Sent: 10 July 2006 14:08
To: Sunday Times Letters
Subject: No "Invasion" of Afghanistan
Sir,
Michael Portillo, in his excellent article "No offence, imam, but we
must call it Islamic terror" (July 9), writes of "The allied invasion of
Afghanistan..." But there was no invasion of Afghanistan.
Before the fall of Kabul, and of most of the rest of Afghanistan, to the
insurgent Afghan Northern Alliance in November 2001--and the consequent
collapse of the Taliban regime--there were no foreign regular combat
formations in Afghanistan. The Northern Alliance did receive air
support and assistance from special forces (both US and British); that however
is not an invasion. Substantial foreign ground combat forces--including
Canadian--only entered the country after the Taliban had been deposed by
indigenous Afghan forces, and those foreign troops entered with the
agreement of the Northern Alliance.
This is no mere semantic quibble. Describing what the US and UK did in
Afghanistan as an "invasion" tends to equate those actions in people's
minds with the real invasion of Iraq. That equation implicitly and wrongly
calls into question the legitimacy of NATO and Coalition actions in
Afghanistan, which have been authorised unanimously by the UN Security Council.
It is most unfortunate that the mythical "invasion" of Afghanistan has
become common currency amongst journalists and commentators. This
misnomer can only help increase extremism amongst susceptible Muslims, the very
thing Mr Portillo wishes to combat.