Charlie Wilson rose out of the same hardscrabble ground as another larger-than-life
Texan, Lyndon B. Johnson. Wilson went to Congress at the height of
the Cold War, and became increasingly frustrated because the rules of engagement
for that silent war prevented him from participating. Evewn though
he was on the House Appropriations Committee, where the real power
resided (the power to disburse money), he often felt that the American
side limited its effectiveness with petty legalistic constraints.
Then came Afghanistan. The Soviets invaded, though not officially
acknowledging this to their own citizens. America began funding a
ragtag army of Afghan tribal warlords who suddenly became freedom fighters
because they were taking on the Great Russian Bear. Charlie Wilson's
heart ached when he heard reports of the pitiful World War I rifles that
the brave
mujadheen used against sophisticated Soviet weaponry. But it
was strict administration policy not to supply American weapons, not to
acknowledge that America had a vested interest in this war. A captured
M-16 rifle or rocket launcher would hand the Soviets a propaganda coup,
one that would seem to justify the Soviet invasion.
Charlie Wilson and his CIA friend Gust Avrakatos set about to change this. George Crile, a veteran 60 Minutes producer with many forays into Afghanistan and Pakistan under his belt, has put together the previously-untold story of how Charlie beat the bureaucrats and got to fulfill his James Bond fantasy by using the mujadheen to stick it to the communists. It is probably fair to say that without Wilson's bravado, there would have been no driving of the Soviets out of Afghanistan, and perhaps a great delay in the collapse of the Soviet Union as well.
How Charlie and Gust got Stinger missiles produced by General Dynamics in the San Gabriel Valley of Southern California, into the hands of the freedom fighters, makes a great story and highlights an overlooked truism of world history - the things that go on unseen frequently have as much effect as the "official explanation" offered to the public.
But, as Crile points out, this is not just the story of an oversized
flawed hero. It is also a story that perfectly illustrates the law
of unintended consequences. Charlie Wilson's feudal freedom fighters
became 20th Century techno-guerillas without shedding their radical Islamic
fundamentalist tendencies. Somke banded with Osama bin Laden's al
Qaeda after the expulsion of the Soviet Army, and other swith the brutal
warlords who, to this very day, resist the imposition of Western-style,
Kabul-centered
democracy into Afghanistan.
Afghanistan is a Western construct which throws together into one country many rival ethnic factions that have been warring among themselves for centuries. These factions are better at fighting than they are at uniting. Crile reminds us that, in the Afghan language, the same word is used for "cousin" and "enemy." Crile's story of the biggest covert operation in American history is a tale from the 1980s whose chilling relevance to today is obvious.
Dialogue on favorite books with Deane Rink before and during his latest trek to Antarctica, with a note from Bill Ransom and a digression about Frank Herbert (a.k.a Bookbabble 101) -- a very long and rapidly growing document:
Book reviews by Richard Seltzer
A
library for the price of a book.
The
Middle East -- Context for Conflict: Iraq, Iran, Israel, Syria, Lebanon,
Egypt, Jordan, Saudi Arabia, Turkey, and the Persian Gulf States. Historical
background and context for understanding today's news. This CD contains
the full text of 10 "Country Studies" published by the Federal Research
Division of the Library of Congress. Each country study is presented as
a single document, in plain text form -- easy to read, to print, and to
search (rather than as a collection of over 100 separate documents for
each book). The tables in the appendix of each book are presented as html
documents. In addition, we include: The 2003 edition of the CIA
World Factbook, an interlinked set of hundreds of HTML documents, with
detailed up-to-date reference information on every country in the world,
with images of maps and flags; and some classic works of history, literature,
and religion, including The Koran and books on the traditions of Judaism,
all in plain text form. Complete
table of contents Free sample: Iraq,
a Country Study.
Published by B&R Samizdat Express, 33 Gould St., West Roxbury, MA 02132. 617-469-2269 seltzer@samizdat.com
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