The Children of Afghanistan

Painting Afghan Children
Afghan Children – Painting by Norbert Haupt – 1980

The war in Afghanistan has gone on for more than twelve years. That’s a long time in a child’s life. Considering that we all remember very little of our own childhood before age three or four, this would mean that any Afghan youth now 17 or 18 years old would have no memory in his life of not being at war. For them, the state of war has existed forever.

Afghan Children
Afghan children line up for food distributed by UNICEF at Maslakh refugee camp, approximately 6 miles west of Herat in western Afghanistan. (Behrouz Mehri/AFP/Getty Images)

Here are their faces. Many have never known what a “normal” life is like. They were born and have grown up in refugee camps. Many have lost their parents.

Looking up the demographics of the United States and Afghanistan, a vast difference is apparent:

Demographics USDemographics AfghanistanFirst, there are very few old people in Afghanistan.

Second, more than 42.6 percent of all people in Afghanistan are children under 14 years of age.

Given what I said above, that we don’t remember much before age three or four, more than half of the entire population of Afghanistan knows the United States only as a nation of warriors, patrolling their country, at war inside their country.

When I think about this, it occurs to me that we only need to wait another 15 years or so, and just about everyone alive in Afghanistan will know us as we want to be known. We don’t need rockets, drones, bombs, bullets or tanks. All we need to do is be nice and wait. The children of Afghanistan will be our friends, if we act like friends. Or they will be our enemies, if we act like enemies.

As a matter of that, we could have fed and clothed these children for the past 12 years for a fraction of the hundreds of billions of dollars we have spent on military action, and we would have an entire generation of Afghans, 50% of the entire population, who would be our friends.

As we said so aptly in the sixties: Make love, not war.

Yet, we keep propagating the idiocy of war.

School in Afghanistan

School in Afghanistan

This is a school in Afghanistan. This is the country we’re spending $10 million PER HOUR on defending.

The Permanent State of War

The United States has been at war in Afghanistan since October 7, 2001. As of today, this war has gone on for eleven years, two months and one day.

In comparison, the time the U.S. was engaged in war in the Civil War, WW-I and WW-II combined was nine years, seven months and seven days.

Since the invasion of Afghanistan, the United States has been operating under emergency wartime powers granted under the 2001 Authorization for Use of Military Force. This authorization grants the president and the federal government extraordinary authorities. It effectively suspends civil liberties for anyone the government considers an enemy.

We call this the “War on Terror.”

The Civil War and the two World Wars ended when a capitulation treaty was signed by the warring powers. There was a clear end to those wars. We knew when they were over. In the War on Terror, we’re fighting terrorists. While we have decimated many terrorist organizations, killed or captured many leaders, a whole new generation of youth has grown up to join the enemy. We will never completely eradicate al-Qaeda. We will never sit down with an al-Qaeda leader at a surrender meeting and sign a treaty. There will be terrorists in the world. We are not going to eradicate them all, especially not with guns and drones. We can only cripple their organizations, keep them down and on the defensive, and we can educate the countries that harbour them so their safe havens slowly disappear.

This War on Terror has cost us about $2 trillion so far, and it’s ongoing.

We can’t afford education in our country, and we continue to cut education budgets.

We can’t afford maintaining our infrastructure.

We can’t afford healthcare coverage for all.

But apparently we can afford foreign wars that get us nowhere, that cannot ever end, and that no longer make sense.