Select date

May 2024
Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat Sun

The Taliban destroyed cultural sites. No, Trump shouldn’t follow suit.

24-6-2020 < Attack the System 38 301 words
 

Donald Trump: Social Justice Warrior of the Right?


From January, when US-Iranian relations were heating up, which now seems like ancient history with everything that’s happened since.


Hawaii Tribune Herald


The Taliban’s slow rise to power in Afghanistan in the 1990s drew interest in the West but not much initial condemnation. The ultra-conservative religious militia’s 1996 takeover of the remote, landlocked Asian nation was seen as unsurprising and perhaps even just in a nation whose leaders had been perpetually corrupt for decades.


But then came the events of early 2001, which drew furious condemnation from Islamic and non-Islamic nations alike. Taliban leader Mullah Mohammed Omar ordered the destruction of two carvings of Buddha, measuring 175 and 120 feet tall, which were hewn into a cliff face in the Bamiyan region in the third and fifth centuries. The destruction was compared to Nazi book-burning and blasted by the U.S. State Department as an assault on “the world’s cultural legacy.” Six months later, after it became known that Afghanistan was where Osama bin Laden had plotted the horrific terror attacks of 9/11, the view that the Taliban was barbaric was already in place. Within months, a U.S.-led coalition drove the Taliban out of Kabul and a new government was installed.


Now, 20 years later, President Donald Trump seems to want to follow in the Taliban’s footsteps. Over the weekend, he said that if Iran attacked America or Americans in response to the U.S. drone assassination of Iranian Gen. Qassem Soleimani, he would order attacks on 52 Iranian sites — including cultural sites. He chose 52, he explained, because Iran had held 52 Americans hostage in 1979-80.


READ MORE



Print