Foreign Policy Blogs

Afghanistan

The Moral Argument for the War in Afghanistan: Then and Now

The moral argument for the invasion and War in Afghanistan used to be that of liberal interventionism—the claim that intervening in the domestic politics of a country is justified if it delivered the people of that country from the clutches of illiberality and coercive governance. Further the claim went that if offered a chance, the people […]

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Walter Russell Mead's Pak-Vision

Walter Russell Mead, an esteemed scholar of American history, and provocative observer of current geopolitical trends is attempting to see the world through Pakistan’s eyes. Here’s his Pak-Vision of the situation in Afghanistan through Islamabad’s view: The second major issue shaping negative Pakistani feelings about the United States is almost as important.  Pakistanis are on […]

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Max Boot Speaks on General Petraeus' New Command on Charlie Rose

Max Boot , Senior Fellow for National Security Studies at the Council on Foreign Relations, and most importantly a Petraeus advisor, had a chat with Charlie Rose.  I invite you, my reader, to watch the whole interview here. There are a few takeaways that you might want to keep in mind as you watch Boot […]

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Wikileak Damage: From Secretary Gates to Speaker Pelosi

Wikileak Damage: From Secretary Gates to Speaker Pelosi

After Faheem poignantly detailed President Karzai’s disapproval of the Wikileaks document leak, we now have Secretary of Defense Robert Gates’ strong reaction from the incident: “I’m not sure anger is the right word. I just — I think mortified, appalled,” Gates said. “And if I’m angry, it is because I believe that this information puts those in Afghanistan […]

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In Diplomacy Speak Karzai Points to Pakistan As Driver of Terrorism, Denounces WikiLeaks Docs

During a press conference President Hamid Karzai responded to the WikiLeaks document dump. He took a hard line on Pakistan, though in the language of diplomatic speak.  Echoing U.S. Congressional leaders Karzai spoke out against at least one of Afghanistan’s neighbors: A widely run Associated Press piece quotes him: “The international community is here to […]

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Greg Mortenson, Author of "3 Cups of Tea" and "Stones Into Schools" Speaks to Charlie Rose

Greg Mortenson, humanitarian activist, education entrepreneur in Afghanistan and to a great  extent Pakistan, spoke to Charlie Rose a few days ago.  The conversation was broadcast yesterday. During the talk Mr. Mortenson highlights the importance of the Afghan tribal elders in achieving a settled peace.  That’s to say he is arguing that the U.S and […]

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The Main Consequence of WikiLeaks Doc Dump: Afghans Will Shy From Aiding U.S. Interests

Politico just posted a new piece on the fall-out of the WikiLeaks document dump.  Former Director of the CIA, Michael Hayden has gone record to say that More importantly contrary to– or even consistent with– WikiLeak’s founder Julian Assanges’ claim that he has withheld 15,000 documents that reveal the identities of Afghan’s who have aided […]

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Winning the War in Afghanistan By Winning our Battles

The news filtering out of Afghanistan has been damning for what some have called the American cowboy of doing politics. Shoot first; ask questions later.  Defeat your enemy in battle; only then figure out a way to keep him defeated in the war. Game theorists work with a concept called subgame perfection, where the stable […]

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The New York Times & WikiLeaks in the Wrong

Apparently, the word ‘secret’ has lost all meaning nowadays. The New York Times, Guardian, and Der Speigel have all published reports using thousands of pages of classified American intelligence reports on the war in Afghanistan from 2004-2009 given to them by Wikileaks. The United States government condemned the disclosure of these secret documents and so […]

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Islamic Republic of Afghanistan

Useful information about Islamic Republic of Afghanistan. This might help those who are making their first trip to Afghanistan. Afghanistan History: Afghanistan originally was governed by different kings, emirs (Commander or general) or shahs (leader, King). Its first state was established on October 1747 in Kandahar by Afghan Military Commander Ahmad Shah Durani. After dead […]

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Negotiating with the Taliban: The Road Ahead

Afghan soldiers are killing American contractors and British troops. The recent news from the field is causing no less than rushed panic in strategy and policy circles: How can we draw down when the team we’re supposed to be handing off to in 2014 is infiltrated through with the enemy? It’s no surprise then that […]

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Richard Haass Stepping Back

Richard Haass, President of the Council on Foreign Relations and former Bush administration national security leader, has come out with a sobering critique of the current war in Afghanistan. Off the bat, he discusses how the war has changed from one of necessity to know one of choice. Here’s Haass: The war being waged by […]

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Afghanistan- Education System

Afghanistan- Education System

Afghanistan has two education systems; the religious and the government. The religious system is taught by Mulas (religious leaders) at masques that includes teaching Quran and provide religious advices. The government system is implemented at schools which is free of charge and is consist of  different subjects including religious. Afghanistan does not only have different […]

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George Packer on the Fallow Ground in the War in Afghanistan

George Packer’s latest piece in the New Yorker is a must read for anyone interested in Afghanistan and the war, there, boiling over. Packer is sifting through President Obama’s Afghanistan war strategy.  He’s interested in parsing through the infighting, the dramatic change in leadership personnel, the wild hedging on Obama’s fruitless partnership with the heroically incompetent Karzai […]

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Thoughts on Gen. Petraeus As a Game Changing Commander in Afghanistan?

It seems that the day’s reportage always fails to deliver good news.  Lives lost and opportunities squandered, squarely pegged in the middle of each New York Times piece, is the mounting price we pay. NATO troops and Afghan sons and daughters, fathers and mothers dead and dying. Today’s bomb attack has added four more casualties […]

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