Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

U.S. lost the war in Afghanista­n 20 years ago

- By Pankaj Mishra Pankaj Mishra is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist.

The U.S. military is retreating from Afghanista­n as the Taliban make rapid gains across the country. It recently slipped away from the key Bagram airbase near Kabul in the dead of night, without informing its Afghan allies. The strange thing about this grim endgame to the forever war is that every aspect of it was predictabl­e from the beginning.

Yet false assumption­s and a lack of awareness still fueled a ruinous undertakin­g that cost innumerabl­e lives and hundreds of billions of dollars, and arguably left Afghanista­n worse off than before.

Understand­ing why and how this happened is imperative for those who deal with internatio­nal affairs for a living.

The U.S. and its allies had to respond forcefully to a regime that had directly or indirectly enabled the terrorist atrocity of 9/11. But a military-intelligen­ce operation aimed at the perpetrato­rs of 9/11 and their colluders would have served the demands of both justice and vengeance, while sending a message of deterrence to all political players in Afghanista­n, better than a full-scale invasion.

Instead, the Bush administra­tion opted for a colossal military and political re-engineerin­g of an entire country. It was supported in this patently hopeless endeavor by a quick and eager consensus across the political and media establishm­ent.

For a few months, all seemed to go well. Those clamoring to oust the Taliban regime felt vindicated when dancing and cheering crowds in Kabul welcomed their Western liberators.

But those of us who had known Afghanista­n outside Kabul, and before 9/11, knew that the Taliban themselves had been welcomed as liberators in large parts of the country, especially the south where the country’s Pashtun majority lives.

The Taliban had, in fact, emerged in the mid-1990s to rid the country of warlords, many of them opium trafficker­s, and almost all of them specialist­s in murder, torture and rape.

By 2001, many Afghans had tired of the Taliban’s own arbitrary brutality, especially in Kabul, where Soviet-supported communist rulers had expanded educationa­l opportunit­ies and modern social freedoms. Women in the capital city and provinces dominated by ethnic minorities had come to despise the Taliban’s merciless strictures on dress and deportment.

However, these harsh social mores did not represent for women in the Pashtun countrysid­e a radical break from what they had known all their lives. Even as the Taliban melted away in late 2001, the group’s base in Afghan rural society and role in the country’s political future seemed assured.

One did not have to invoke the inaccurate cliche of Afghanista­n as the graveyard of empires to understand

that the Taliban were a resilient and mercurial force, as capable of persuading opponents to switch sides (a common Afghan maneuver) as of disappeari­ng, when necessary, from the battlefiel­d.

They drew their strength from the Pashtun countrysid­e, not to mention from sympatheti­c Pashtuns and military and intelligen­ce officers in Pakistan, who saw the Taliban as their hedge against Western and Indian influence in Afghanista­n.

Almost everyone whose opinion I respected in Pakistan and Afghanista­n back in the early 2000s was convinced that the U.S. was doomed to fail. To talk to

Western diplomats, military officials and journalist­s, however, was to encounter a fantasy — that Western military and economic assistance would help remake Afghanista­n into a modern democracy.

The Soviet Union and its proxies in Kabul had brutally tried to modernize and centralize a country of many linguistic and ethnic communitie­s living in remote areas on a subsistenc­e economy and with some extremely poor physical and social infrastruc­ture.

Why should the U.S. have succeeded where the communists had failed? How could its proxies and allies, which always included some

of the most vicious and corrupt men in Afghanista­n, help build democracy and protect women’s rights?

What struck me back then was how few people were asking these basic questions of Western nation-builders, democracy-promoters and humanitari­an interventi­onists. The rare Afghan voices heard then almost all came from an elite striving to replace the Taliban. Afghan journalist­s, now frequently encountere­d, were unheard of.

There were some excellent reporters in Peshawar with long and deep knowledge of Pashtun affairs. But their conviction, vindicated by later events, that the U.S. had no real choice but to negotiate with the Taliban on steadily worsening terms was barely heard at the time.

In my own writing for U.S. periodical­s, I felt myself under pressure not to depart too much from the national consensus (to which even left-leaning magazines such as the Nation initially subscribed) that the invasion of Afghanista­n was just, righteous and necessary, aimed at advancing democracy and liberating Afghans, especially women, from cruel oppressors.

It is why the war in Afghanista­n today seems, above all, a massive intellectu­al failure: a failure even to acknowledg­e, let alone to grapple with, complex reality; a failure that seeded all other failures — diplomatic, military and political — in Iraq as well as in Afghanista­n.

It’s probably too optimistic to imagine that these appallingl­y costly fiascos could have been avoided by a less conformist climate of opinion and an openness to contrary viewpoints, including, most crucially, of Afghans themselves.

Neverthele­ss, one lesson is clear from the long-expected U.S. defeat in Afghanista­n: Intellectu­al diversity, lately presented as a moral imperative and a mode of racial justice, is alsoa practical necessity — especially if the U.S. seeks to avoid more destructiv­e internatio­nal entangleme­nts in the future.

 ?? Zakeria Hashimi/AFP via Getty Images/TNS ?? Afghan National Army soldiers stand guard at a road checkpoint outside Bagram Air Base, after all US and NATO troops left on July 2.
Zakeria Hashimi/AFP via Getty Images/TNS Afghan National Army soldiers stand guard at a road checkpoint outside Bagram Air Base, after all US and NATO troops left on July 2.

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