The War in Afghanistan: How It Started and How It Is Ending.
Just weeks before
U.S. forces were set to complete their pullout from Afghanistan, the Taliban
have seized the momentum, capturing the northern city of Kunduz on Sunday.
Kunduz, a city of
374,000, was the third provincial capital to be overtaken by Taliban in three
days and its fall is a major blow to the Afghan government. The city, in a
province of the same name, is a vital commercial hub near the border with
Tajikistan.
The Taliban’s
summer-long military campaign has forced widespread surrenders and retreats by
Afghan government forces. By late July, the group had seized control of half of
the country’s roughly 400 districts. Government troops abandoned scores of
outposts and bases, often leaving behind weapons and equipment. In many cases,
they surrendered without a fight, sometimes following the intercession of
village elders dispatched by the Taliban.
The Taliban
military victories, especially in northern Afghanistan, where opposition to the
militants has traditionally been strongest, provided a violent coda to the U.S.
military mission in America’s longest war.
In mid-April,
President Biden, declaring that the United States had long ago accomplished its
mission of denying terrorists a safe haven in Afghanistan, announced that all
American troops would leave the country by Sept. 11.
A combat mission
that has dogged four presidents — who reckoned with American casualties, a
ruthless enemy and an often corrupt and confounding Afghan government partner —
is at last coming to an end.
Mr. Biden
conceded that after nearly 20 years of war, America’s longest on foreign soil,
it was clear that the U.S. military could not transform Afghanistan into a
modern, stable democracy.
Responding in
July to critics of the withdrawal, the president asked: “Let me ask those who
wanted us to stay: How many more? How many thousands more of America’s
daughters and sons are you willing to risk?”
The United States
is leaving behind about 650 troops to secure the U.S. Embassy in Kabul. Some
are stationed at the international airport in the capital, alongside Turkish
troops who have agreed to provide airport protection.
Why did the
United States invade Afghanistan?
Weeks after Al
Qaeda attacked the United States on Sept. 11, President George W. Bush
announced that American forces had launched attacks against the terrorist group
and Taliban targets in Afghanistan.
“These carefully
targeted actions are designed to disrupt the use of Afghanistan as a terrorist
base of operations, and to attack the military capability of the Taliban
regime,” the president said.
Mr. Bush said the
Taliban, which then governed most of Afghanistan, had rejected his demand to
turn over Al Qaeda leaders who had planned the attacks from bases inside
Afghanistan. He said he intended to bring Al Qaeda leaders to justice, adding,
“And now the Taliban will pay a price.”
Even then, the
president warned that Operation Enduring Freedom would entail “a lengthy
campaign unlike any other we have ever seen.”
By December 2001,
the Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden and other top commanders had fled to safety in
Pakistan, a nominal U.S. ally. American forces did not pursue them, and
Pakistan ultimately evolved into a safe haven for Taliban commanders and
fighters, who in subsequent years crossed the border to attack American and
Afghan forces.
Inside
Afghanistan, American troops quickly toppled the Taliban government and crushed
its fighting forces as 2001 drew to a close.
In December 2001,
the Taliban’s spokesman offered an unconditional surrender, which was rejected
by the United States. Nearly 20 years later, the United States is pleading with
the Taliban to agree to a cease-fire and negotiate a political settlement with
the U.S.-backed Afghan government.
In May 2003,
Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld announced an end to major combat operations
in the country.
How did the
mission in Afghanistan evolve?
After routing the
Taliban, the United States and NATO pivoted to rebuilding a failed state and
establishing a Western-style democracy, spending billions trying to reconstruct
a desperately poor country already ravaged by two decades of war, first during
the Soviet occupation of the 1980s and then during the proceeding civil war.
There were early
successes. A pro-Western government was installed. New schools, hospitals and
public facilities were built. Thousands of girls, barred from education under
Taliban rule, attended school. Women, largely confined to their homes by the
Taliban, went to college, joined the work force and served in Parliament and
government. A vigorous, independent news media emerged.
But corruption
was rampant, with hundreds of millions of dollars in reconstruction and
investment money stolen or misappropriated. The government proved unable to
meet the most basic needs of its citizens. Often, its writ barely extended
beyond the capital, Kabul, and other major cities.
In 2003, with
8,000 American troops in Afghanistan, the United States began shifting combat
resources to the war in Iraq, launched in March of that year.
What happened on
the battlefield?
The Taliban
rebuilt their fighting capabilities, despite a steady influx of American and
NATO troops, who sought to win over Afghans with promises of new schools,
government centers, roads and bridges.
With the Taliban
posing an enhanced military threat, President Barack Obama deployed thousands
more troops to Afghanistan as part of a “surge,” reaching nearly 100,000 by
mid-2010. But the Taliban only grew stronger, inflicting heavy casualties on
Afghan security forces despite American combat power and airstrikes.
In May 2011, a
U.S. Navy SEAL team killed Osama bin Laden in a compound in Abbottabad,
Pakistan, where he had been living for years near a Pakistan military training
academy. In June, Mr. Obama announced that he would start bringing American
forces home and hand over responsibility for security to the Afghans by 2014.
By then, the
Pentagon had concluded that the war could not be won militarily and that only a
negotiated settlement could end the conflict — the third in three centuries involving
a world power. Afghan fighters defeated the British army in the 19th century
and the Russian military in the 20th century.
With the war at a
stalemate, Mr. Obama ended major combat operations on Dec. 31, 2014, and
transitioned to training and assisting Afghan security forces.
Nearly three
years later, President Donald J. Trump said that although his first instinct
had been to withdraw all troops, he would nonetheless continue to prosecute the
war. He stressed that any troop withdrawal would be based on combat conditions,
not predetermined timelines.
But the Trump
administration also had been talking to the Taliban since 2018, leading to
formal negotiations that excluded the Afghan government, led by President
Ashraf Ghani.
What is the
status of peace talks?
In February 2020,
the Trump administration signed an agreement with the Taliban that called for
all American forces to leave Afghanistan by May 1, 2021. In return, the Taliban
pledged to cut ties with terrorist groups such as Al Qaeda and the Islamic
State affiliate in Afghanistan, reduce violence and negotiate with the
American-backed Afghan government.
But the deal did
not include enforcement measures to compel the Taliban to honor their promises.
And with the Afghan government excluded from the U.S.-Taliban deal, relations
with the United States were strained. The Trump administration pressured Mr.
Ghani to release 5,500 Taliban prisoners while receiving little in return,
further alienating the Afghan government.
After the deal
was signed, the Taliban stopped attacking American troops and refrained from
major terrorist bombings in Afghan cities. The United States reduced air
support for government forces, generally restricting them to instances in which
Afghan troops were in danger of being overrun.
The primary
objectives of the 2020 deal were for Afghan leaders and the Taliban to
negotiate a political road map for a new government and constitution, reduce
violence and ultimately forge a lasting cease-fire.
But the
government accused the Taliban of assassinating Afghan government officials and
security force members, civil society advocates, journalists and human rights
workers — including several women shot in broad daylight.
Because of their
strong battlefield position and the U.S. troop withdrawal, the Taliban have
maintained the upper hand in talks with the Afghan government, which began in
September in Doha, Qatar, but have since stalled. The Pentagon has said the
militants have not honored pledges to reduce violence or cut ties with
terrorist groups.
The Biden
administration says it continues to support peace talks, but the Taliban appear
in no hurry to negotiate. Nor have they explicitly said they would agree to a
power-sharing government, implying instead that they intend to fight for a
monopoly on power.
Can Afghan
security forces hold off the Taliban without U.S. troops?
Military and
police units have been hollowed out by desertions, low recruitment rates, poor
morale and leadership and the theft of pay and matériel by commanders. They
have suffered high casualty rates, which American commanders have said are not
sustainable.
Many of the
country’s 34 provincial capitals, in both the north and the south, are under
siege. Government counterattacks have retaken only a handful of bases and
districts.