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Wali Karzai Makes The Case For CIA Oversight.

It wasn’t that long ago that the suggestion that there should be more civilian oversight of the CIA provoked hysterical reactions from conservative lawmakers that doing so would put Americans in danger. With the news that Wali Ahmed Karzai, brother of Afghan President Hamid Karzai, may have been on the CIA payroll while being involved in the opium trade that also funds the Taliban, it might be time to revisit that assertion. Because if the Times report is true, that means that the CIA has not only been undermining the military’s efforts to cut down the Taliban’s revenue base, but it also means that it’s possible that American tax dollars have inadvertently helped fund the same people who are killing American soldiers. Andrew Exum further says that military officials in southern Afghanistan he's spoken to describe Wali Karzai “and his activities as the biggest problem they [the military] face — bigger than the lack of government services or even the Taliban.”

The Karzai revelation has important strategic implications, namely, how a counterinsurgency strategy is going to work with a corrupt government headed by someone who stole an election and whose sibling is a high-level drug dealer helping to provide the enemy with a revenue source. Spencer Ackerman also points out that there are a number of serious unanswered questions about the CIA and Karzai—my question is, did Congress know about the relationship? Yesterday the House Dems on the intelligence committee accused the CIA of misleading or witholding information from them five times, but only cited four instances. Was yesterday’s revelation one of those times? It's a serious problem either way, but if Congress was aware of the relationship that would seem to me to be a pretty big deal.

Spencer also notes that there may have been a number of reasons why the Bush administration decided to maintain this relationship for eight years--perhaps they believed they needed the relationship to maintain stability in Afghanistan while Iraq was imploding, for example. I would only add that many of the things we have come to think of as major mistakes by the CIA have their origins in the whims of the executive. There's always going to be tension in a democratic society between the impulse for transparency and having an effective intelligence service. That doesn’t make oversight any less important. It makes it more important. That whole new Church Committee thing is looking like a good idea.

— A. Serwer




COMMENTS

in any civil war, you can tell which side we are backing by discovering which side is running the drug trade. We can't run the world, but we can out-muscle any drug lord on the planet.

It works like this: We aren't popular. We need to buy loyalty. You can only buy corrupt people. Drug lords are as corrupt as can be and are always glad to have protection. They are (it's true) great sources of information, tied into the weapons trade, etc. The problem is, the bargain corrupts us in the process.

All this stuff about the Taliban's drug biz is fantasy. They shut opium down before 9/11, the UN recognized that, the US rewarded them for it. Sure, they may charge a tax on a truck at a checkpoint.

The history of the Afghan drug war after 9/11.
First we were too busy catching Osama. Then the Brit general says the coalition will leave drug suppression to the Afghan police later. Then drugs get out of hand and a nice (lady) staffer testifies to a congressional committee, it will take a long time to train the Afghan police since, "They don't know how to do jumping jacks." The hearing was a farce. Finally, in the last 2 years the coalition has been losing ground. (Used to be safe to travel, now unsafe even in Kabul...) Charts in the FT show the volume of drugs in Afghanistan declining over that period. Drugs rose and fell with the fortunes of the Karzai regime.

Lets review the questions: Did congress know? How could they not know? Only by not caring.

Was this a CIA mistake? Are you kidding? This is standard procedure. This is one of the tools to build our empire, or at least delay its decline. This is what success looks like: We have our puppet D.C. restauranteer and his brother running the biggest sector in the Afghan economy. Why else have a colony?

If we actually believe all the stuff about making their life better, then we should simply pack-up our puppets and leave.

It is not a matter of oversight; it's a bad war, an undeclared war, a lost war. That's the power congress needs to exercise, the power to end the war.

It is not a matter of oversight; it's a bad war, an undeclared war, a lost war. That's the power congress needs to exercise, the power to end the war.

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