‘US wasted billions in failed Afghan stabilisation efforts’
WASHINGTON: The United States wasted billions of dollars trying to stabilise fragile parts of Afghanistan from 2001-2017 and some efforts caused more harm than good, a US government watchdog said Thursday.
A report by the office of the Special Inspector for Afghanistan Reconstruction found that Washington had set unrealistic expectations for itself after the US-led invasion in 2001 and overestimated its ability to build and reform government institutions.
"Despite some heroic efforts to stabilise insecure and contested areas in Afghanistan between 2002 and 2017, the programme mostly failed," Special Inspector General John Sopko said as he presented the report in Washington. "This happened for a number of reasons, including the establishment of a set of unrealistic expectations about what could be achieved in just a few years´ time."
The report found that the military pressured aid groups to build schools and infrastructure in areas that were still being contested by the Taliban, leading to the failure of many projects. "Opportunities for corruption and elite capture abounded, making many of those projects far more harmful than helpful," the document states.
The SIGAR analysis found that Washington had set expectations and programmes not properly tailored for Afghanistan, and noted that successes in stabilising Afghan districts rarely lasted longer than the physical presence of coalition troops and civilians.
"Under immense pressure to quickly stabilize insecure districts, US government agencies spent far too much money, far too quickly, in a country woefully unprepared to absorb it," SIGAR noted.
-
Epstein Case: Ghislaine Maxwell Invokes Fifth, Refuses To Testify Before US Congress -
Ferrari Luce: First Electric Sports Car Unveiled With Enzo V12 Revival -
Chappell Roan Parts Ways With Wasserman Music Over CEO's Ties With Epstein -
Andrew Mountbatten Windsor Publically Shamed After Brother And Nephew Change Decades Old Royal Rule -
Jon Stewart On Bad Bunny's Super Bowl Performance: 'Killed It'' -
Savannah Guthrie Receives Massive Support From Reese Witherspoon, Jennifer Garner After Desperate Plea -
Celebrities Take Sides As Brooklyn Beckham’s Feud With David, Victoria Heats Up -
Prince Harry Reacts As Beatrice, Eugenie's Names Surface In Epstein Emails -
Cyprus Joins European AI Race: What It Means For Greek LLMs And Regional Innovation -
Amazon Soon To Launch 'AI Content' Marketplace, Says Report -
Is AI Reliable For Health Advice? New Study Raises Red Flags -
WhatsApp Web Starts Rolling Out Voice And Video Calling For Beta Users -
Catherine O’Hara’s Cause Of Death Finally Revealed -
Swimmers Gather At Argentina’s Mar Chiquita For World Record Attempt -
Brooklyn Beckham, Nicola New Move Could Leave David, Victoria Reeling -
Anthropic Criticises ChatGPT Ads As OpenAI Begins Testing Advertising In AI Chats