After American failure in Afghanistan, China is trying another approach
By: Rachel Marsden
PARIS — As the old adage goes, the definition of stupidity is doing the same 
thing repeatedly and expecting a different result. Is anyone in charge going to 
do any soul searching to ask why history has yet again repeated itself in 
Afghanistan?
American and allied troops evacuated their base at Bagram Airfield earlier this 
month, handing it over to the Afghan military as remaining NATO combat 
operations draw down ahead of U.S. President Joe Biden’s planned Sept. 11 
withdrawal deadline. Biden’s critics have compared Afghanistan to the Vietnam 
War and the fall of Saigon in 1975, conjuring up the iconic image of the final 
helicopter out of Saigon evacuating Americans from the roof of the U.S. Embassy.
But it was long before the fall of Saigon that Americans wondered what the U.S. 
was doing in Vietnam and whether the cost was worth it for the average citizen. 
The same can be said of Afghanistan. If images of helicopter evacuations are a 
concern, it’s a clear indication of mission failure. But after nearly 20 years 
of American intervention in Afghanistan, you’d think there would be something to 
show for it.
The initial pretext for involvement was to neutralize the Taliban, which was 
accused of harboring al-Qaeda mastermind Osama bin Laden in the wake of the 
9/11, terrorist attacks on U.S. soil. Largely ignored was the fact that bin 
Laden and the vast majority of those who carried out the attacks were citizens 
of U.S.-allied Saudi Arabia.
But the Taliban never really went away. The U.S. captured some of them, detained 
them at the military prison at Guantanamo Bay, freed them in a hostage exchange 
in 2014, then began “peace negotiations” in 2018, announcing to the world that 
the U.S. was working out a deal with the Taliban to ensure stability in 
Afghanistan.
Does anyone really think that the millennial and Gen Z Taliban members retaking 
control of Afghanistan piece by piece after two decades of what they consider to 
be the foreign occupation of their country since their birth are going to abide 
by the deals made by these boomers?
It all seems like bad theater meant to save face amid the long-overdue 
exfiltration of Western troops. If the Taliban is likely to return to power in 
Afghanistan and the Afghan army isn’t well-trained enough to do much about it, 
you have to wonder what exactly has been going on over the past 20 years. 
Where’s the bang for the American taxpayer’s buck after an estimated $2 trillion 
and 241,000 total lives lost?
Knee-jerk neoconservative interventionists are already categorizing Biden’s 
withdrawal as a failure. John Bolton, who served as national security adviser 
under former President Donald Trump, wrote of a “disastrous withdrawal” in 
Britain’s Telegraph newspaper. Rep. Michael McCaul of Texas, the top Republican 
member of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, said on Fox News: “We’re going 
dark in Afghanistan, and there’s going to be consequences long term for this. 
President Biden [is] going to own these images.”
The failure happened long before Biden came along. Biden simply decided (as 
Trump did before him) that there was no use throwing good money after bad. How 
much longer did these guys want taxpayers to continue to write blank checks for 
this war without seeing a return on their investment?
Now China is set to move in with the strategy that the U.S. probably should have 
tried: a purely economic one. Afghanistan is apparently eyeing a $62 billion 
Chinese investment offer as part of Beijing’s planned China-Pakistan economic 
corridor. Countries such as Montenegro, with its $1 billion, 25-mile unfinished 
road to nowhere, have found themselves ensnared in a debt trap after accepting 
loans from Chinese banks. It’s a strategy China has used with a certain number 
of countries, notably in Africa. But even if the strategy accomplishes nothing 
at all, it will still be on par with what the U.S. accomplished in Afghanistan.
There is already a Western legacy in Afghanistan shaping up, and it’s the exact 
opposite of the originally stated counterterrorism objective. As the Taliban 
takes over, other jihadist militia groups are leaving Afghanistan and entering 
neighboring countries — a sort of jihadist Big Bang — risking disorder 
throughout the region and presenting a potential threat to countries such as 
China, Pakistan and Russia.
So in a few years, when these nations are trying to liquidate these jihadists as 
domestic threats and U.S. officials are screaming about human rights violations 
by these countries, you’ll know the rest of the story.
COPYRIGHT 2021 RACHEL MARSDEN