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Repeating History: Parallels between Mujahidin Tactics and Afghanistan’s Current Insurgency
Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • Repeating History: Parallels between Mujahidin Tactics and Afghanistan’s Current Insurgency

    Originally posted December 2009

    Since 1747, all of the invaders or occupiers of Afghanistan have made almost the same mistakes. All were obliged to leave Afghanistan, resulting in the downfall or demise of their empires. In general, Afghans are independent thinkers and believe their own way of life to be the best. Interfering in their day-to-day affairs brings animosity and hatred against their would-be rulers, occupiers, and invaders. Nor do Afghans accept the imposition of rulers or types of government which would clash with their basic values.

    April 18, 2012

    Charting a Course for a Better Future: Responding to the Crimes of the Past
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • Charting a Course for a Better Future: Responding to the Crimes of the Past

    Originally posted December 2009

    Thirty years of war have taken an enormous toll on all aspects of Afghan society whose traditional social fabric has broken down, giving rise to a new generation of political and military elites. The cycles of violence over the past three decades have included massive human rights abuses by all parties, leaving a legacy of pent-up grievances and profound feelings of injustice.

    April 18, 2012

    Respecting Afghanistan’s Sovereignty
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • Respecting Afghanistan’s Sovereignty

    Originally posted December 2009

    Respect for Afghanistan’s sovereignty is a sine qua non condition to restoring the country to normalcy. The fact that a country expects and demands that its sovereignty be respected should not be misconstrued as a refusal to engage the outside world — as a sign that the country is drifting towards some type of chauvinistic nationalism.

    April 18, 2012

    The Death of the Buddhas of Bamiyan
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • The Death of the Buddhas of Bamiyan

    Originally posted December 2009

    The 2001 destruction of the two giant Buddhas in Bamiyan is, by far, the most spectacular attack against the historical and cultural heritage of Afghanistan committed during the country’s recent period of turmoil.

    April 18, 2012

    Post-Buffer Afghanistan: A Nation-State Here to Stay?
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • Post-Buffer Afghanistan: A Nation-State Here to Stay?

    Originally posted December 2009

    Nation-states, like their citizens, have life spans. Some are short. The bumptious Republic of Texas, for instance, lasted only nine years before being absorbed by a larger and even more energetic United States of America. Yugoslavia survived intact for two generations and then fragmented into six parts, seven including Kosovo.

    April 17, 2012

    Women's Prospects in Afghanistan: Oppression or Opportunity?
  • Analysis
  • Women's Prospects in Afghanistan: Oppression or Opportunity?

    Recent media reports indicate that fewer Afghan women turned out to vote for a President on August 20, 2009 than went to the polls five years ago, when in some districts female turnout had been even higher than that of males. Apprehension, convention, ennui, and disorganization led to families keeping their women home on election day, even as men dared to vote. The reversal of women’s rights, which they had only recently begun to exercise, is an ominous sign.

    April 12, 2012

    The Monotony of History
  • Analysis
  • The Monotony of History

    The state of Pakistan seems incapable of learning from its experiences in former East Pakistan (now Bangladesh), and seems therefore doomed to repeat history when it comes to addressing the grievances of Balochistan. Home to nearly ten million of the 180 million-strong population of the country (an estimate at best, since the last census was in 1998), the province has the smallest population in the country but  the largest land area.

    March 12, 2012