BusinessLine (Mumbai)

Escape from Kabul

Good for a speed read on Afghanista­n

- Rasheeda Bhagat

The Fall of Kabul – Despatches from Chaos by journalist Nayanima Basu, promises a lot, but ends up a tad disappoint­ing. Make no mistake about it — any journalist who had landed in the Afghan capital in August 2021, barely 10 days before its heartbreak­ing capitulati­on to the Taliban without any fight or resistance, will have a captivatin­g and gripping story to tell.

Basu has one, and it is filled with suspense, drama, and serious questions on her returning home as the Taliban moved into Kabul and quickly shut down exit routes from the city. But the manner in which she tells that story, the frequent whining and persistent attempt to paint herself a war hero, end up irritating the discerning reader.

But her story first. Having covered Afghanista­n from Delhi for several years, in July 2021, as there was wide expectatio­n of a peace deal between the Ashraf Ghani government and the Taliban, and the impending return of the dreaded Taliban to this beleaguere­d country, the author lands up in the city on August 8, 2021, to report for the online publicatio­n The Print, where she was working then.

OPTIMISTIC ABOUT PEACE

The book is a bit of a thriller with elements of drama, often exaggerate­d, right from her arrival at the Kabul airport and journey to Hotel Serena, where the internatio­nal biggies led by CNN and other Western media entities are camping.

In Kabul, Basu is completely surprised to find that everyone is optimistic about the peace talks with the Taliban initiated by the US in Doha. There is widespread belief that the Ashraf Ghani government will stay on, and a power-sharing deal with the Taliban worked out.

Even when it becomes clear that the existing dispensati­on will fall and the Taliban will once again take over Afghanista­n, most people tell Basu that this time around it would be a “di‘erent” Taliban; in order to get internatio­nal acceptance, they would not revert to their regressive gender policies.

But very soon Basu finds for herself the exact opposite and how she manages to get away in the nick of time forms the rest of the narrative. ‘Will I die tonight?’ is the title of one chapter, which describes how her editor asks her to get out of the country, and says her ticket has been booked on the first Air India flight out the next morning, which never lands.

She somehow makes it to the airport, along with another Indian journalist, and after long hours of trauma and lurking danger to her life at the chaotic airport, has to flee to the Indian Embassy, and finally makes it home on August 17 by the Indian Air Force C-17 Globemaste­r. During the entire harrowing period, her foremost thought is about her young son waiting for her back at home in Delhi.

A big plus of this book is that it provides in a useful capsule the history of this unfortunat­e country right from 1830 and the way superpower­s like England, the US and the Soviet Union played dirty games to expand their influence in Central Asia. It e‘ectively brings out the shameful manner in which the US first attacked the country, occupied it, and then left its government high and dry, departing abruptly without tying up the loose ends, aiding Afghanista­n’s speedy slide into the dark ages once again.

Any book on Afghanista­n is interestin­g, and Basu’s narrative is good for speed reading. But if you want a really gripping account, complete with vivid descriptio­ns, and in-depth reporting and analysis of the eventual mess that the western occupying nations led by the US and UK made in Afghanista­n during NATO’s 20-year occupation there, do read Escape from Kabul — the Inside Story by (Major) Levison Wood and Geraint Jones.

The reviewer is the editor of ‘Rotary News Trust’, and a ‘businessli­ne’ columnist. She had travelled to Afghanista­n in 2005 and reported from there

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