The Economist - USA (2019-08-17)

(Antfer) #1
TheEconomistAugust 17th 2019 69

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100

2008 10 12 14 16 18

0

20

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1919 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 2000 10 18 2008 10^12141618

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600

1,200

1,800

2,400

3,000

GDPper
person,$*

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100

Deathsduetoconflict
inAfghanistan,’000

Afghan
civilwar

ThirdAnglo-
Afghanwar

Soviet-
Afghanwar

Saurrevolutionestablishes
communistregime

1973 coupoverthrows
Afghanmonarchy

Afghan
civilwars

USwarin
Afghanistan

Acenturyaftergainingindependence,Afghanistanismoreviolentthanithasbeenfordecades

Th Tlib ’ i h d f h ld i h h h i

TimelineofAfghanistan’seconomicandmilitaryhistory Afghanssatisfiedwith
personalfreedoms,%

Afghansfeelingsafe
walkingaloneatnight,%

Sources:Gallup;MaddisonProject;PeaceResearchInstituteOslo;UppsalaConflictDataProgram;WorldBank *2011prices,atpurchasing-powerparity

TheTaliban’sinsurgencyhasspreadfromstrongholdsin the southtothe entirecountry

Deathsduetoconflict
By location

2001-02

1999-
2000 2003-04 2005-06 2007-08

2009-10 2011-12 2013-14 2015-16 2017-18

KabulKabul

Hindu

Kush

Mts
Hindu

Kush

Mts

Kandaha
defacto
Talibancapital

Kabu

Kandahar
defacto
Talibancapital

Kabu

Helmand
province

Helmand
province

USinvasionbegins

USdraw-downbegins

BeforetheUS
invasion,theTaliban
foughtagainsta
northerncoalition

AftertheUS
invasion,the
Talibanquickly
retreated

TheUSpassed
securityoperations
toNATOinstages
from 2003 to 2006

Talibaninsurgents
basedinthesouth
andinPakistan
grewinstrength

AstheTaliban
regainedstrength,
theytookthewar
intothenorth

UStroopsmadea
majorpushinto
Helmandprovince
in 2009

In 2015 theTaliban
capturedand
brieflyheldKunduz

PA

KI

ST

AN

2018 sawthemost
areasaffectedand
peoplekilledsince
theconflictbegan

ToraTo r aBoraB o r a
al-Qaeda
hideout
Kandahar

Kabul

Kandahar

Kabul

KabulKabul

Kunduz

Deathsreported None 25 100200 400 800

O


n august 19thAfghans will take to the
streets to mark 100 years of indepen-
dence from Britain. They have more to
protest about than to celebrate: their coun-
try has not known peace for 40 years.
Afghanistan’s modern woes began in
earnest in 1979, when the Soviet Union in-
vaded to prop up a communist regime. In
response, America funded mujahideenre-
bels, escalating a bloody proxy war. The So-
viet withdrawal in 1989 was followed by in-
fighting among warlords, and then by the
brutal rule of the Taliban, an Islamist group
that took over much of the country.
After al-Qaeda plotted the September

11th, 2001 attacks from Afghan camps, the
United States and its allies invaded. nato-
led troops have been stationed there since


  1. American negotiators and the Tali-
    ban have recently held talks about a peace
    deal, but the Afghan government has yet to
    participate formally (see Asia section).
    Westerners often assume that the war
    was fiercest in 2010, when the annual death
    toll for natoforces peaked at 710. The co-
    alition has pulled back since then, with the
    number of American troops falling from
    100,000 to 14,000. As a result, just 94 nato
    soldiers have died since the start of 2015.
    Donald Trump wants a full exit by 2020.
    This hardly reflects a mission accom-
    plished. Violence between Afghans has
    soared during nato’s retreat. In 2018 some
    25,000 people were killed in the conflict—
    the most since at least the early 1990s, the
    earliest period in which detailed records
    based on contemporaneous reports are
    available. (Prior figures are estimated by
    historians, and are less reliable.) This toll is


greater than the 20,000 or so who died last
year in Syria, where violence has declined.
Facing less pressure from nato, the Ta-
liban are overwhelming the Afghan army,
spreading to cities such as Kunduz from
their stronghold in the south. A majority of
Afghans now live in areas controlled or
contested by the Taliban, according to the
Long War Journal, a website that tracks the
conflict. Gallup, which has polled Afghans
since 2008, finds that record numbers fear
for their liberty and safety.
The survivors are destitute. Historical
economic records are patchy, but Bill Byrd
of the United States Institute of Peace, a
think-tank, describes a “lost quarter-cen-
tury of development” after the Soviet inva-
sion. The Maddison Project, which makes
back-dated gdpestimates, suggests a deep
recession in the 1990s. A recovery since
2001, aided by foreign spending, has sput-
tered. Afghanistan is the only country in
Asia or the Middle East where people are
still poorer than those alive in 1950 were. 7

Violence has not been this widespread
since the Soviet withdrawal

Prisoners of war


Graphic detailAfghanistan

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