To Lose a War
The Fall and Rise of the Taliban
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3.5 • 2 Ratings
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- $15.99
Publisher Description
Named a Best Book of the Year by The New Yorker
“A book that is as deeply humane and profoundly rendered as any I’ve read about Afghanistan, or any other war.” —Elliot Ackerman, New York Times Book Review
From one of the great foreign correspondents of our time, author of some of the most essential reporting from Afghanistan from before 9/11 to the return of the Taliban to power in 2021, the first full accounting of that entire era, combining previously published dispatches and new reporting into a single epic tapestry
Jon Lee Anderson first reported from Afghanistan in the late 1980s, covering the US-backed mujahideen’s insurrection against the Soviet-backed regime in Kabul. Within days of the 9/11 attacks, he was again on the ground as an early eyewitness to the new war launched by the US against the Taliban and their Al Qaeda allies. His reportage from the first year of the war won a number of awards and was published in book form as The Lion’s Grave: Dispatches from Afghanistan. At the time, the American military had prevailed on the battlefield, and the newfound peace seemed to offer a precious space for Afghan society to restore itself and to forge a democratic future. But all was not well: Osama bin Laden was still in hiding, the Taliban were stealthily reorganizing for a comeback, and the United States was about to turn its attention to Iraq.
To Lose a War collects Anderson’s writing from Afghanistan over a near-quarter-century span. Containing the stories from The Lion’s Grave and all of those he published since, as well as important writing appearing here for the first time, the book offers a chronological account of a monumental tragedy as it unfolds. The colossal waste, missed signals, and wishful thinking that characterized the twenty-year arc of the US-led war in Afghanistan have consecrated it as one of the greatest foreign policy failures of the modern era, and a bellwether of a larger American imperial decline.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
In this collection of his New Yorker dispatches from Afghanistan, Anderson (The Fall of Baghdad) narrates in vivid detail how America's longest war became a bloody quagmire. His pieces cover the conflict's 20-year arc, beginning with the 2001 overthrow of the Taliban by a coalition of warlords backed by American forces. Painting their downfall as less of a rupture than a reconfiguration of power, he profiles cagey warlords and ragged militiamen who abruptly switched sides and cut murky deals that allowed the Taliban and al-Qaeda leadership to escape to Pakistan. His reporting from later years finds him embedded with American military units fighting a revived Taliban insurgency. It's a depressing grind of patrols, IED attacks, and brusque searches that alienated villagers—some of whom had lost family to American air strikes and firepower—all to prop up an unpopular, kleptocratic Afghan government. The final chapters cover the Taliban's 2021 reconquest of Afghanistan, when Taliban leaders insist to Western donor agencies that they will respect women's rights, only to reimpose a harsh fundamentalism that banned women from school, work, and eventually from even talking outside their homes. Anderson's pieces are a triumph of high-wire journalism—often taking him into hair-raising action—that also offer a capacious, resonant panorama of Afghan society. The result is a captivating account of a military march of folly that ably dissects its many tragic delusions.