Gulf News

How America’s ‘War’ was corrupt from start

Some 40% of money allocated for the war in Afghanista­n actually went back to donor countries in corporate profits and consultant salaries

- BY FARAH STOCKMAN Farah Stockman is a columnist and editor.

Look under the hood of the “good war,” and here is what you see. Afghanista­n was supposed to be an honourable war to neutralise terrorists. It was supposed to be a war that America should have won, had it not been for the distractio­n of Iraq, and the hopeless corruption of the Afghan government. But let’s get real. Corruption wasn’t a design flaw in the war. It was a design feature. We didn’t topple the Taliban. We paid warlords bags of cash to do it.

As the nation-building project got underway, those same warlords were transforme­d into governors, generals and members of Parliament, and the cash payments kept flowing.

“Westerners often scratched their heads at the persistent lack of capacity in Afghan governing institutio­ns,” Sarah Chayes, a former special assistant to US military leaders in Kandahar, wrote recently in Foreign Affairs. “But the sophistica­ted networks controllin­g those institutio­ns never intended to govern. Their objective was self-enrichment. And at that task, they proved spectacula­rly successful.”

Instead of a nation, what we really built were more than 500 military bases — and the personal fortunes of the people who supplied them. That had always been the deal. In April 2002, Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfeld dictated a top-secret memo ordering aides to come up with “a plan for how we are going to deal with each of these warlords — who is going to get money from whom, on what basis, in exchange for what, what is the quid pro quo, etc”

Reconstruc­tion assistance

The war proved enormously lucrative for many Americans and Europeans, too. One 2008 study estimated that some 40 per cent of the money allocated to Afghanista­n actually went back to donor countries in corporate profits and consultant salaries. Only about 12 per cent of US reconstruc­tion assistance given to Afghanista­n between 2002 and 2021 actually went to the Afghan government. Much of the rest went to companies like the Louis Berger Group, a New Jerseybase­d constructi­on firm that got a $1.4 billion contract to build schools, clinics and roads. Even after it got caught bribing officials and systematic­ally overbillin­g taxpayers, the contracts kept coming.

“It’s a bugbear of mine that Afghan corruption is so frequently cited as an explanatio­n (as well as an excuse) for Western failure in Afghanista­n,” Jonathan Goodhand, a professor in Conflict and Developmen­t Studies at SOAS University of London, wrote me in an email. Americans “point the finger at Afghans, while ignoring their role in both fuelling and benefiting from the patronage pump.”

Who won the war on terror? American defence contractor­s, many of which were politicall­y connected companies that had donated to George W. Bush’s presidenti­al campaign, according to the Centre for Public Integrity, a non-profit that has been tracking spending in a series of reports called the Windfalls of War. One firm hired to help advise Iraqi ministries had a single employee — the husband of a deputy assistant secretary of defence.

Great deal

For George W. Bush and his friends, the wars in Iraq and Afghanista­n achieved a great deal. President Bush got a chance to play a tough guy on TV. He became a wartime president, which helped him win re-election. By the time people figured out that the war in Iraq had been waged on false pretences and the war in Afghanista­n had no honourable exit plan, it was too late.

What stands out about the war in Afghanista­n is the way that it became the Afghan economy. At least Iraq had oil. In Afghanista­n, the war dwarfed every other economic activity. Over two decades, the US government spent $145 billion on reconstruc­tion and aid, and an additional $837 billion on war fighting, in a country where the GDP hovered between $4 billion and $20 billion per year.

Imagine what ordinary Afghans might have done if they had been able to use that money for long-term projects planned and executed at their own pace. But alas, policymake­rs in Washington rushed to push cash out the door, since money spent was one of the few measurable metrics of success. The money was meant to buy security, bridges and power plants to win “hearts and minds.” But the surreal amounts of cash poisoned the country instead, embitterin­g those who didn’t have access to it, and setting off rivalries between those who did.

“The money spent was far more than Afghanista­n could absorb,” concluded the special inspector general of Afghanista­n’s final report.” The result was a fantasy economy that operated more like a casino or a Ponzi scheme than a country. Why build a factory or plant crops when you can get fabulously wealthy selling whatever the Americans want to buy?

The money fuelled the revolving door of war, enriching the very militants that it was meant to fight. None of this is to say that the Afghan people don’t deserve support, even now. They do. But far more can be achieved by spending far less in a more thoughtful way. What does the Taliban takeover say about the war? It proves that you cannot buy an army. Once the money spigot turned off, how many stuck around to fight for America’s vision of Afghanista­n?

 ?? Muhammed Nahas /© Gulf News ??
Muhammed Nahas /© Gulf News

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