"Afghanistan emerged as a significant U.S. foreign policy concern in 2001, when the
United States, in response to the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, led a military
campaign against Al Qaeda and the Afghan Taliban government that harbored and
supported it. In the intervening 19 years, the United States has suffered over 22,000
military casualties (including around 2,400 fatalities) in Afghanistan and Congress has
appropriated approximately $143 billion for reconstruction and security forces there. In that time, an elected
Afghan government has replaced the Taliban; improvement in most measures of human development is limited;
and future prospects of gains remain mixed.
In January 2021, the Trump Administration reported that it had reduced U.S. forces in Afghanistan to 2,500, the
lowest level since 2001, in advance of the potential full military withdrawal by May 2021 to which the United
States committed in the February 2020 U.S.-Taliban agreement. As part of that agreement, in return for the full
withdrawal of international forces, the Taliban committed to preventing other groups, including Al Qaeda, from
using Afghan soil to recruit, train, or fund raise toward activities that threaten the United States or its allies. The
agreement is accompanied by text which, according to Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff General Mark Milley,
contains additional Taliban commitments, including to not attack U.S. or international forces. U.S. officials
contend that the Taliban have not fulfilled their commitments, and describe the prospective U.S. withdrawal as
“conditions-based,” but have not specified exactly what conditions might halt, reverse, or otherwise alter the
withdrawal timeline laid out in the agreement.
Afghan government representatives were not participants in U.S.-Taliban talks, leading some observers to
conclude that the United States would prioritize a military withdrawal over a complex political settlement that
preserves some of the social, political, and humanitarian gains made since 2001. After months of delays, on
September 12, 2020, Afghan government and Taliban representatives officially met in Doha, Qatar, to begin their
first direct peace negotiations toward such a settlement, a significant moment with potentially dramatic
implications for the course of the ongoing Afghan conflict. Talks do not appear to have made progress and remain
complicated by a number of factors, including high levels of violence..."
Afghanistan
Sunday, May 2, 2021
Afghanistan: Background and U.S. Policy: In Brief
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