Authors: David Isby
665.
GEN Stanley McChrystal,
COMISAF Initial Assessment
(“McChrystal Report”), Kabul, 20 August 2009, p. 1.
666.
Tom LoBianco, “Clinton: Ousting Al Qaeda Only Goal in Afghanistan,”
The Washington Times
, 16 November 2009.
667.
Donna Miles, “Gates Lashes Out at Leakers,”
American Forces Press Service news report
, 12 November 2009.
http://www.defenselink.mil/news/newsarticle.aspx?idAfghanistan56659
.
668.
“NATO Chief: Leave Afghanistan and ‘al-Qaeda Will Be Back in a Flash,”
The Daily Telegraph
(London), 17 November 2009.
669.
“Turkey Says No More Troops for Afghanistan,”
Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty News Report
, 6 December 2009,
http://www.rferl.org/content/article/1896577.html
; Delphine Strauss, “Turkey Rules Out Extra Troops for Afghanistan,”
The Financial Times
(London), 7 December 2009,
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/dd61c30e-e2d1-11de-b028-00144feab49a.html
.
670.
Interview, Kabul, 20 October 2009.
671.
Mukhtar E. Khan, “The Return of Sharia Law to Pakistan’s Swat Region,”
Jamestown Terrorism Monitor
, v. 7, n. 4, 3 March 2009.
672.
Gohar Ali Gohar and Hamidullah Khan, “TNSM, Taliban Reject Darul Qaza: Democracy, Sharia Incompatible: Sufi,”
Dawn
(Karachi), 4 May 2009.
673.
Rahim Wardak has impressed this fact on the author on several occasions.
674.
Bill Roggio and Thomas Joscelyn, “Pakistan’s Jihad. In the War on Terror, Islamabad is Both With Us and Against Us,”
The Weekly Standard
, 15 December 2008.
A
affinity groups,
25
,
31
,
35
,
44–45
,
50–52
,
77
,
218
,
348
,
370
Afghan conflicts,
187–243
and center—periphery,
210–13
and corruption,
199–208
ethnolinguistic conflicts,
189–93
and gender issues,
223–35
and governance,
241–43
internal conflicts,
187–243
and land/water rights,
221–23
and modernization,
208–10
and political leadership,
213–15
religious conflicts,
194–99
and warlords,
215–19
Afghan insurgents,
130–69
and collateral damages,
297–99
countering,
291–332
response to,
299–304
and security forces,
309–23
spread of,
307–9
stopping,
328–32
Afghan narcotics,
170–86
countering,
179–86
impact of,
177–79
and insurgency,
170–86
and options,
181–83
Afghan Taliban
pre-2001,
136–39
rise of,
81–86
Afghanistan
aid to,
333–67
chronology of,
xvii—xxii
conflicts in,
187–243
,
372–74
,
395–97
demographics of,
236–38
economy in,
359–62
future of,
368–97
influence on,
270–80
,
374–81
,
390–95
last chance for,
381–88
map of, vi—vii
modernization of,
208–10
new Afghanistan,
362–64
reconstruction of,
333–67
security forces in,
309–23
solutions for,
238–41
threat to,
119–24
Afridi, Mangal Bagh,
251
aid
buying into,
346–52
and conflict,
333–67
and corruption,
358–59
divided efforts for,
341–43
and economy,
359–62
Kerry-Lugar bill,
267
,
285
,
364–67
to Pakistan,
364–67
success of,
343–45
Akhund, Mullah Birader,
138
Al Qaeda resilience,
3–17
al Yazid, Mustafa Abu,
120
al-Libi, Abu Yahya,
120
Al-Zawahiri, Ayman,
120
Amanullah, King,
57
Anders, Dave,
142
Atmar, Mohammed Hanif,
43
,
122–23
,
148
,
199
,
306
,
320–26
Aziz, Maulana Abdul,
257–58
B
Baluchistan insurgency,
245–47
Barrett, Richard,
168
Belcher, Chris,
142
Bhittani, Turkistan,
264
Bhutto, Benazir,
34
,
124–25
,
247
,
268
Biden, Joseph,
217
bin Laden, Osama,
13
,
38
,
86–87
,
94
,
100
,
102
,
108
,
115
,
121–24
,
131
,
142
,
273
binabd-al-Hakim, Maulavi Abd-al-Hadi “Pash Wa’l,”
166
Blanchette, Richard,
143
,
165–66
,
238
,
303
Bugti, Nawab Akbar Shabaz Khan,
245
Burke, Edmund,
187
Burt, Richard,
89
Bush administration,
95–98
,
269
,
274
,
300
,
365
,
392
C
Callwell, C. E.,
291
Carter, Ashton,
284
Cavoli, Chris,
153–54
,
162–64
,
327
CENTCOM,
305–6
center—periphery,
210–13
change, pushing,
54–60
chronology of Afghanistan,
xvii—xxii
Churchill, Winston,
187
client—patron relationships,
46–50
,
55
,
189
,
218
Clinton, Hilary,
379
collateral damages,
297–99
conflicts
and aid,
333–67
and center—periphery,
210–13
and corruption,
199–208
defined by,
21–60
ethnolinguistic conflicts,
189–93
and frontiers,
10–13
and gender issues,
223–35
and governance,
241–43
internal conflicts,
187–243
and land/water rights,
221–23
and legitimacy,
36–39
losing,
13–17
and modernization,
208–10
multiple,
4–10
and political leadership,
213–15
religious conflicts,
194–99
support for,
13–17
and warlords,
215–19
winning,
289–397
Cowper-Coles, Sherard,
6
Cronin, Audrey Kurth,
128
D
demographics,
236–38
Dostum, Abdul Rashid,
66
,
190
,
194
,
216–17
,
222
Durand Line,
4
,
11
,
26
,
39
,
62–63
,
68
,
71
,
74
,
85–86
,
259–60
,
278
,
283–84
,
392
,
396
Durand, Mortimer,
62
dwellers in vortex,
61–88
E
Eide, Kai,
345
Elphinstone, Mountstuart,
21
,
54
,
59
,
65
,
191
Es’haq, Mohammed,
387
ethnolinguistic conflicts,
189–93
ethnolinguistic divisions,
25–30
exiles, returning,
220–21
F
Fahim, Mohammed Qassam,
204
,
219
,
309–10
failure,
6–17
faith,
30–36
Farivar, Massoud,
147
Fazlullah, Mullah,
255–56
Ferdinand, Franz,
3
Fidai, Mohammed Halim,
325–26
Frontiers,
10–13
,
61–63
,
71–77
,
89
,
280–83
future of Afghanistan,
368–97
future of Pakistan,
388–90
G
Gailani, Pir Sayid Ahmed,
35
Galbraith, Peter,
207
Gates, Robert,
103
,
272
,
306
,
375
,
379
gender issues,
223–35
Gentilni, Fernando,
294
Ghani, Ashraf,
7–8
,
139
,
167
,
189
,
201
,
205–6
,
211–12
,
219
,
334
,
339–42
,
345
Ghani, Owari,
260
Ghazi, Mullah Abdul Rashid,
257–58
Gilani, Yousaf Raza,
72
,
261–62
,
268
Gingrich, Newt,
283
glossary, xi—xv
Goethe,
107
H
Hadiri, Mohammed Ashraf,
238
Hainse, Marquis,
148
,
153
,
160
,
162
,
320
,
327
Hanif, Alim,
43
,
122–23
,
148
,
199
,
320
,
323
,
325
Haq, Qazi Mahbubul,
251
Haqqani, Husain,
73
Haqqani, Jaluladin,
79
,
133
,
140–42
,
144
,
174
,
264
,
269
,
328
,
331
Haqqani, Sirajjuddin,
123
,
133
,
140–42
,
144
,
174
,
264
,
269
,
328
,
331
hard men,
1–4
,
10
,
15–17
,
141
,
382
,
396
Hayden, Michael,
110
Hekmatyar, Gulbuddin,
2
,
32–33
,
53–54
,
70
,
74
,
82
,
92
,
133
,
140–42
,
151
,
328
,
331
Holbrooke, Richard,
180
,
183
,
200
,
217
,
270
,
291
,
375
I
infidels,
2–16
,
56
,
85
,
114
,
122–28
,
156–61
,
173–77
,
228–29
,
329–31
,
351
institutions and power,
39–44
insurgents
in Baluchistan,
245–47
countering,
291–332
and development,
159–62
ethnicity of,
142–49
funding,
168–69
leaders of,
140–42
and legitimacy,
153–58
and narcotics,
170–86
in Pakistan,
244–87
recruiting,
163–64
response to,
299–304
and security forces,
309–23
spread of,
307–9
intelligence surveillance and reconnaissance (ISR),
305–6
internal conflicts,
187–243
Ittehad-i-Islam, Abdurrab Rasul Sayyaf,
29
J
Jackson, Michael,
228
Jalil, Mullah Abdul,
138
Jawad, Sayid T.,
206
Joya, Malalai,
234
K
Kakar, Malalai,
323
Kalakani, Habibullah,
65
Karzai, Hamid,
30
,
53
,
56–58
,
67–68
,
97–99
,
170
,
190–201
,
206–7
,
211–12
,
221
,
229
,
277
,
298–300
,
356
,
384