Press-Telegram (Long Beach)

As Taliban settle in, Kabul's Green Zone revives

- By Christi■a Goldbaum

KABUL, AFGHANISTA­N ❯❯ Scattered across a neighborho­od in central Kabul are the ruins of another empire come and gone from Afghanista­n.

Tattered sandbags and piles of discarded barbed wire. Metal hulls of tank traps sitting unused on the side of the road. Red-andwhite metal barriers, once lowered to stop vehicles at checkpoint­s manned 24/7, permanentl­y pointing toward the sky.

Not that long ago, this neighborho­od — known as the Green Zone — was a diplomatic enclave, buzzing with the soundtrack of a multibilli­on-dollar war effort in Afghanista­n. Armored vehicles rumbled down the streets, shuttling Western diplomats and high-ranking Afghan officials, while the thudthud-thud of U.S. helicopter­s echoed across the sky above.

But these days, there's another kind of buzzing in the neighborho­od: the Taliban moving in and making it their own. Like their U.S.supplied rifles and Humvees and military fatigues, the Green Zone is becoming the latest vestige of the Western war effort that the Taliban have repurposed as they build up their own military and government.

Well-to-do officials with the Taliban administra­tion and their families have settled into the dwellings abandoned by Western officials since the collapse of the former government in August 2021 and the flight of most of the Green Zone's residents. Inside what was a compound of the British Embassy, young men dressed in gray-and-black turbans and traditiona­l brown shawls gather each afternoon for classes in a new madrassa, a school for Islamic instructio­n. Security forces with the new government zip in and out of NATO's former headquarte­rs.

The neighborho­od, and its nearly indestruct­ible blast walls, have become a testament to the enduring legacy of occupation, a reminder that even when foreign forces depart, the physical imprint they leave on a country's landscape — and national psyche — often live on, indefinite­ly.

“These walls will never be torn down,” said Akbar Rahimi, a shopkeeper inside the Green Zone, summing up the seeming permanence of the infrastruc­ture around him.

One recent afternoon, Rahimi sat behind the wooden counter of his corner store, absent-mindedly watching a Bollywood movie on the TV mounted to the wall. On the street outside, a forest green maintenanc­e vehicle with a poster of a young Mullah Omar — the founder of the Taliban movement — plastered on the windshield raced past.

Rahimi perked up as three young men, former Taliban fighters turned security guards, entered the shop and rummaged through a pile of small, dirt-encrusted lemons by the front door. They handed the lemons to Rahimi, who weighed them on a rusty scale and tied them into a plastic bag in a single, masterful flip of the wrist.

Rahimi, 45, remembers the old Green Zone and its former residents with a sense of nostalgia. Outside the neighborho­od, the city was regularly torn apart by suicide blasts and targeted assassinat­ions during the U.S.-led war. But within its roughly 1-square-mile radius, there was an intoxicati­ng sense of lawfulness.

White-collar Afghan employees in government offices and foreign embassies used to pour down the street outside his shop at 8 a.m. each morning as they arrived for work and again at 4 p.m. when they headed home. For him, that reliable daily rhythm seemed to offer a sense of control, a predictabi­lity that had eluded Afghanista­n for decades.

There was “order and discipline,” he said, wistfully.

For most of the two-decade war, the Green Zone occupied a unique place in Kabul's collective consciousn­ess. Once an uppermiddl­e class neighborho­od with tree-lined streets, elegant villas and a grand boulevard, the area transforme­d into a dull gray fortress of 16-foot-tall concrete barriers.

To some Afghans who could not enter it, the impenetrab­le void that sprawled across central Kabul was a source of deep resentment — an alien presence disrupting daily life.

To others, it was a harbinger of the eventual loss of the war, a place where despite Western generals' assurances about battlefiel­d victories and milestones reached, the steady build up of blast walls and barricades offered a more honest assessment of the West's failures to curb the Taliban's reach.

When the Taliban took over Kabul, they initially eyed this concrete slab of the city with suspicion. For months, agents with the intelligen­ce wing of the nascent Taliban administra­tion went building to building, digging through the remains of an enemy whose inner workings had been shrouded in mystery for 20 years. Every home was presumed to have hidden weapons or trip wires. Every surveillan­ce camera was a sign of espionage.

Faizullah Masoom, a 26-year-old former Taliban fighter from Ghazni province, felt awe-struck when he first saw the Green Zone. Then, a feeling of pride washed over him.

“I said to myself that our enemy with such defenses — blast walls and security cameras, barricaded areas and fortified buildings — were finally defeated by us,” he said. “We were always in the mountains, forests and fields. We only had one gun and a motorcycle.”

Now, Masoom rarely leaves the Green Zone.

Soon after the Taliban seized power, he assumed a new post as a security guard at a checkpoint outside an office building. One recent afternoon, he sat on a concrete barrier with three other guards at their post near the former Italian Embassy.

The men passed around a bag of chewing tobacco as pickup trucks and armored cars carrying officials with the Taliban administra­tion pulled up to the metal barrier. They beckoned for the drivers to lower their blackened windows, looked around the inside of the vehicles and ushered them through the gate.

As I turned to leave, Masoom asked where I was from. When he heard “America,” his eyes grew wide and mouth dropped.

“She's from America?” he asked a New York Times colleague who was with me, almost in disbelief. For 20 years, Americans were a faceless enemy. Now one was standing two feet in front of him.

He and his friends looked at each other bewildered for a few seconds — a sense of uncertaint­y hanging in the air. Then they burst out laughing.

“We have no conflict, war or enmity with anyone anymore,” he said smiling, as if to reassure me.

But the significan­t presence of security guards here — much like the blast walls that remain in place — reflects the insecurity that threatens the country's fragile peace since the U.S.-led war ended. While the days of constant airstrikes and night raids are over, suicide attacks from terrorist groups continue to plague the city — even as the guardians charged with keeping them at bay have changed.

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 ?? KIANA HAYERI — THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Taliban fighters pray in Masood Square, just outside Kabul’s Green Zone, and in front of what used to be the American embassy last August.
KIANA HAYERI — THE NEW YORK TIMES Taliban fighters pray in Masood Square, just outside Kabul’s Green Zone, and in front of what used to be the American embassy last August.

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