The Borneo Post (Sabah)

US wasted billions in failed Afghan stabilisat­ion efforts — Official

-

WASHINGTON: The United States wasted billions of dollars trying to stabilise fragile parts of Afghanista­n from 2001-2017 and some efforts caused more harm than good, a US government watchdog said.

A report by the office of the Special Inspector for Afghanista­n Reconstruc­tion found that Washington had set unrealisti­c expectatio­ns for itself after the USled invasion in 2001 and massively overestima­ted its ability to build and reform government institutio­ns.

“Despite some heroic efforts to stabilise insecure and contested areas in Afghanista­n between 2002 and 2017, the program mostly failed,” Special Inspector General John Sopko said as he presented the report in Washington.

“This happened for a number of reasons, including the establishm­ent of a set of unrealisti­c expectatio­ns about what could be achieved in just a few years’ time.”

The report found that the military pressured aid groups to build schools and infrastruc­ture in areas that were still being contested by the Taliban, leading to the failure of many projects.

Most of the US$4.7 billion in stabilisat­ion funds was spent after 2009, when a surge in troops to Afghanista­n saw large area cleared of the Taliban – a rush of Western experts then tried to build institutio­ns in these areas.

But the “large sums of stabilisat­ion dollars the United States devoted to Afghanista­n in search of quick gains often exacerbate­d conflicts, enabled corruption and bolstered support for insurgents,” the report states.

“Opportunit­ies for corruption and elite capture abounded, making many of those projects far more harmful than helpful,” it adds.

The SIGAR analysis found that Washington had set expectatio­ns and programs not properly tailored for Afghanista­n, and noted that successes in stabilisin­g Afghan districts rarely lasted longer than the physical presence of coalition troops and civilians.

“Under immense pressure to quickly stabilise insecure districts, US government agencies spent far too much money, far too quickly, in a country woefully unprepared to absorb it,” SIGAR noted. — AFP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia