invasion and then what is happening as mahbouba seraj says, looking at today, what has to happen. >> all, i would like to respond somethinmahbouba seraj said that this kind of thing, education "wl take root" in afghanistan. i think that is the problem of the approach, that it is a top-down trickle-down approach which was devised by white, middle-class western feminists and then kind of delivered to afghanistan rather than indigenous feminism and afghanistan. i think the failure is that, ye afghan women might be educated but they don't have the political capacity to safeguard the rights they have one in the past 20 days. and that is the reason for that is this idea of empowerment as something excised from political, radical struggle. women and afghanistan were never able to do that in the past 20 years. amy: we have 20 seconds. >> net terms of the burqa, those are the theatrics of the west. it is this wearable equation that if you are wearing the burqa, you are oppressed. if you subtly take it off, you are free. it is truly tragic to see that repeated again 20 years after the initial