The Last Days of the Afghan Republic


A Doomed Evacuation Twenty Years in the Making

Price:
Sale price$60.99
Stock:
In stock, 2 units

By Noah Coburn, Arsalan Noori
Imprint:
ROWMAN & LITTLEFIELD PUBLISHERS
Release Date:
Format:
HARDBACK
Pages:
272

Request Academic Copy

Button Actions

Please copy the ISBN for submitting review copy form

Description

Arsalan Noori (pseudonym) is a scholar and social science researcher who has worked with the international community for over 15 years.



Noah Coburn (Goddard College) is a socio-cultural anthropologist and a leading authority on the shifting political landscape in Afghanistan. He is the author of Losing Afghanistan: An Obituary for the Intervention.



Author website: www.noahcoburn.com


Characters



Timeline



Acronyms



The Last Flight out of HKIA



A Failed Intervention?



A Land of Opportunity?



A Contracted War



A Divided Country



A Growing Distance



Young Politics



Special Immigrants



Willful Ignorance



The Second Coming of the Taliban



Insecurity and Failed Diplomacy



The Challenges of Resettlement



Lawyers, Travel Agents, and Traffickers



The Final Days of the American Occupation



Why wasn’t it fixed



Priority 2



The Collapse



After August 15



Chaos



In Afghanistan it’s still who you know



Unaccompanied Minors



The Women who Remained Behind



Tea with the Taliban



Airplane Hangers



Making Compromises



Parole



California



Kabul



Sources


Drawing on interviews with Afghans who thrived under the 20-year U.S. occupation of Afghanistan, Bennington College anthropologist Coburn and Noori (the pseudonym of a young Afghan social researcher) present a vivid portrait of life under the occupation, as well as the turmoil caused by the 2021 withdrawal. Though running was considered inappropriate for a woman, Zeinab was able to pursue her passion for triathlon competitions thanks to American NGOs like Free to Run, which also hired her to organize events. Najeeb, an employee of a local company hired by the U.S. Department of Defense, worked as a translator. When the U.S.-backed Afghan government collapsed on Aug. 15, 2021, Zeinab, Najeeb, and others who associated with “internationals”—Americans and other Westerners—feared for their safety and the loss of their freedoms. Many fled the country, attempting to emigrate with their families to the West, but ending up scattered around the world and separated from their loved ones. The authors provide both a sweeping history of the Afghan republic and a close-up look at the individuals who were served and then betrayed by it. This is an intimate and moving study of the broken lives left in the wake of U.S. military intervention.

— Publishers Weekly



An excellent book, very different from other "what went wrong books" in weaving in the perspectives of the Afghans affected – almost destroyed – by the U.S. abandonment of Afghanistan. The Last Days of the Afghan Republic is full of unique insights on the unexamined issues of working in an unfamiliar culture without deep understanding of the people. It is a “must read” for USAID and NGO professionals who will face these recurring problems.

— Ronald Neumann, former US Ambassador to Afghanistan



The Last Days of the Afghan Republic offers nuanced and human portraits of what it is like to be caught between uncaring and mismanaged geopolitical projects and everyday terrorism of the new-old Taliban regime.

— Joshua Reno, Binghamton University



Very little of the many things written on the country and the war have actually been produced by bona fide experts, and few of those experts have Dr. Coburns credentials. But more than that, this book is co-authored, and indeed co-created by an Afghan partner with many years of experience working with internationals. I would recommend this to all my colleagues – both Afghan specialist and others. The Last Days of the Afghan Republic brings a much needed and much neglected voice to the discussion of the war.

— Benjamin Hopkins, George Washington University



A compelling account of people in Afghanistan whose lives and futures suddenly became collateral damage when the United States hastily departed the country without any planning for the consequences that would entail.

— Thomas Barfield, Boston University


You may also like

Recently viewed