some glimpse into his thinking.
 
Johnson ordered tens of thousands of U.S. troops onto the island to put down  a popular rebellion and install a right wing dictator, Joaquin Belaguer, who ravaged the nation for nearly 30 years.  Johnson summoned two Republican lawmakers to the White House, Senator Everett Dirkson and representative Gerald Ford, to crow,  "[I’ve just taken an action that will prove that Democratic presidents can deal with Communists as strongly as Republicans.
 
So, Dominicans were saddled with a U.S. Puppet dictator for decades, denied the right to choose their own leaders, and experienced untold repression, so that U.S. presidents could claim strength and political advantage over their adversaries in the other party.
 
Obama, despite his plea for "new politics," is faced with an opposition unlike any other president in history.
 
What would this opposition do if he announced a withdrawal from Afghanistan? The roar and howls of protest would be deafening.
 
"Weak on Terrorism!", "Betrayer of the Afghan People!" and on and on …..

For President Johnson, Vietnam was  the quicksand that devoured his presidency, his domestic agenda, and from which there was no escape.
 
 For President Obama, facing a nation that had been called "graveyard of empires,"  quicksand may prove a step up.
 
Obama didn’t start the war, but he did inherit it.

What he does now, either escalation or withdrawal, may determine whether Afghanistan becomes what it was for the former Soviet Union: another Vietnam. 
 


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{Source: Chester, Eric Thomas,  Rag-Tags, Scum, Riff-Raff and Commies: The U.S. Intervention in the Dominican Republic: 1965-66  N.Y., Monthly Review Press, 2001) .p.90}

###

Death Row prisoner Mumia Abu-Jamal is a committed revolutionary, journalist, and author of many books. His most recent title is "JAILHOUSE LAWYERS: Prisoners Defending Prisoners vs. The USA" published by City Lights Books (www.citylights.com). Massive evidence demonstrating that Abu-Jamal did not receive a fair trial has convinced groups as diverse as Amnesty International and the NAACP to demand that he be granted a retrial. A growing movement that includes the NAACP and the National Lawyers Guild further advocates the U.S. Department of Justice to investigate the ample evidence of civil rights violations in his case. Such an investigation should result in Abu-Jamal’s retrial and release. To support the movement in support of investigation and retrial see:http://www.freemumia.com/civilrights.html

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Mumia Abu-Jamal is an acclaimed American journalist and author who has been writing from Death Row for more than twenty-five years. 
 
Mumia was sentenced to death after a trial that was so flagrantly racist that Amnesty International dedicated an entire report to describing how the trial "failed to meet minimum international standards safeguarding the fairness of legal proceedings." The complete report is posted here on the Amnesty website.
 
Mumia is author of many books, including Jailhouse Lawyers: Prisoners Defending Prisoners vs. The USA, forthcoming from City Lights Books.
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