Scott Horton Show - Just the Interviews - 12/30/21 Basir Bita on the Economic Crisis in Afghanistan
Episode Date: January 1, 2022Scott interviews activist Basir Bita about the economic calamity that’s hit Afghanistan since the U.S. withdrawal this past summer. With the U.S. and IMF freezing Afghan government funds as well as ...widespread market corrections after the fall of the previous regime, Afghanistan has been thrown into turmoil. Food prices have tripled since the summer and many Afghans face issues with food security. Bita argues that the Biden Administration and others should get over their hesitation to work with the new government of Afghanistan. And that a refusal to do so reveals how little they truly care for the Afghan people, despite their rhetoric. Basir Bita is a civil society activist now based out of Canada. He is an advisor for Afghan Peace Volunteers, a youth group in Kabul, Afghanistan that advocates for nonviolent conflict resolution. Follow him on Twitter @BasirBita This episode of the Scott Horton Show is sponsored by: The War State and Why The Vietnam War?, by Mike Swanson; Tom Woods’ Liberty Classroom; ExpandDesigns.com/Scott; EasyShip; Free Range Feeder; Thc Hemp Spot; Green Mill Supercritical; Bug-A-Salt and Listen and Think Audio. Shop Libertarian Institute merch or donate to the show through Patreon, PayPal or Bitcoin: 1DZBZNJrxUhQhEzgDh7k8JXHXRjYu5tZiG. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
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All right, y'all, welcome to the Scott Horton Show.
I'm the director of the Libertarian Institute, editorial director of antivore.com, author of the book, Pools Aaron,
time to end the war in Afghanistan, and the brand new, enough already, time to end the war on terrorism.
And I've recorded more than 5,500 interviews since 2000.
almost all on foreign policy and all available for you at scothorton dot four you can sign up the podcast feed there and the full interview archive is also available at youtube.com slash scott horton's show all right you guys introducing basir bita and um he is a longtime civil society activist in afghanistan and uh he left afghanistan when the taliban took over
and it really is amazing, I'm sure some of you guys have noticed that all the hawks on TV and in the papers who supported the war for the Afghan people's own goods supposedly over the last 20 years.
Now it don't seem to care about them whatsoever, as many reports are coming in from all quarters, that they're facing an economic depression and a massive hunger and even starvation crisis going in, well, this winter right now as we speak.
and so thank you, Bess, here, for joining us.
Appreciate it.
Pleasure.
So, first of all, what can you tell us about this situation as far as the population in Afghanistan?
And I know it's a big country, but a lot has changed in a very short amount of time here.
And obviously, the markets that distribute and provide food to everybody must have been severely disrupted, huh?
Well, that's a hundred percent, too.
You know, you can see, for example, almost more than 100,000 Afghans were evacuated through evacuation efforts by the U.S.
governments to the U.S.
So many others left the country, and tons of honors of others are still stuck in Afghanistan
who are in dire need of not only being evacuated from the country,
but also, as you just mentioned, lack of access to food markets.
Unfortunately, after the Taliban takeover in August,
the U.S. froze nearly 10 billion in assets belonging to the Afghan Central Bank.
The International Monetary Fund froze the distribution of $450 million in the World Bank,
held back hundreds of millions in the Afghan Reconstruction Trust Fund, as they call it.
Meanwhile, to give you a broader picture, Afghan T-shirts have gone without pay since June and hospitals are already closing.
The Afghan people can't be blamed for the oppressive policies of the Taliban.
What we want, what I personally want, is to unfreeze the funds.
Private sector is almost non-fictional anymore as there is neither a food,
a stable food market nor a currency in circulation.
The scale of disaster is unthinkably large.
The UN estimated that 23 million people face acute food insecurity,
and 1 million children reached dying from malnutrition.
With Afghanistan having sank into world's worst humanitarian crisis,
nobody was surprised when the United Nations requested 4.5 billion for Asian needs in 2022,
which is the largest ever such appeal.
So the situations for women's rights,
is more than a survival catastrophe.
The crisis is not only about physical access
to food materials, but there is a mental breakdown
where all Afghans suffers,
who already suffered from PTSD and other mental challenges.
Every day I'm in close contact with friends of mine,
with my brothers, parents,
and I hear different stories of people,
people committing suicide, selling their children, or leaving their children on their street.
Street, rubbery, skyrocketed, and you know that food material prices has tripled since fall of Kabul.
Hmm.
Food prices have tripled, huh?
Tripled.
Yeah.
Now, of course, politically, the problem is simple, right?
Well, we can't give money to the Taliban, and so then that's it.
There are only other choices to be the worst of poor sports and watch innocent civilians starve?
Well, I believe that there are politically available opportunities to open at least a negotiation with the Taliban as the UN already had some discussion with the Taliban in order to deliver funds and food materials to the people.
We've been talking with them directly in, in,
substantive talks since 2018.
Why stop now?
Absolutely. Absolutely.
You know, even before the U.S. invasion in 2001, the Taliban were ready to open
discussion with the U.S. governments, but the U.S. governments kept refusing.
There were so many people, Afghan experts, outside Afghanistan and inside Afghanistan,
who were consulted before the war,
their main argument was that
if you invade Afghanistan,
at the end of today,
you will have a big mess left behind.
But the U.S. governments invaded.
The same story happened about Iraq,
and at the end of a decade of so-called intervention
you can see that what is left behind in Iraq.
There is no mass destruction weapons found ever.
So there is an opportunity of discussion with the Taliban.
I'm sure the Taliban is now in a situation that they are open for discussion.
Well, obviously no space or room for accepting women's rights overnight.
or democracy and elections or whatever they call it, but there is some room because there
are some internal conflict within Taliban as well.
Right.
And, you know, for American politics sake, people really need to make the distinction,
not that these guys are great guys or anything, but the Taliban, in a very real sense,
they are extremely conservative, as opposed to, for example,
Islamic State when they rolled into Western Iraq and were as, you know, Patrick Coburn compared
them to the Khmer Rouge where they just essentially were as radical as could be and, you know,
just committed to mass chaos. That's not what the Taliban is. And so for all of their faults,
it seems like essentially now that the war is over and they've won it, you could parachute aid workers
into certainly any provincial capital in the country. And they would,
not be in danger there. It's not a war zone anymore. They would be under the protection of
the new state as run by the Taliban. And if all they're doing is delivering wheat to hungry
people, there shouldn't be anything in the world that stands in the way of that.
Well, obviously, yeah, Taliban, we can, I can hear stories that there are some NGOs or
humanitarian organizations working undergrounds in Afghanistan. And I hear from friends of mine
relatives that they have already received some support from them. I'm sure the Taliban
will won't disagree with delivering food materials or humanitarian assistance. But the issue
is still over the U.S. and its allies. You know, I believe that the U.S. and the allies just are
trying to make a face for themselves after spending almost $3 trillion in Afghanistan war.
And then you could see the Taliban is back on the power.
This is all, I believe, the U.S.
The main reason is the U.S. still freezing the money, is just to show that the U.S. citizen
and the world that we are against Taliban's, we won't, we will.
even expand our sanctions if the Taliban
do not accept very basic
women's rights and democracy
or whatever they call it.
Hold on just one second, be right back.
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right yeah all their original pie in the sky goals that they made up so that they could have an excuse to stay in the war and not leave it um yeah yeah
uh which of course the taliban have no intention or capability of delivering for that matter not at all
if it came down to it so listen i mean um it's just kind of implied throughout this whole discussion right
is that everybody's just sort of too distracted and detached and this policy it's
been considered and decided on by very few in the White House and the Pentagon and the State
Department and whoever, but that essentially everybody else is over it, nobody's really
kind of paying attention to this, and they could stay on like this. There's not really a recognition
that, you know, first of all, we could release the funds that we're holding, and then second
of all, do everything we can to help organizations, you know, aid organizations get in there
to help feed people and you know even if it's all about public relations for the empire how about
being a good sport in your loss and still you know reaching out an extra help in hand to the
civilian population under the control of the people who beat you in the war you know for no other
reason that might look good you know to some state department flunky somewhere or another that like
hey, what if we were kind for a change, just for a minute, you know?
Yeah, you know, I believe that when the U.S. and its allies consented,
that it's time to attack Afghanistan 2001, and just over a month,
the U.S. managed to kick out Taliban out of the country,
and then 20 years of fight against terrorism.
which ended up to fruitless efforts and a big mess left behind.
I believe that now it's time for international community to once again step in and make a coalition
as they invaded the U.S. Afghanistan 20 years ago, it's time that they should form
and a more realistic approach would be to work with the new Taliban government or regime
for the sake of at least basic state services.
The Taliban lack such a capability as you just mentions to deliver this services.
But for the sake of the future of the people who already suffered for four decades
by the direct involvement of the U.S. supporting the insurgents groups,
even the rise of Taliban for the first time and the second time,
now it's their time to step in and help the Afghans to at least they can suffer less,
if not relief from the pains.
Right.
Well, listen, I sure appreciate the sentiment there.
and now do you know who's really doing very much in europe or in the united states or canada for that matter to actually overcome the decision that's already been made here obviously to try to get them to loosen up and change their mind i know there have been some efforts
well there yeah there are some efforts i'm a friend of mine who used to be a um as i call them a big donkey in the uh governments in the puppet governments
But in who is now working for the Taliban governments, he, I had a conversation with him who said that there is some sort of tendency from within the Taliban's to open a conversation with the international community.
There are some efforts from Canada, some civil society organizations, NGOs, who are.
who are trying to not only evacuate Afghans,
but also to deliver services.
I hear even from friends of mine,
peace activists and civil society activists in the US
and from different parts of the world, Germany,
that there should be some pressure over the international community
to get them, have at least the conversations,
you know, in our,
21st century, there is no more space for bloodshed, for brutality, for bullying, that it's
time to invade again a country and make them so-called free of dictatorship.
So there are some pressure from different parts of the wars to get the international community,
but I'm hopeful that someday they understand what they are.
left behinds and now it's time to be more truthful to a citizen of your own country, not just
to make a face for yourself. Right. Yeah, and listen, I'm never one to justify our government
doing anything to or for anybody. But in this case, we're talking about providing cash dollars
and minimal calories for people, you know, wheat to eat so they don't lay down dead or, you know,
go you know completely helpless out there so and for some kind of transition period you know it's
hardly the worst thing in the budget and you know in fact if they would just give the Taliban the
money that belongs to the sovereign government as you mentioned already and just get out of the way
lift all their sanctions and uh pardon me lift all their sanctions and encourage other nations
to go and do everything they can too that'd be good enough frankly
if they, you know, were really going about it in a way trying to help.
Well, you know, the current situation is for Taliban is really tough.
Taliban in different provinces, you see their forces, those who work for the Taliban's,
who sacrifice themselves for application of Sharia law around Afghanistan
and to bring Taliban again to power.
they are losing their hope for their future.
As they can see, they don't get paid,
they don't have their resources available to them
as those who sacrifice their families,
the friends, relatives.
They are internal conflict between different fractions of Taliban.
The younger generation believe that they sacrifice themselves
on the battlegrounds, and they are strictly against any
democratic values or westernized terms and wars like democracy and women's rights.
But there are some older generations who used to administrates the Taliban regime back in 1996
2001, who are a bit more open to the conversations.
So there is, but if, but if they, also, there is no chance to unfreeze $10 billion overnight and let
Taliban regime have access to us.
And that's all, that's not going to work either.
That is as political suicidist will.
Yeah.
All right.
Well, listen, I appreciate your effort in bringing this to light and trying to keep people
paying attention.
There's so many greatest humanitarian disasters in the world going on at the same time right now.
It's hard to keep track of them.
Of course, Yemen also being inflicted by the United States or, you know, suffering under violence
inflicted by the United States and its allies there as well.
But, you know, I don't know, if every nation in the region took a mostly hands-off approach
and just let things settle out in Afghanistan, who knows how long it might take that country
to reach a decent kind of settlement and status quo
where they could just try to live happy and prosperous lives
instead of all this constant violence,
which has been inflicted on them from the outside,
essentially for the last couple of generations here,
with plenty of domestic actors, to be sure, involved.
Yeah, well, domestic actors as well as regional players, Iran, Pakistan.
Oh, and Pakistan is, I've, um,
I can see that Pakistani governments is now afraid of the Taliban.
You never thought that Taliban would try to, you know,
there is some dispute over some regional and domestic interest between the Taliban and Pakistan.
You can see, but Taliban is receiving support from other neighboring countries.
I believe that China has already reached.
It's sand to Taliban governments.
There could be some possible support from Russia, Iran already.
And, you know, if the sanctions continue and lasting for longer time,
I believe that Taliban will again reach out to internal resources they already had
And they've made money through, like, drug trafficking, selling out the mines, like copper mines, and reaching out to others to receive support.
Yeah. All right. Well, thank you again. I really appreciate your time on the show, Bacir.
Thank you so much.
All right, you guys. That is Bacir, Bita, a long time civil society.
activist in Afghanistan and now in Canada.
The Scott Horton show, Anti-War Radio, can be heard on KPFK 90.7 FM in L.A.
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