USA Has Lost the War in Afghanistan (for now), But They Will Return

Sayeed Ahmed
5 min readJun 19, 2021

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The civilians are left to pay the price for this colossal misadventure

Kids on a Kabul Street, June 2002. Photo by author.

June 2002. I was on my first visit to Kabul. People were trying to put together their lives with a new hope. Kids seemed happy and curious. Some were walking to whatever remained of the schools. Some were playing on the streets, while some others were curiously watching the foreigners.

Fast forward to 2021. June 15. Armed men gunned down five polio vaccinators and injured several others in Afghanistan’s eastern Nangarhar province. June 9. Masked gunmen stormed into an office of HALO Trust, a charity engaged in mine clearing, and killed at least 10, injuring many others. June 6. A roadside bomb killed 11 civilians traveling on a bus in western Afghanistan. Last month, Dasht-e-Barchi, a Hazara Shia Muslim neighborhood in west Kabul, experienced a wave of Taliban violence. Most of the 85 killed were school-going girls between 11 and 17. Such mindless violence has continued since the USA signed the Doha Peace Agreement with the Taliban in February 2020. We have lost count. Our senses have become numb.

What’s more, the Taliban have warned the neighboring states against allowing any American military base in their territories. The Afghans who, in the Taliban’s view, had cooperated with the Americans, such as the interpreters, fear for their safety after the withdrawal. In short, the Taliban are well on their way to return as the definite victors while the American troops are slinking away.

If such is the outcome of two decades of bloody war, why did the USA launch the offensive in 2001? What has caused the withdrawal? And who pays the price for its colossal misadventure?

Why the 2001 offensive?

The short answer is strategic positioning at the ‘Eurasian Heartland’ and Afghan mineral resources.

In 1904, English Geographer Halford Mackinder, one of the founding fathers of geopolitics and geostrategy, published a paper titled ‘The Geographical Pivot of History.’ According to Mackinder, whoever controls the Eurasian continent or the ‘heartland’ can exercise global dominance. This heartland comprises Central Asia and the Caspian basin. Russia has dominated it for many years. But, of late, Chinese influence is also increasing in this region.

The other attraction for the USA was Afghan minerals. Imperial Britain had conducted minerals assessments in Afghanistan till the 1919 Anglo-Afghan War. Subsequently, Russia (erstwhile Soviet Union) had continued such explorations until its departure in 1989. All these explorations suggested a lucrative reserve, including several rare earth elements.

Thus, military strategy and the lure of minerals formed the background of America’s ambitious 2001 offensive. Its official goal was to prevent terror groups from using Afghanistan as a safe haven. But in 2021, the number of such groups has risen from 4 to at least 20. Al Qaeda (including their offshoots) membership has increased from 400 to tens of thousands globally. The precarious security situation in the region has made mining almost impossible. Two decades of war have drained the USA of trillions of dollars without making any discernible progress. Despite the high-sounding goals, the 2001 offensive and the massive firepower it deployed ended up as a dismal failure.

What went wrong?

Matthew Hoh, a senior fellow with the Center for International Policy and a Marine combat veteran, has explained how the USA misinterpreted the whole premise in Afghanistan. First, Washington’s impression of the Jihadists as the source of insurgency was utterly misplaced. Instead, most insurgents were only fighting foreign occupation forces.

Second, several Afghan units resorted to atrocities, often against civilians, including women and children. By association, the American troops were also implicated, strengthening the local population’s resolve against their presence.

Third, it was surprisingly easy for the Afghan insurgents to drain the American troops of their resources and patience. They lured them into frequent battles with minimal cost and effort. Eventually, the American policymakers realized that this was an endless war with no chances of winning it.

Finally, Washington assumed that once Kabul came under control, the whole country would follow. It ignored the fact that Afghanistan is a complex mosaic of many tribes. Further, it interpreted Islam as a monolithic and extremist faith which in reality is not. Many Muslims follow progressive and inclusive Islamic thoughts, such as Rumi, the Persian philosopher-poet.

Young Afghan farmer boy murdered on 15 January 2010 by a group of US Army soldiers called the Kill Team. Wikimedia Commons (Public Domain).

The combination of all these incorrect assumptions and impressions, mishandling of the public sentiments, atrocities, and the unfavorable terrain led to a catastrophic failure of the American mission. Unfortunately, history is replete with similar fates of many invading foreign powers. We may euphemistically call it a withdrawal. But, in reality, Washington is only joining the long line of empires conceding abysmal ends in this inhospitable terrain.

Who pays for this misadventure?

Ordinary Afghan civilians caught up in the mindless conflicts between the different factions have already paid a steep price. A 2019 study by Brown University indicated that crossfire, improvised explosive devices (IEDs), assassinations, bombings, night raids into houses of suspected insurgents, and cluster bombs had killed civilians in disproportionate numbers. A rough estimate puts the total number of war deaths to 157,000 since 2001. Of this, more than 47,000 are civilians. In addition, about 2.7 million Afghans fled abroad, and another 4 million faced displacement within the country. As the current trend of continued violence indicates, these numbers are likely to increase.

A member of the Taliban’s religious police beating an Afghan woman in Kabul on August 26, 2001. Video footage at http://pz.rawa.org/rawasongs/movie/beating.mpg. By RAWA — http://rawa.org/beating.htm.

The Afghan women stand to lose everything they have achieved so far. In a Taliban-controlled regime, they will go back to restrictive indoor lives, deprived of education, healthcare, and economic opportunities. A recent BBC documentary, “Killing Hope: Targeted Attacks in Afghanistan,” shows how young professionals, often women, are being murdered.

What is the endgame?

Although leaving, the Americans will keep at least a thousand troops and some CIA officers supervising the Afghan National Army operations and gathering intel. We are yet to see how it will pursue minerals or strategic objectives in the coming years. Aborting is not an option because too much is at stake in this far-flung, rugged, and hostile territory, historically known as the “graveyard of empires.” Meanwhile, the little kids I met on Kabul’s streets will become the innocent victims of a brutal power game.

But make no mistake. America will return to Afghanistan in some other form.

#afghanistan #war #defeat #graveyard #strategic #warOnTerror

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Sayeed Ahmed
Sayeed Ahmed

Written by Sayeed Ahmed

Travels and writes as a hobby on history, culture, politics, and contemporary issues.

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