Corporate media coverage of the U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan and the collapse of the countryâs U.S.-backed government has offered audiences more mystification than illumination. I looked at editorials in five major U.S. dailies following the Talibanâs retaking of Kabul: the Boston Globe, LA Times, New York Times, Wall Street Journal and Washington Post. The editorial boards of these papers consistently trivialized South Asian lives, erased U.S. responsibility for lethal violence, and made untenable assertions about Washingtonâs supposedly righteous motives in the war.
Uncounted civilian cost

The New York Times (8/15/21) ran the next best thing to a photo of a helicopter taking off from the Kabul embassy roof: a photo of a helicopter flying over the embassy roof.
The editorials evince a callous indifference to the toll of the war on civilians in Afghanistan and Pakistan, where the war has also been fought. The New York Times (8/15/21) referred to âat least 2,448 American service membersâ lives lost in Afghanistan,â and to âAfghan casualties so hugeâ60,000 killed since 2001, by one estimateâthat the government kept them a secret.â The link makes clear that the authors are talking about deaths among Afghan police and soldiers. Yet, as of April, more than 71,000 civiliansâover 47,000 Afghans and more than 24,000 Pakistanisâhave been directly killed in the US-initiated war.
The Boston Globeâs piece (8/16/21) described âtwo decades of the United States propping up Afghan forces to keep the Taliban at bay at the cost of more than $2 trillion and more than 2,400 lost military service members.â Tens of thousands of dead Afghan and Pakistani civilians evidently arenât significant enough to factor into âthe costâ of the war.
âThe war in Afghanistan took the lives of more than 2,400 American troops,â said the Los Angeles Times editorial (8/16/21), which went on to add, âFor decades to come, America will be paying the medical bills of veterans suffering from the emotional and physical toll of their trauma and injuries.â The authors ignored dead, wounded and psychologically scarred South Asian civilians, though the UN Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA) logged 3,524 civilian injuries in the first half of 2021 alone, and 5,785 in 2020.
The Wall Street Journal (8/15/21, 8/16/21), meanwhile, didnât mention any deaths that took place during the war.
âSome 66,000 Afghan fighters have given their lives in this war during the past 20 years, alongside 2,448 U.S. service members,â the Washington Post (8/16/21) pointed out, declining to spare a word for noncombatants. U.S. troops, the article assured readers, âendured very modest casualties, since 2014,â without noting that the U.S. inflicted a great many on Afghan civilians in that period: For instance, a 2019 Human Rights Watch report noted that, in the first six months of that year, the U.S. and its partners in what was then the Afghan government killed more civilians than the Taliban did.
Forever war > withdrawal

The âAfghan debacleâ was âavoidable,â the Washington Post (8/16/21) argued, if only Biden had been willing to commit to an indefinite military occupation.
Two of the editorials were clear that they would prefer continuous U.S. war against Afghanistan to withdrawal. The Washington Post (8/16/21) claimed that
a small U.S. and allied military presenceâcapable of working with Afghan forces to deny power to the Taliban and its Al Qaeda terrorist allies, while diplomats and nongovernmental organizations nurtured a fledgling civil societyânot only would have been affordable, but also could have paid for itself in U.S. security and global credibility.
Costs such as the harm the âU.S. and allied military presenceâ does to Afghans did not enter into the Postâs accounting for âaffordability.â No explanation is offered as to why Afghans should endure the lack of âsecurityâ entailed in âU.S. and alliedâ bombs falling on their heads. Nor did the authors clarify why the U.S.âs âglobal credibilityâ is a higher priority than, say, stopping the U.S. from killing Afghan children, as it did last October.
The Wall Street Journal (8/15/21) professed concern for the âthousands of translators, their families, and other officials who are in peril from Taliban rule and didnât get out in time,â and said that what it sees as the impending âmurder of these innocentsâ will be a âstain on the Biden presidency.â Yet the authors argued that the U.S. should continue bombing Afghanistan indefinitely, asserting that
Afghans were willing to fight and take casualties with the support of the U.S. and its NATO allies, especially airpower. A few thousand troops and contractors could have done the job and prevented this rout.
Over the course of the war, that airpower tended to mean the mass death of Afghan civilians: In 2019, for example, U.S. airstrikes killed 546 of them (Washington Post, 9/4/21). In advocating the continued American bombing of Afghanistan to stop the âmurder of these innocents,â the authors are calling for the âmurder ofâŠinnocents,â just by the U.S. rather than the Taliban.
The âAmerican dreamâ

The Los Angeles Times (8/16/21) praised the U.S.âs ânoble hopes to build a multiparty democracy,â insisting that âthe people of Afghanistan were failed by their leaders.â
The New York Timesâ editorial board (8/15/21) gushed about the purity of U.S. values, saying that the Talibanâs return to power is
unutterably tragic. Tragic because the American dream of being the âindispensable nationâ in shaping a world where the values of civil rights, womenâs empowerment and religious tolerance rule proved to be just that: a dream.
The editors did nothing to explain how they square their view that the U.S.âs âdreamâ entails worldwide âcivil rightsâ and âwomenâs empowermentâ with the U.S.âs carrying out torture in Afghanistan or its propensity for killing Afghan women (Guardian, 7/11/08).
The board went on:
How [the war] evolved into a two-decade nation-building project in which as many as 140,000 troops under American command were deployed at one time is a story of mission creep and hubris, but also of the enduring American faith in the values of freedom and democracy.
That faith in âfreedomâ was manifest by such practices as training warlords who killed and abused civilians, and propping up an Afghan state that included officials who sexually assaulted childrenâactions that U.S. troops were told to ignore, as the New York Times (9/21/15) itself reported.
Similarly, the Los Angeles Times (8/16/21) claimed that
the U.S. and its Western allies had noble hopes to build a multiparty democracyâwith respect for the rights of women and minorities, an independent judiciary and a new constitutionâbut nation-building was not an appropriate goal.
Itâs anyoneâs guess how the paper reconciles the U.S. and its partnersâ ânoble hopesâ for such things as ârespect for the rights of womenâ with the U.S. working with Saudi Arabia and Pakistan to finance and arm extremely conservative forces in Afghanistan, so as to undermine progressives in the country while strengthening reactionary elements, a history (described in Robert Dreyfussâ book Devilâs Game) that all of the editorials obscure.
Swallowing official justifications

The Wall Street Journal (8/15/21) argued that Mr. Trumpâs withdrawal deadline was a mistake, but Mr. Biden could have maneuvered around itââmeaning he could have ignored it.
Indeed, the editorials suffered from a basic failure to question the official justifications offered for the war and occupation. The New York Times editorial board (8/15/21) wrote that
the war in Afghanistan began in response by the United States and its NATO allies to the attacks of September 11, 2001, as an operation to deny Al Qaeda sanctuary in a country run by the Taliban.
Thereâs no place in that narrative for the fact that eight days into the war, in October 2001, the Taliban offered to discuss turning over Osama Bin Laden (Guardian, 10/14/01). The Journal characterized the Taliban as âthe jihadists the U.S. toppled 20 years ago for sheltering Osama bin Laden.â But it was in mid-November 2001 (Guardian, 11/17/01) that the U.S. toppled the Taliban, a month after they had said they were willing to talk about extraditing bin Laden.
In the same vein, the Los Angeles Times editorial (8/16/21) said that
after the U.S. ousted the Talibanâwhich had hosted the Al Qaeda terrorist network and refused to turn over terrorists such as Osama bin Ladenâthe George W. Bush administration expanded the goals of the mission in ways that in hindsight were never realistic.
This phrasing implies that the U.S. overthrew the Taliban because they ârefused to turn over terrorists such as Osama bin Laden.â However, in addition to the Taliban signaling that it could be open to extraditing the Al Qaeda leader in October 2001, according to a former head of Saudi intelligence (LA Times, 11/4/01), the Taliban said in 1998 that it would hand over bin Laden to Saudi Arabia, the U.S.âs close ally; the Saudi intelligence official says that the Taliban backed off after the U.S. fired cruise missiles at an apparent bin Laden camp in Afghanistan and a pharmaceutical factory in Sudan, following attacks on U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania attributed to Al Qaeda.
The outlets thus failed to inform their readers that, had the U.S. pursued negotiations for bin Ladenâs extradition, Afghans may have been spared 20 years of devastating war. That U.S. planners might have drawn up their Afghanistan policies with a view to the countryâs vast resource wealth and strategic positionâand thereâs evidence that they did (In These Times, 8/1/18)âis not a perspective that the editorials opted to share with their readers. Neither is the idea that the U.S. doesnât have the right to decide who governs other countries.
Engineering forgetfulness about Americaâs Afghan war, if left unchallenged, will make it easier to wage the next one.
Gregory Shupak teaches media studies at the University of Guelph-Humber in Toronto. His book, The Wrong Story: Palestine, Israel and the Media, is published by OR Books.
Source: Mronline.org