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THE AMERICAN WAR IN AFGHANISTAN by Carter Malkasian Kirkus Star

THE AMERICAN WAR IN AFGHANISTAN

A History

by Carter Malkasian

Pub Date: July 1st, 2021
ISBN: 978-0-19-755077-9
Publisher: Oxford Univ.

Comprehensive history of the longest armed conflict in U.S. history.

In his third book, Oxford-trained historian and former State Department official Malkasian gives the most thorough account of the war in Afghanistan to date. Spanning more than 18 years and three American presidents—George W. Bush, Barack Obama, and Donald Trump—the conflict is now winding down, but in a way that many find disappointing. In the first three chapters, he lays the scene of Afghan culture and society. Malkasian argues that America’s war in Afghanistan is part of the broader upheaval sparked by the Soviet-Afghan War, begun in 1978 and fought between Soviet-backed Communists who took power in a coup and the resistance fighters to whom the U.S. supplied over $1 billion in funds and arms as part of Cold War containment. In the middle chapters, Malkasian gives a blow-by-blow of American phases of the war, beginning with the period from the initial invasion after 9/11 through the 2003 Iraq War. Then came the 2006 Taliban offensive that triggered the troop surge of 2007. The author gives the most detailed coverage to Obama’s surge, which included 140,000 troops (compared to Bush’s 30,000) and was marked by various resets and reallocations. Malkasian focuses on the southern province of Helmand, where he spent nearly two years as a civilian adviser. In the final chapters, the author looks at Trump’s drawdown and the 2019-2020 peace talks. Malkasian is clear on why those talks succeeded: “It is not the battlefield stalemate or diplomatic prowess. It is Donald Trump….More than other any other US politician, he was willing to buck criticism and demand that the United States leave.” Perhaps the war wouldn’t have been so costly if this had happened sooner, but Malkasian concedes that there was never an easy way out. Mismanagement, tribalism, and refusals to leave have all fed “the combat experience of a generation of US servicemen and women.” For the Afghan people, the experience has been nothing short of catastrophic.

A sweeping, deeply researched account that will gratify specialists and nonspecialists alike.