Afghanistan from the Cold War through the War on Terror

Author:   Barnett R. Rubin (Director of Studies and Senior Fellow, Director of Studies and Senior Fellow, Center on International Cooperation, New York University)
Publisher:   Oxford University Press Inc
ISBN:  

9780190229276


Pages:   544
Publication Date:   30 April 2015
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
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Afghanistan from the Cold War through the War on Terror


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Overview

One of our foremost authorities on modern Afghanistan, Barnett R. Rubin has dedicated much of his career to the study of this remote mountain country. He served as a special advisor to the late Ambassador Richard Holbrooke during his final mission to the region and still serves the Obama administration under Holbrooke's successor, Ambassador Marc Grossman. Now Rubin distills his unmatched knowledge of Afghanistan in this invaluable book. He shows how the Taliban arose in resistance to warlords some of whom who were raping and plundering with impunity in the vacuum of authority left by the collapse of the Afghan state after the Soviet withdrawal. The Taliban built on a centuries-old tradition of local leadership by students and teachers at independent, rural madrasas--networks that had been marginalized by the state-building royal regime that was itself destroyed by the Soviets and radicalized by the resistance to the invasion. He examines the arrival of Arab Islamists, the missed opportunities after the American-led intervention, the role of Pakistan, and the challenges of reconstruction. Rubin provides first-hand accounts of the bargaining at both the Bonn Talks of 2001 and the Afghan Constitutional Loya Jirga of 2003-2004, in both of which he participated as a UN advisor. Throughout, he discusses the significance of ethnic rivalries, the drug trade, human rights, state-building, US strategic choices, and international organizations, analyzing the missteps in these areas taken by the international community since 2001. The book covers events till the start of the Obama administration, and the final chapters provide an inside look at some of the thinking that is shaping today's policy debates inside the administration. Authoritative, nuanced, and sweeping in scope, Afghanistan in the Post-Cold War Era provides deep insight into the greatest foreign policy challenge facing America today.

Full Product Details

Author:   Barnett R. Rubin (Director of Studies and Senior Fellow, Director of Studies and Senior Fellow, Center on International Cooperation, New York University)
Publisher:   Oxford University Press Inc
Imprint:   Oxford University Press Inc
Dimensions:   Width: 15.50cm , Height: 4.10cm , Length: 23.10cm
Weight:   0.703kg
ISBN:  

9780190229276


ISBN 10:   0190229276
Pages:   544
Publication Date:   30 April 2015
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us.

Table of Contents

"Part 1: Before 9/11 Introduction: ""Helping Afghanistan"" 1998 ""Afghanistan under the Taliban"" 1999 ""Afghanistan: The Last Cold-War Conflict, the First Post-Cold War Conflict"" 2000 ""Afghanistan: The Forgotten Crisis"" 1996 ""The Political Economy of War and Peace in Afghanistan"" 2000 ""Women and Pipelines: Afghanistan's Proxy Wars"" 1997 ""Arab Islamists in Afghanistan"" 1997 ""Afghanistan: Reconstruction and Peacebuilding in a Regional Framework,"" With Ashraf Ghani, William Maley, Ahmed Rashid, and Olivier Roy, 2001 Part 2: Reconstructing Afghanistan? Introduction: ""Afghans Can Be Our Allies,"" New York Times, September 22, 2001 ""A Blueprint for Afghanistan"" 2002 ""Peace Building, State Building: Constructing Sovereignty for Security"" 2005 ""The Politics of Security in State-Building"" ""The Politics of Center-Periphery Relations in Afghanistan"" With Helena Malikyar 2003 ""Transitional Justice and Human Rights in Afghanistan"" 2003 ""The Political Context of Public Administration in Afghanistan"" 2007 ""Crafting a Constitution for Afghanistan"" 2004 ""Regional Issues in the Reconstruction of Afghanistan"" With Andrea Armstrong 2003 ""From Bonn to London: Governance Challenges and the Future of Statebuilding in Afghanistan"" With Humayun Hamidzada, 2007 Part 3: Contesting Afghanistan Introduction: ""The Death of an Afghan Optimist"" 2006 ""Afghanistan's Uncertain Transition from Turmoil to Normalcy"" 2006 ""Saving Afghanistan"" 2007 ""Pashtun and Taliban in Two States"" ""U.S. and Iran in Afghanistan"" With Sara Batmanglich ""Counter-Narcotics to Stabilize Afghanistan: The False Promise of Crop Eradication"" With Jake Sherman 2008 ""Afghan Dilemmas: Defining Commitment"" 2008 ""The Transformation of the State in Afghanistan"" 2008 ""From Great Game to Grand Bargain: Ending Chaos in Afghanistan and Pakistan"" With Ahmed Rashid 2008 Conclusion ""A Tribe Apart"" 2009 Appendix ""Afghanistan 2005 and Beyond: Prospects for Improved Stability"" 2005"

Reviews

"""A longtime policy wonk and adviser to the U.N. and the U.S., Rubin spent decades deliberating upon best practices for saving Afghanistan from its chronic tribulations. His sustained analyses and advocacy are compiled here, addressing a time frame from the late 1980s to the start of the Obama administration. Rubin makes important points along the way . . . Rubin's work serves as a timely codicil, if not a coda, to a war winding down, and will interest pundits and academics alike."" --Publishers Weekly ""With decision time on Afghanistan now at hand, it is a good moment to reflect on what has gone wrong, and on the historical mistakes that should not be repeated. This is one of the many themes in an important new book by Barnett Rubin, the great American scholar and veteran of all things Afghanistan . . . I consider [Rubin] to be the inheritor of the mantle of the American scholar Louis Dupree, whose groundbreaking book Afghanistan, which appeared in 1973, and long sojourn in that country with his equally famous wife Nancy Dupree, made him the dean of scholars and reporters alike for two generations."" --Ahmed Rashid, The New Republic ""[C]rucial to an understanding of Afghanistan, the flaws of the Western project there, the enemies we are facing, and therefore of possible future policies . . . Barnett Rubin, senior advisor to the US special representative for Pakistan and Afghanistan in the first Obama term, has been consistently among the wisest and most sensible of US expert voice on Afghanistan."" --Anatol Lieven, New York Review of Books ""After decades of violent conflict, the path to a peaceful and prosperous future is fraught with difficulties; Afghanistan from the Cold war to the War on Terror provides a frank, insightful account of the challenges the country faces; as well as its rich history, and enormous potential."" --Kofi Annan ""For over fifteen years, Barnett Rubin has been a source for me of deeply informed and concerned advice on how we international actors might help Afghans and their neighbors find a way to live with each other with dignity and without bloodshed. This book illuminates how hard we tried, and how, so far, we have fallen short."" --Lakhdar Brahimi, Special Envoy of the UK and Arab League to Syria, and Former UN Special Representative of the Secretary-General for Afghanistan and Iraq ""If published a decade ago, the insights in Barney Rubin's book could have prevented the Americanization of the war in Afghanistan. His words are steeped in that quixotic country."" - -Leslie H. Gelb, President Emeritus of the Council on Foreign Relations and a former New York Times columnist"


If published a decade ago, the insights in Barney Rubin's book could have prevented the Americanization of the war in Afghanistan. His words are steeped in that quixotic country. - -Leslie H. Gelb, President Emeritus of the Council on Foreign Relations and a former New York Times columnist For over fifteen years, Barnett Rubin has been a source for me of deeply informed and concerned advice on how we international actors might help Afghans and their neighbors find a way to live with each other with dignity and without bloodshed. This book illuminates how hard we tried, and how, so far, we have fallen short. * Lakhdar Brahimi, Special Envoy of the UK and Arab League to Syria, and Former UN Special Representative of the Secretary-General for Afghanistan and Iraq * After decades of violent conflict, the path to a peaceful and prosperous future is fraught with difficulties; Afghanistan from the Cold war to the War on Terror provides a frank, insightful account of the challenges the country faces; as well as its rich history, and enormous potential. * Kofi Annan * [C]rucial to an understanding of Afghanistan, the flaws of the Western project there, the enemies we are facing, and therefore of possible future policies . . . Barnett Rubin, senior advisor to the US special representative for Pakistan and Afghanistan in the first Obama term, has been consistently among the wisest and most sensible of US expert voice on Afghanistan. * Anatol Lieven, New York Review of Books * With decision time on Afghanistan now at hand, it is a good moment to reflect on what has gone wrong, and on the historical mistakes that should not be repeated. This is one of the many themes in an important new book by Barnett Rubin, the great American scholar and veteran of all things Afghanistan . . . I consider [Rubin] to be the inheritor of the mantle of the American scholar Louis Dupree, whose groundbreaking book Afghanistan, which appeared in 1973, and long sojourn in that country with his equally famous wife Nancy Dupree, made him the dean of scholars and reporters alike for two generations. * Ahmed Rashid, The New Republic * A longtime policy wonk and adviser to the U.N. and the U.S., Rubin spent decades deliberating upon best practices for saving Afghanistan from its chronic tribulations. His sustained analyses and advocacy are compiled here, addressing a time frame from the late 1980s to the start of the Obama administration. Rubin makes important points along the way . . . Rubin's work serves as a timely codicil, if not a coda, to a war winding down, and will interest pundits and academics alike. * Publishers Weekly *


A longtime policy wonk and adviser to the U.N. and the U.S., Rubin spent decades deliberating upon best practices for saving Afghanistan from its chronic tribulations. His sustained analyses and advocacy are compiled here, addressing a time frame from the late 1980s to the start of the Obama administration. Rubin makes important points along the way ... Rubin's work serves as a timely codicil, if not a coda, to a war winding down, and will interest pundits and academics alike. Publishers Weekly With decision time on Afghanistan now at hand, it is a good moment to reflect on what has gone wrong, and on the historical mistakes that should not be repeated. This is one of the many themes in an important new book by Barnett Rubin, the great American scholar and veteran of all things Afghanistan ... I consider [Rubin] to be the inheritor of the mantle of the American scholar Louis Dupree, whose groundbreaking book Afghanistan, which appeared in 1973, and long sojourn in that country with his equally famous wife Nancy Dupree, made him the dean of scholars and reporters alike for two generations. Ahmed Rashid, The New Republic [C]rucial to an understanding of Afghanistan, the flaws of the Western project there, the enemies we are facing, and therefore of possible future policies ... Barnett Rubin, senior advisor to the US special representative for Pakistan and Afghanistan in the first Obama term, has been consistently among the wisest and most sensible of US expert voice on Afghanistan. Anatol Lieven, New York Review of Books After decades of violent conflict, the path to a peaceful and prosperous future is fraught with difficulties; Afghanistan from the Cold war to the War on Terror provides a frank, insightful account of the challenges the country faces; as well as its rich history, and enormous potential. Kofi Annan For over fifteen years, Barnett Rubin has been a source for me of deeply informed and concerned advice on how we international actors might help Afghans and their neighbors find a way to live with each other with dignity and without bloodshed. This book illuminates how hard we tried, and how, so far, we have fallen short. Lakhdar Brahimi, Special Envoy of the UK and Arab League to Syria, and Former UN Special Representative of the Secretary-General for Afghanistan and Iraq If published a decade ago, the insights in Barney Rubin's book could have prevented the Americanization of the war in Afghanistan. His words are steeped in that quixotic country. - -Leslie H. Gelb, President Emeritus of the Council on Foreign Relations and a former New York Times columnist


Author Information

Barnett R. Rubin is Director of Studies and Senior Fellow at the Center on International Cooperation at New York University. His books include Blood on the Doorstep: The Politics of Preventive Action, The Fragmentation of Afghanistan, and The Search for Peace in Afghanistan.

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