The Parcham faction was part of the Saur revolution- indeed, the Saur revolution was a reaction to Mohammad Daoud Khan's purging of the Parcham faction from the PDPA- as well as the movement that overthrew the Afghan monarchy in 1973. Karmal participated in both governments that proceeded from those revolutions. Karmal did a really awful job of being a "Soviet puppet", as he didn't listen to them when they told him not to seek revenge against the Khalq faction. It appears more that he was simply one of the most powerful people left standing after the Soviets deposed Amin (and Amin killed so many others). You can infer a good degree of independence from the fact that Karmal acted independently.you've implied that the presence of an allied Afghan gov (that they installed) indicates that the government was wholly independent (check...)
There was a great deal of continuity between the governments before and after the assassination of Amin. There was not a great deal of continuity between the Taliban and the American puppet government (unless you count Taliban soldiers showing up to receive paychecks from the new regime, then disappearing).
It's a rationale that makes sense when you're intervening to help a government that was the result of a popular revolution fight a foreign-armed, foreign-funded insurgency with the participation of many foreign volunteers. Yes. Same words, completely different context and meaning.you've even appealed to providing stability, which was the refrain of the US interventionists for years (mega check). It's not "roughly the same words", it's a bloody rerun.
Or the completely different surrounding situation, relevantly different facts, etc.If these justifications were faulty before, they're faulty now. They don't magically hold more water depending on who's doing it.
You've made it even more clear that you're just pointing at similar words that make sense as a strong argument in one context and not another.
The Red Army was also horrible to Germany, but that doesn't make Soviet participation in WW2 a matter of "imperialism".In both cases, I'm squarely pointing the finger at military leadership (and the government) for failing or refusing to hold any kind of standard of behaviour. Exactly as you do with the grotesque US war crimes perpetrated elsewhere. When war crimes are this endemic, this common, the problem cannot be fobbed off on individual soldiers; there's something sick and permissive in policy & culture.
Invading the Taliban is quite different from providing military aid to the Afghan government, yes, even if the Soviets ended up eliminating a particular head of government in reaction to him assassinating much of the rest of the government including his predecessor and others who had negotiated the agreement with the Soviet Union to send troops. Misconduct by the US military isn't what makes it an imperialist institution anymore than the Taliban is imperialist for destroying some very large and ancient Buddha statues.You're not. You'll rightly bring up horrifying excesses perpetrated by US personnel overseas, and then throw up these excuses about how the gov and leadership can't be blamed when it's the USSR.