NPR Host Laughably Claims That 'Taliban Has Never Been an Enemy of the United States'
While the prospect of a US withdrawal from Afghanistan is looming, some are at work pushing a revisionist history of America's involvement there. One NPR host even went so far as to claim that the Taliban, the brutal government toppled during the 2001 US invasion, "was never an enemy of the United States."
Even a cursory review of the history of the invasion belies that hat statement, made by radio host John Hockenberry, also a former ABC and NBC reporter, whose show "The Takeaway" broadcasts on NPR stations nationwide. Check below the break for video and a transcript (via former NBer Jeff Poor), as well as a brief but thorough debunking of Hockenberry's preposterous claim.
I guess, Christine Fair, I’m wondering why this is even a debate. The Taliban has never been an enemy of the United States. They don’t love us in Afghanistan, but they’re not sending planes over to New York or to the Pentagon and it seems to me much more broadly that the debate needs to happen is what is the sort of multi-state strategy for dealing with rogue nations of all kinds. Yemen is about to fall apart. You’ve got Somalia problems. The idea that terrorists just go to Afghanistan and launch weapons at the United States it seems in 2011 is an absurdity.
Yes, it is an absurdity precisely because the US military presence there removed a regime, the Taliban, that was overtly and consistently hostile to the Untied States and more than accommodating to the terrorist forces that attacked the country on September 11. The regime most certainly was an enemy of the United States, and in all likelihood would be again if it resumed power in Afghanistan.
Perhaps Hockenberry should have reviewed the 9/11 Commission Report before issuing that blanket statement. The report noted that Osama bin Laden "cemented his ties with" the Taliban as early as 1996. By September 11, 2001, the Taliban was housing enough al Qaeda training camps to churn out an army.
The Taliban seemed to open the doors to all who wanted to come to Afghanistan to train in the camps. The alliance with the Taliban provided al Qaeda a sanctuary in which to train and indoctrinate fighters and terrorists, import weapons, forge ties with other jihad groups and leaders, and plot and staff terrorist schemes. While Bin Ladin maintained his own al Qaeda guesthouses and camps for vetting and training recruits, he also provided support to and benefited from the broad infrastructure of such facilities in Afghanistan made available to the global network of Islamist movements. U.S. intelligence estimates put the total number of fighters who underwent instruction in Bin Ladin-supported camps in Afghanistan from 1996 through 9/11 at 10,000 to 20,000.
In other words, the Taliban was not "sending planes over to New York or to the Pentagon," as Hockenberry put it. They were helping to train the groups that were, and providing them sanctuary - hospitality, even - in the nation they ruled.
So real was the threat posed by the Taliban, in fact, that the 9/11 Commission warned that a resurgent Taliban regime - a serious possibility in the event of US withdrawal, the Commission wrote - "could once again offer refuge to al Qaeda, or its successor."
Hockenberry's blanket statement is pure revisionist history. There are legitimate arguments for withdrawal from Afghanistan. "The Taliban was never a threat in the first place" is not one of them.
Before his time at NPR, Hockenberry claimed that "American politics thrives on ignorance." It "works without a backup plan as long as people are so unrepentantly uninformed," he added. But with a news media that pushes these kinds of blatant falsehoods, can he really blame them?
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Comments
This is so lame!
Submitted by HelenS on Tue, 06/21/2011 - 2:07pm.
In fact, it would not surprise me AT ALL to hear a card-carrying Taliban member-in-good-standing rise up and say, "Oh yes we are! We HATE the USA! Don't call us FRIENDS, you INFIDELS!!!"
Or something like that.
Me - "The libs/dems of today are the Quislings of former years - the cowards who would vote a fraud into office in exchange for handouts from the devil."
I see Obama's negotiations need help
Submitted by Agnostic on Tue, 06/21/2011 - 2:16pm.
at least he needs help framing the news that America is negotiating with terrorist so that the American voters will swallow the administration's line - whatever it ends up being. Big suprise, NPR first to defense.
Been that way for a while
Submitted by jon_torlin on Tue, 06/21/2011 - 2:31pm.
It's easier to say that Muslims have been an enemy of the US ever since Thomas Jefferson took them on. Not just the Taliban or Al Qaeda(however that's spelled, I or E)
Of course anything not of Islam is an enemy anyway so however long they've been around, 1400 years or so. And for the US, in the last 200+ years. It's foolish to say it's far less than that, even if they declared jihad on us in 1993 or whenever that was.
-Jon
Give Obama some time and the
Submitted by jkwtrading on Tue, 06/21/2011 - 2:33pm.
Give Obama some time and the Taliban will be back in business in the Afghanistan arena.
Either John Hockenberry is
Submitted by Beukeboom on Tue, 06/21/2011 - 3:10pm.
Either John Hockenberry is lying or is completely ignorant. You make the call.
Either way he's qualified for NPR.
they aren't sending planes.....
Submitted by almostacowboy on Tue, 06/21/2011 - 3:14pm.
No. And, they aren't sending ICBM's, nor nuclear submarines, nor drones either, genius!
Now, that position is truly laughable.
They should have all these
Submitted by ant on Wed, 06/22/2011 - 1:18am.
They should have all these things, they invented them, along with everything else material and creative, ... at least that's what BO and his State Department have been telling me.
Hmm. The Taliban vs the people of Afghanistan
Submitted by Gary Hall on Tue, 06/21/2011 - 4:46pm.
Hockenberry simply doesn't have his ducks in a row. Perhaps he have "the Taliban" confused with "the people of the country of Afghanistan?" Further, he may have the United States confused with the Imperialist USSR of old.
In both cases, they are not one in the same. The people in Afghanistan do not want the Taliban in control of Afghanistan again. While they may be conflicted over the US actions in the past 10 years, the one thing that the once proud people of Afghanistan deeply want is their country back. The Imperialist Soviet Empire stole it from them in the late 1970's -- then, the Taliban finished them off in the mid 1990's.
The world should have two goals here; 1.) the security of the West against these radical terrorists (al Qaeda and the Taliban) and 2.) securing the future of Afghanistan for the Afghan people.
The UN, if it ever had an ethical role to play, should push Russia to pay heavily in the effort to save Afghanistan.
John Hockenberry needs a history lesson.
(;~> gary
Maybe he meant "'Taliban Has
Submitted by mattm on Tue, 06/21/2011 - 8:50pm.
Maybe he meant "'Taliban Has Never Been an Enemy of the United States since Barack Hussein Imam Jihadi Soetero Osamabama usurped the office of the presidency"....
Insanity
Submitted by NCMike on Wed, 06/22/2011 - 9:00pm.
At what point, will mature, thinking Americans, with blood shooting out of their eyes, finally, FINALLY, say "enough, is enough" and end this insanity and foolishness. When will reason finally burst forth into the brain of enough people to say that "the emperor has no clothes!" This stupidity masquerading as "tolerance" on the part of average Americans, for every juvenile, insipid idea, position, and tantrum by the ninnies of the left, is destroying this country, not just for us, but for our children and our children's children.