Make Sense of Afghanistan With Thomas Barfield: Part 3 | FO° Talks

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Fair Observer

Fair Observer

11 ай бұрын

#afghanistan #ThomasBarfiel #AshrafGhani
Afghanistan is in turmoil. The democratic government installed by the US collapsed after 20 years. This government was a result of a US-led attempt to modernize and reform Afghanistan. However, this Kabul regime lost popular support because of pervasive corruption and fell even before the last US troops left in 2021.
In part one and part two of this discussion, we explored the history of Afghanistan, covering ground until the collapse of the US-backed democratic government. In this final part, Barfield talks about what has happened after American troops have left and postulates what we can expect in the future.
Ashraf Ghani’s government spectacularly failed to keep the country together after the rather chaotic and hurried American pull-out from Afghanistan. Within just a week, the Taliban took over almost all of Afghanistan’s cities. Even Kabul fell without much resistance.
Barfield explains that this pattern repeats throughout Afghanistan’s history. When a regime fails, its support evaporates and victors walk into the capital without much bloodshed. This creates the illusion that they hold absolute power. Many regimes that began this way ended up in the same manner, falling to the next set of troops that marched in.
Afghanistan is a multi-ethnic state going through much strife. Yet despite all of its political instability, Afghanistan is not on the verge of breaking up. Barfield argues that, if the country had to implode, it would have done so already. Afghanistan has survived despite its long history of instability and civil wars.
In Afghanistan’s culture, ethnicity and nationality are two quite different things. There is no strong desire to create ethnic states. Rather, groups jockey for position within the loose mutli-ethnic state. Barfield’s extensive familiarity with Afghan ethnic politics enables him to dispel some popular, but inaccurate, Western assumptions about how “Pashtun,” “Tajik” or “Hazara” identity work.
For now, the Taliban are in charge. However, we do not know for how long. Also, it is important to analyze what they are trying to accomplish.
In some ways, the Taliban’s treatment of women has been even more oppressive than it was during their prior rule in the 1990s. They have instituted a complete social separation between men and women. Even in other conservative Islamic states like Iran, women are not excluded from the economy as they are now in Afghanistan.
Simultaneously, Afghanistan’s society is less receptive to this sort of imposition. Before the US invasion, the share of the population living in cities was around 10%. That number has now tripled to about 30%. What’s more, women are far more educated after 20 years of liberal governance than their mothers and grandmothers. These women will certainly have a hard time swallowing the Taliban’s new norms.
So, is Afghanistan headed for a crisis? It seems likely, but it is not clear what form this crisis will take. Afghanistan’s food insecurity is worrying, and the regime may not be able to moderate itself enough to cooperate with foreign aid-even from Pakistan. If the government has to seize large amounts of food from local farmers, it could undermine its own support.
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NATO summit 2016
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Ashraf Ghani
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Пікірлер: 5
@KamBam-ni3pt
@KamBam-ni3pt 10 ай бұрын
Watch part 1 to 3 these to men have a deep harted for pashtuns and seem to point out all thry flaws and even white wash the other warlord that are not pushtun as humane but the pushtun warlords are arnimals
@KamBam-ni3pt
@KamBam-ni3pt 10 ай бұрын
Lol so this guy jus hope Afghanistan fall into civil war and he says it with a smile he has so much hate because he has been proven wrong
@KamBam-ni3pt
@KamBam-ni3pt 10 ай бұрын
This man makes me laugh 😃 his videos from 10 12 years ago kept talkib about Afghanistan ethics that they dived and taliban will never enter north thr Tajikis wont allow it all his life basically he wanted civil war in Afghanistan thats what he predicted would happen if taliban get back into power 10 years ago now hes angry his life work have been false and Afghans are more united then he thought
@KamBam-ni3pt
@KamBam-ni3pt 10 ай бұрын
Bitter bitter man everything u even said now is false china has invested in Afghanistan all ready and Uzbekistan wants to work with Afghanistan too to bulid the rail road to pakistan port
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