Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
In this collection of his New Yorker dispatches from Afghanistan, Anderson (The Fall of Baghdad) narrates in vivid detail how America's longest war became a bloody quagmire. His pieces cover the conflict's 20-year arc, beginning with the 2001 overthrow of the Taliban by a coalition of warlords backed by American forces. Painting their downfall as less of a rupture than a reconfiguration of power, he profiles cagey warlords and ragged militiamen who abruptly switched sides and cut murky deals that allowed the Taliban and al-Qaeda leadership to escape to Pakistan. His reporting from later years finds him embedded with American military units fighting a revived Taliban insurgency. It's a depressing grind of patrols, IED attacks, and brusque searches that alienated villagers--some of whom had lost family to American air strikes and firepower--all to prop up an unpopular, kleptocratic Afghan government. The final chapters cover the Taliban's 2021 reconquest of Afghanistan, when Taliban leaders insist to Western donor agencies that they will respect women's rights, only to reimpose a harsh fundamentalism that banned women from school, work, and eventually from even talking outside their homes. Anderson's pieces are a triumph of high-wire journalism--often taking him into hair-raising action--that also offer a capacious, resonant panorama of Afghan society. The result is a captivating account of a military march of folly that ably dissects its many tragic delusions. (Aug.)
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Review by Kirkus Book Review
The noted journalist gathers hisNew Yorker pieces on America's misadventure in Afghanistan. American soldiers put boots on the ground in Afghanistan shortly after 9/11, their mission to smash al-Qaida and hunt down Osama bin Laden, the architect of the attack on the U.S. Two decades later, Afghanistan's "pliant…pro-Western regime" collapsed, replaced by the Taliban. Basing his accounts on numerous sojourns in the country over that two-decade stretch of the American war, Anderson is particularly good with the small, revealing details of daily life, such as the interaction of the citizens of Kabul with the Taliban: "For the most part, they seemed to ignore each other, as if they came from different worlds but were forced to coexist." Early in the war, he notes, the one man who knew where bin Laden might be hiding was assassinated. That would be a common theme, as tribal leaders across the nation were targeted by rivals; even so, Anderson observes, the government of Hamid Karzai, "built on uneasy alliances, accommodated a range of aggressive warlords and corrupt officials." Much of Afghanistan is "preindustrial," governed by the rhythms and mores of rural life in small towns and villages where, the author writes memorably, "lambs are tethered next to men with long knives who slaughter them and hang the carcasses from hooks, hacking them into a steadily diminishing mess of blood and meat and bone and fat by day's end." One of the many flaws in American strategy there, it seems, was to assume that the country was more modern and ready for democracy than it was. Indeed, he remarks at the end of the book, "there is now no place on earth that is more oppressive for women than Afghanistan." Essential for understanding the futility of America's longest war. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.