Archive for the ‘Afghanistan’ Category

Americans should not turn away from the tragedy of education in Afghanistan | TheHill – The Hill

With the withdrawal of U.S. forces from Afghanistan, America is poised to move on from its longest war. In its place, lawmakers in Washingtonhave beenholding hearings about the turbulent U.S. exit from Afghanistan.

The American people have the right to know why and how our withdrawal spiraled downward so quickly and chaotically, but it is a distraction from more immediate questions about how to protect the gains we made in Afghanistan over two decades including, first and foremost, the improvement and expansion of education for young Afghans.

The past two decades stood out as an exceptional period in the countrys efforts to establish and expand public education in the face of corruption, decrepit infrastructure, gender discrimination, and deficient training for educators.

Early in my career, I served in the Peace Corps in Iran and later as the press attach in the U.S. Embassy in Tehran, where I was taken hostage for 444 days. Despite this, my belief in the fundamental goodness of American values and faith in the importance of working to build a better world remains resolute.

It was a huge motivator in my decision to go to Afghanistan shortly after the U.S.-led rout of the Taliban as the lead in what was called the Teachers College, Columbia University, Afghan Education Project, which lasted for three years from 2003-2006. There was little hesitation by the president of Teachers College and its faculty over its newest international effort in Afghanistan.

The school has a long history in Afghanistan, writing textbooks and attempting to make uphill progress in teacher training from the early 1950s until the communist coup of 1978 and could not continue its programs while the country fell into civil war from 1989-1996. It was remembered fondly by Afghan educators and welcomed back in late 2003, to work on teacher education and to rewrite the Ministry of Educations Soviet-style texts and remove Taliban-mandated changes from the elementary curriculum.

During this time, after years of repression, Afghan children were returning to school in large numbers. Young women who were not under-educated during Taliban rule and treated as pariahs in society, began finding their way. Our project made possible through UNICEF funding was an improvement upon the existing education apparatus in Afghanistan, but unfortunately it was only a fraction of the investment needed to create a sustainable system.

In the years following my arrival in 2003, Afghan children were continuously deprived of school buildings or qualified teachers. The Education Ministry was out of touch with contemporary pedagogy. Millions of dollars were needed, but never came, to reconstruct more than 7,000 schools that were in disrepair or build the thousands more that were needed. It shocked me that, at the time, a staggering 80 percent of the more than 100,000 Afghan teachers had little education themselves and were hardly trained to teach, holding little or no command of any subject matter. This never meaningfully improved in the ensuing years. Many teachers never even showed up because of the abysmal pay.

Nevertheless, what exemplified our effort was a sense that children in Afghanistan should have the same opportunities as children in America. But with students being forced to contend with the impact of death and pain in wartime, and to navigate a society that did not treat people equally or with respect for their differences, the focus of elementary education was on the basic life skills.

We may have been idealistic about our mission, but we were more than realistic about what confronted contemporary Afghans. Thats why Afghan elementary education emphasized social justice, exploring personal emotions and decision-making, the value of helping others, cooperation, and love for a shared country.

Today, the brutal Taliban regime is destroying those fragile but important gains, especially for women and girls, and reimposing restrictions not seen since the Taliban first swept into power in the 1990s. This includes prohibiting girls from attending secondary school and converting the Ministry of Womens Affairs building into offices for the religious morality policy.

Now, more than ever, America must have an honest reckoning with whats at stake in paving the way for the Taliban to dismantle progress made in education which will require facing the full tragedy of the cataclysm in store for millions of Afghans who dream of going to a real school.

It's a hard truth to face, but one that is vital if the U.S. wants to avoid leaving a dismal legacy one that has only enabled more suffering and injustice.

I can only hope that the flicker of light we helped to create in the space of education and opportunity somehow endures in the hearts and minds of the Afghan people, and that our government one day recognizes the benefit to America of investing in education around the world that is rooted in inclusion and tolerance.

Barry Rosen, a survivor of the Iran hostage crisis (Nov. 4, 1979-Jan. 20, 1981), is the former executive director of external affairs at Teachers College, Columbia University. Follow him on Twitter @brosen1501.

Excerpt from:
Americans should not turn away from the tragedy of education in Afghanistan | TheHill - The Hill

Afghanistan veterans are reframing their service after the war’s end – ArmyTimes.com

Kate Mannion spent college drinking and playing rugby, so when she joined the Marine Corps in 2008 she did so to become a better person.

She trained as a military police officer and was soon on deck for deployment. At that time the Corps needed female Marines to engage Afghan women. She still had a healthy dose of young, adrenaline-fueled ideas about life in a combat zone and killing terrorists.

As a young lance corporal she went into the deployment with pessimistic views about the people, the culture, what she would encounter, how she would be treated as a woman, an American, a Marine.

But her experiences there ended up flipping me on my head, she said.

As thousands fled Afghanistan last month, virtuous human moments arose Marines lifting a child over barbed wire, a baby birthed on an evacuation flight, scattered networks of U.S. veterans scrambling to help their Afghan comrades reach safety.

But amid the chaos, death and destruction that rolled across the country, taking U.S. troops with it, questions emerged, What went wrong? Whos to blame? Was it worth it? Whats to come?

The staggering cost of the 20-year war in Afghanistan, which took an estimated 171,000-174,000 lives and $2.3 trillion, according to a recent report from the Costs of War project at Brown University, hovers darkly over these questions. The war directly resulted in the deaths of 2,442 U.S. service members, according to the study, and the Defense Department reports that more than 20,000 were wounded, many of them catastrophically.

Military Times spoke with Afghanistan veterans about how they struggle to balance the scales of what was given and what was lost, to find what was gained. What will they choose to remember and how will they reconcile those memories as the years pass?

For some, their thoughts flit between worthwhile and futile. Some know they tried to help but see their good intentions as doomed all along. Others know they made a difference and their work will manifest itself in an Afghanistan that is one day free.

For this small group of veterans, the answers to these questions dont often revolve around combat, but are rather intensely personal the memories, the images, the discussions with Afghan individuals that they carry with them and are theirs alone.

Mannion worked on the female engagement teams, two female Marines embedded with all-male infantry units, often accompanying Navy medical units providing care.

At times, she sat with village women in a separate area while male Marines met with tribal leaders.

Talking was often like a game of charades.

Marine Lance Cpl. Kate Mannion after a makeup session with Afghan women during her 2010 deployment. (Kate Mannion)

The women would turn on music, they would be dancing, they would put makeup on us, they would give us all the sugar they had in the house in our tea so the teacup would literally be like half sugar with just a little tea on top, Mannion said.

The women drew big red circles on her cheeks and then gathered around, erupting in laughter.

They were just howling, she said.

She knew the women were putting themselves at risk through these small acts.

And theyd talk.

How are you, is there any way we can help? shed ask. Are there ways Marines can alleviate any of those stresses? Are we doing anything to make your life more difficult?

And they responded.

As a matter of fact, you are, they said.

Simply by being there, they attracted the Taliban.

Those small slices of happy memories might be a nice treat for her, but for them only amounted to a small reprieve.

Its hard, any good she accomplished can feel like a selfish little Band-Aid, she said.

Scott Mann, 53, is a retired Army lieutenant colonel who served nearly 23 years, with most of that time as a Green Beret. He deployed to Afghanistan three times between 2005 and 2011, founded the nonprofit The Heroes Journey and authored the book, Game Changers: Going Local to Defeat Violent Extremists.

More recently, he worked with a group of Afghanistan veterans, Task Force Pineapple, to get former comrades out of the country.

On his first two deployments, the mission was hunting bad guys. There was not much of the traditional working with locals to build up a fighting force thats the core Green Beret mission.

By the 2010 deployment, Mann was a lieutenant colonel and held the title of village stability director.

The aim had shifted.

The program borrowed from efforts in the highlands of Vietnam where Green Berets partnered with South Vietnamese villagers to fight off the Viet Cong and North Vietnamese.

His teams lived in villages, wore the same garb as locals and sat on shuras.

They started with six villages and grew to 113 villages across the country.

They helped villagers solve farming and water shortage problems during the day, he said. Then they climbed to the rooftops at night to fight the Taliban.

Retired Army Lt. Col. Scott Mann uses his storytelling ability in the production Last Out ... Elegy of a Green Beret. in October 2019. Mann served three tours in Afghanistan before retiring after a nearly 23-year career. (Scott Mann)

In a rare moment of rest, Mann sat beneath a mulberry tree with a village elder. Mann asked him what life was like before the Soviet Union invaded in 1979.

The elder looked up at the dome of the blue mosque and started crying.

You know we used to go on the grass of the mosque every Friday and have a picnic, the elder told him. The kids would play and the elders would tell stories, and nobody was worried about getting shot, nobody was worried about something bad happening and I can barely remember that. But that was what life was like, and one day it will be that way again.

The retired soldier still holds the elders words as a vision of a better future in Afghanistan, and the role he and others played fueled that future, even if now it seems so distant.

I do think seeds have been planted, not just along the ability to fight but also to govern themselves and resolve their disputes, Mann said. And frankly, to get a life back that so many of them have been denied.

Airman 1st Class Ashley Dent landed in Japan in 2011 for her new duty station and was promptly told she would be headed to Afghanistan in the next rotation.

The Air Force veteran and former president of her student veterans organization at New York Institute of Technology remembered what she learned in the simplest of situations getting food each day.

Ashley Dent during her service in the Air Force. She deployed to Afghanistan in in 2011. (Ashley Dent)

When she saw Afghans working in the dining facilities it shocked her. She assumed U.S. workers would be serving food. The body language and cultural differences put her on edge.

But soon she chatted with the food workers. A young man, short with dark hair and a medium build would share his dreams of college.

One day he wasnt there. She asked others about him.

Oh yeah, he died, an Afghan man said. A motorcycle accident.

He showed me a picture of him, she said.

Oh yeah, thats him, she said. He was just here yesterday.

They started laughing.

The casual way they tossed off his death jarred her. Later, she understood, there was so much death.

That young man, in his early twenties like her, made her see the Afghans in a new light, they were like her, wanting other things in life.

Of course, there are bad guys but there are guys on the base just trying to make a living for their family, she said.

She lived on Bagram Air Base when the United States killed Osama bin Laden. The mortar attacks that followed seemed endless.

When we would get hit they would be running for cover just like we were, she said.

Nick Riffel, 32, served two tours in Afghanistan between 2009 and 2012.

Riffel now works as the national security policy advisor for The American Legion, which was involved with advocating for veterans and Afghan allies during the withdrawal.

Heading into his first deployment he had hope. Then 6th Marine Regiment went into the massive Battle of Marjah. Forty-five Marines died, many more were injured, an estimated 70 or more Afghan soldiers perished.

They did the things Marines do root out the enemy and fight.

Marine Nick Riffel at a mosque in Marjah, Afghanistan in 2010. Riffel deployed twice to the country during his military service. (Nick Riffel)

When he returned to Helmand province a year later as a corporal and infantry team leader, the whole vibe was different, he said.

The deployment was more about security for humanitarian efforts. This included a school where interpreters assigned to his unit taught reading, writing and math to children ages six to 10.

Two out of three times wed get shot at, wed get lit up in that position and it was directly related to the Taliban not wanting the children to have, especially, a Western-style education, Riffel said.

Riffel saw wide cultural gaps. In America, educating the young is paramount. In farming-centric rural Afghanistan, another body doing farm work made a difference.

Fathers would ask him, why do you put my child in school? They wanted the young ones working the fields.

But the kids liked it, he said.

Hes heard echoes of his own experience since then among Vietnam War veterans, saying local Vietnamese villagers told them the same thing.

Before he finished his second tour, Riffel was shot up so badly he had to be medically evacuated.

I wanted to do right by kids, I wanted to do right by them in my Western way of thinking and everything like that, but if someone had to put me on the spot and say, Did this happen? Did this help? I would say probably not, he said.

Memories of Mannions two deployments linger, more than a decade after the first.

She still smells the bazaar burning trash, burlap sack, dust, and food cooking in oil.

On one trip, Navy medical personnel treated a child with burns on his feet from a cooking fire. That small task, one that would be an easy fix in the United States, could result in infection and death in rural regions of Afghanistan. On others, giving simple things like Motrin to a dying, elderly woman helped to ease her pain.

This isnt sustainable, theyre going to run out of the medicine, she told herself.

Navy medical officer Lt. Jisun Hahn treats an Afghan child. Marine Lance Cpl. Kate Mannion often accompanied navy medical teams in her work on female engagement teams during her 2010 Afghanistan deployment. (Kate Mannion)

But, she also saw that, if only for a moment or two, they were able relieve small sufferings, let women vent their problems, connect and play with the children.

Her team worked to get foot-pump sewing machines and fabric. They got the grunts to ask village men if their wives knew how to sew.

She laughs at the memory.

I know you guys were stuck in a firefight this morning but I need you to help me assemble this big iron sewing machine, she said.

Todd Hunter, 38, carried a weapon like any other Marine as he traversed Afghanistan. But he also carried a video camera. The combat correspondent joined the Corps in 2005 and was deployed to Afghanistan a few years later.

Hunter now works as a spokesman for Disabled American Veterans.

During his 2008 Afghanistan deployment, the corporal saw villagers gather in a corner of the rural countryside to see the flicker of modernity.

On one of his trips shooting videos of military and humanitarian projects, troops and workers had gotten an old electricity plant running again.

I just remember people wanting to see electricity. Wanting to see a light bulb turn on, things we take for granted, the kind of joy it brought them, he said.

His job meant moving from one forward operating base to another, but what his travels lacked in time, they made up for in variety.

Marine Cpl. Todd Hunter teaches an Afghan National Police officer how to snap his fingers during a 2007-2008 deployment. (Todd Hunter)

Every few months, a local businessman who printed materials for coalition forces, delivered a delicious buffet of Afghan food rice, lamb curry, flatbread and a creamy dipping sauce with a mound of brown sugar which was just amazing when you added that to it, he said.

There were many instances of small and large efforts, kindnesses even. Now they blur together.

But even the good could hurt.

Two distinct experiences remain fixed in his memory.

On one trip Marines began handing out toys to children, first the younger girls and boys, then to older children. But they ran out. Not all of the older boys got toys.

As they drove away, he watched a girl, maybe 6 years old, walking with a pink bunny rabbit shed received. Then he saw a teenage boy walk up, sucker punch her and snatch the toy.

Thats one of the images Ill never forget, he said.

But theres another connection he made, however brief.

In the area of Afghanistan where he was that day in 2008, women who were sent to prison often took their children with them.

In the Parwan provincial prison a boy, perhaps 4 years old, was there with his mother. Hunter tried to carry candy with him when he traveled. That day when he saw the boy he had one piece left in his pocket.

He handed it to the boy.

And he lit up when I gave him that candy, Hunter said.

Then he patted the child on the head and walked away.

Editors note: Due to an editing mistake, this story has been changed to correct numbers on the costs of the war.

Todd South has written about crime, courts, government and the military for multiple publications since 2004 and was named a 2014 Pulitzer finalist for a co-written project on witness intimidation. Todd is a Marine veteran of the Iraq War.

Go here to read the rest:
Afghanistan veterans are reframing their service after the war's end - ArmyTimes.com

Lawmakers vow investigations into Afghanistan missteps have only just begun – Military Times

Senior defense leaders this week faced more than 12 hours of questions in public hearings on the chaotic exit from Afghanistan, but lawmakers see that as just the start of their oversight work on the issue.

Leaders in the House and Senate are promising additional classified briefings and public inquiries into not just the last few months of the U.S. presence in Afghanistan, but the last 20 years of military involvement there.

In addition, Senate Armed Services Committee member Tammy Duckworth, D-Ill., on Thursday introduced legislation to create an independent commission to review a variety of military decisions in Afghanistan, to ensure the United States never repeats the mistakes it made in Afghanistan during the 20 years of war.

The panel would be styled after the commission formed to examine intelligence failures in the wake of the Sept. 11 attacks, and would be staffed by outside experts who were not involved in political or military decisions related to the conflict.

Its important to keep it non-political and to make sure that it truly is expansive, that they look at decisions made by the four different [presidential] administrations and 11 different Congresses, Duckworth said. Its not just a look at DOD, but also the State Department, and where did Congress fail?

The commission idea gained preliminary backing from fellow armed services committee members during the panels hearing on Tuesday. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin also offered some support, saying an interagency review of the entirety of the war effort would be useful.

Republicans have also called for more investigation into the Afghanistan exit, but with more focus on the final weeks of the conflict.

On Wednesday, Sen. Marsha Blackburn, R-Tenn., introduced legislation to create a new State Department task force to both review the evacuation of roughly 130,000 individuals in the final weeks of the U.S. presence there and the ongoing work to help more American citizens and Afghan allies get out.

House Armed Services Committee Chairman Rep. Adam Smith, D-Wash., promised multiple classified hearings on the topic in coming weeks, to include the Defense Departments ability to conduct anti-terrorism operations in and around Afghanistan without a ground presence there.

Senate Armed Services Committee held another public hearing on the Afghanistan withdrawal Thursday morning, with views from outside experts about the short-term and long-range security implications there. Officials vowed more will come.

There is a temptation to close the book on Afghanistan and move on to long-term strategic competition with China and Russia, Chairman Jack Reed, D-R.I., said at the hearing. However, while the threat from violent extremists has changed, we must ensure we remain postured to carry out counterterrorism operations in an effective manner.

In order to move forward, we must capture the lessons of the last two decades.

Austin and Joint Chiefs Chairman Gen. Mark Milley are scheduled in coming days to deliver written responses to unanswered questions from the marathon Afghanistan hearings earlier this week. Those submissions may provide the basis for future appearances on Capitol Hill by the pair in months to come.

Leo covers Congress, Veterans Affairs and the White House for Military Times. He has covered Washington, D.C. since 2004, focusing on military personnel and veterans policies. His work has earned numerous honors, including a 2009 Polk award, a 2010 National Headliner Award, the IAVA Leadership in Journalism award and the VFW News Media award.

Read the original:
Lawmakers vow investigations into Afghanistan missteps have only just begun - Military Times

What’s Next for the US in Afghanistan?

WHITE HOUSE

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken delivered to Congress this week an unwavering defense of the Biden administration's exit from Afghanistan, in which he outlined the administration's priorities for the country going forward.

Here are those priorities and the challenges in meeting them.

Assisting Americans and at-risk Afghans

Blinken said the administration was continuing "relentless efforts" to help the fewer than 100 remaining Americans as well as potentially thousands of at-risk Afghans to leave the country if they choose.

Citing the "ongoing terrorist threat to operations of this nature," the State Department declined to provide an official count of Afghans attempting to flee.

A VOA source with knowledge of the evacuation process says that as of Sunday, at least 1,300 at-risk Afghans and U.S.-affiliated individuals are seeking to leave through the Kabul airport or overland transport. Approximately 8,200 are trying to depart from the Mazar-e-Sharif airport, where charter planes have waited for weeks to be cleared for departure.

"The United States has pulled every lever available to us to facilitate the departure of these charter flights from Mazar," a State Department spokesman said.

But those assisting evacuations are losing patience and accuse the administration of offering "empty promises."

"As the days go by and the situation becomes more dire for our 704 passengers, it's hard to have any faith in political promises," independent humanitarian Hazami Barmada told VOA. In recent weeks, she has been assisting the evacuation of a group that includes nine American citizens, nine lawful permanent residents of the U.S., and 170 Special Immigrant Visa holders and their families. As of Wednesday, the group is still stranded in Mazar-e-Sharif.

Engaging diplomatically with Taliban

The U.S. and other Western nations have moved diplomatic operations from Kabul to Doha, Qatar. Blinken said the U.S. was prepared to engage with the Taliban from the Qatari capital in coordination with allies and partners "on the basis of whether or not it advances our interests."

With military intervention no longer a point of leverage for the foreseeable future, the challenge is "how to be diplomatic with a terrorist group," said Brian O'Toole, a nonresident senior fellow at the Atlantic Council.

Paired with the right leverage, diplomacy may be effective, O'Toole said. This includes the previous Afghan government's $9.5 billion in assets currently frozen in American banks, U.S. dominance over the global financial market, and threats of United Nations and Western sanctions or trade restrictions. Incentives could include offers of international aid, budgetary assistance and recognition of the Taliban government.

Blinken said the U.S. has organized key countries to leverage their combined influence over the Taliban. Last week, he led a ministerial meeting of 22 countries plus NATO, the EU, and the United Nations to align these efforts.

The effectiveness of the soft power approach also depends on whether the Taliban will continue to behave as an extremist group or move toward governing Afghanistan as part of the international community in some form.

At this point, the signals are mixed, said Michael O'Hanlon, senior fellow at the Brookings Institution. Despite their pledges to build an inclusive government, members of the all-male interim cabinet are Taliban old guard who may care more about maintaining the internal cohesion of the group than about placating the West. On the positive side, the Taliban have been largely cooperative in the U.S.-led evacuation of 124,000 people out of Afghanistan.

We were adversaries when our country was occupied," Taliban spokesperson Suhail Shaheen told VOA. He added the Taliban has "turned a new page with its former battleground enemy and that it "depends on the U.S." whether they will help in the rebuilding of Afghanistan.

So far, the Taliban are calculating that it's in their best interest to help Washington, O'Hanlon said. "They really don't want to be in a military fight with the United States, even if they won the previous fight."

Over-the-horizon capability

A key priority of the administration is ensuring that Afghanistan does not become a breeding ground for terrorists plotting attacks on the homeland. U.S. intelligence, however, can no longer closely monitor terror groups such as al-Qaida and the Islamic State-Khorasan province.

"There's just no question, as you pull out, without troops on the ground, without the infrastructure we had, without the Afghan government in the position that it was, our intelligence collection is diminished," Director of National Intelligence Avril Haines told attendees at a national security summit Monday.

Now the administration is relying on its "over-the-horizon" capacity its ability to detect and destroy terrorist threats through aerial surveillance and drones launched from outside of country. The same approach has been employed in places around the world where the U.S. does not have military forces on the ground, Blinken said.

But in those countries, the U.S. has at least some intelligence and logistical support, either from a military base or a partner country nearby.

"In Somalia, we're nearby in Kenya. In Syria, we're nearby in Iraq or Turkey. In Yemen, we have access to the water right around Yemen and, if necessary, facilities on the Arabian Peninsula as well," O'Hanlon said. "But here in Afghanistan, the landlocked Hindu Kush, we don't really have any easy, close by waterway. And we don't have any countries that are particularly interested in helping us monitor the Taliban."

There are no American bases in any of the six countries that border Afghanistan. The closest base is more than 1,600 kilometers away, in the United Arab Emirates, and it was used to launch drone strikes against IS-Khorasan during the chaotic last days of evacuations before the August 31 withdrawal.

The best option for Washington is to engage with Pakistan, said James Jeffrey, former special envoy to the Global Coalition to Defeat ISIS and current chair of the Middle East Program at the Wilson Center.

"We have been at odds with Pakistan because of their support of the Taliban," Jeffrey said. "But now that de facto the Taliban is no longer an enemy, I see no reason why we can't, as part of our overall approach, force the Pakistanis to allow us to strike ISIS and al-Qaida from their territory."

How much support Washington can wrangle out of Islamabad remains to be seen. "There is no way we are going to allow any bases, any sort of action from Pakistani territory into Afghanistan," Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan said in June.

Earlier this month, U.S. Central Intelligence Agency Director Willam Burns flew to Pakistan and India to discuss with counterparts the security concerns following the Taliban takeover of Afghanistan.

Support humanitarian aid to Afghan people

On Monday, the administration announced it would send nearly $64 million in new humanitarian assistance to Afghanistan, for a total of $330 million in assistance to the Afghan people this fiscal year. Blinken said the aid would flow through independent organizations such as nongovernmental organizations and U.N. agencies and not through the Taliban government.

"That may work for $64 million in aid, because you can air-drop things and the Taliban has no air presence," said O'Toole. But it will be challenging to distribute larger aid packages without the blessing of those in power.

"You're talking about having real supply convoys and land routes," O'Toole added. "It may be hard to avoid the Taliban."

Moving on from Afghanistan

While Afghanistan has been the first major foreign policy crisis for the administration, the focus will continue to be on Biden's domestic priorities, said Aaron David Miller, senior fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.

"Within that context, Afghanistan is an issue that they would like to put in the rearview mirror," Miller said.

Polls show Americans are more focused on issues such as the pandemic and the recent Biden vaccine mandate, the push to renew the nation's infrastructure, and the upcoming fight on the debt ceiling.

"There are just so many issues out there that I wouldn't be surprised if Afghanistan receded to some degree," said Karlyn Bowman, a distinguished senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute who focuses on American public opinion.

"But clearly as we move ahead toward the 2022 elections, Republicans will remind Americans what happened in Afghanistan," Bowman added.

Biden's approval rating has dropped to a new low of 43% with Americans disapproving of his handling of foreign policy (56%) and the U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan (61%), according to a September 2 NPR/PBS NewsHour/Marist Poll.

Still, a majority of Americans said they support the decision to withdraw in recent polls from the Pew Research Center and ABC News/Washington Post.

Jeff Seldin and VOA's Urdu Service contributed to this report.

Continued here:
What's Next for the US in Afghanistan?

1960s Afghanistan Before The Taliban In 46 Fascinating Photos

1960s Afghanistan presents a stark contrast to the war-torn region we recognize today. Take a peek at the way Afghanistan was and how it can be again.

Like this gallery?Share it:

1 of 47

Dr. William Podlich (second from left) almost always had his small Olympus camera with him on his travels, and he was usually the man behind the camera. This is a rare photo that he himself appears in.

2 of 47

Afghan men out for a picnic.

3 of 47

Peg Podlich on a trip from Kabul to Peshawar, Pakistan.

4 of 47

Dr. Bill Podlich on a hillside in Kabul.

5 of 47

A Buddha statue in Bamiyan Valley. In 2001, the Taliban destroyed the two largest ones.

6 of 47

Men looking over Istalif, a centuries-old center for pottery.

7 of 47

Men and boys enjoying the waters of the Kabul river.

8 of 47

An Afghan boy decorating cakes.

9 of 47

Jan Podlich during a shopping trip in Istalif.

10 of 47

An outdoor market selling a colorful variety of produce.

11 of 47

A crowded plaza filled with people celebrating the new year.

12 of 47

A senior English class at the American International School of Kabul.

13 of 47

Young students in a playground.

14 of 47

These students do their work in a shaded outdoor classroom.

15 of 47

Desks and a leafy canopy are all these students need to make a classroom in the summer.

16 of 47

Wading children play and women wash as ducks float serenely by.

17 of 47

Students at the Higher Teachers College of Kabul, where Dr. Podlich taught for two years with UNESCO.

18 of 47

An Afghani military band.

19 of 47

An Afghan Army parade through Kabul.

20 of 47

Afghan repairmen in Kabul.

21 of 47

Shah-Do Shamshira Mosque, built in the early 20th century under the reign of Amanullah Khan.

22 of 47

The streets fill with cars during rush hour.

23 of 47

Kabul Gorge, sometimes called Tang-i-Gharu, connects Kabul with Jalalabad.

24 of 47

The seasons change, and this winter crowd smiles for the camera.

25 of 47

A boy sells balloons by the river.

26 of 47

Men gather on makeshift mobile bleachers.

27 of 47

Parking lot of the American International School of Kabul.

28 of 47

A chemistry lesson in a mud-walled classroom.

29 of 47

Sisters walking the streets of Kabul.

30 of 47

Afghanistan's Bamiyan Valley, home to numerous Buddhist monastic ensembles and sanctuaries, as well as Islamic edifices.

31 of 47

A man bends his head for a shave.

32 of 47

A man preparing jalebi, a sweet dessert.

33 of 47

King's Hill in Paghman Gardens, constructed following Amanullah Khan's tour of Europe, India, and Iran. Paghman soon became a chic holiday retreat filled with chalets, villas, and gardens. These royal gardens were public; however, in order to enter, one had to don Western garb. At the tail end of the 20th century, though, Paghman became a Mujahideen battleground, and most everything has since been destroyed.

34 of 47

A residential hillside in Kabul.

35 of 47

The King's Palace, where guards are always on duty.

36 of 47

The Soviet-built Salang Tunnel, which connects northern and southern Afghanistan.

37 of 47

A man kneels to pray.

38 of 47

Two Afghan men walking home.

39 of 47

Afghan men exercise their civil rights and protest.

40 of 47

A gas station in Kabul.

41 of 47

Afghan girls coming home from school. Both Afghan boys and girls were educated until the high school level.

42 of 47

Even as cities grow, many areas of rural Afghanistan remain untouched by the changing times.

43 of 47

A truck trundles down a dusty road.

44 of 47

Two Afghan teachers at the Higher Teachers College.

45 of 47

A stop during the Podlich family's bus trip through the Khyber Pass.

46 of 47

Peg Podlich arriving in Kabul.

47 of 47

Like this gallery?Share it:

The peaceful mood and smiling faces that fill images of 1960s Afghanistan are a far cry from modern photos of a country struggling with war and vast corruption. In Afghanistan before the Taliban, the infrastructural investment and Western influence of the 1960s and early '70s created a sociopolitical climate much different than the one that's dominated the last several decades. See more of 1960s Afghanistan before the Taliban in the gallery above and dig deeper into the history below.

The 1950s and 1960s were a hopeful time for the inhabitants of Afghanistan. Internal conflict and foreign intervention had plagued the area for centuries, but recent decades had been relatively peaceful ones.

In the 1930s, the young and progressive king Amanullah Khan was determined to modernize Afghanistan and bring the social, political, and economic achievements he witnessed on his tours of Europe to his own land.

He asked the world's wealthiest nations for help bankrolling his projected reforms, and, seeing the strategic value in a modernized Afghanistan friendly to their own interests in the region, world powers agreed.

View original post here:
1960s Afghanistan Before The Taliban In 46 Fascinating Photos