The Village Always Pays: Why Afghanistan never Heals
The Village Always Pays: Why Afghanistan Never Heals Nearly every government that has ruled modern Afghanistan has made the same calculation: win the capital, ignore the village. Every single one has eventually paid for it. This is not only a Taliban problem. It is not simply an American problem, a Soviet problem, or an Islamist problem. It is Afghanistan’s oldest and most persistent political failure — repeated across ideologies, dynasties, republics, and foreign-backed regimes alike. The village, where most Afghans actually live, has rarely been treated as the foundation of the state. Instead, it has been treated as an afterthought. The Taliban, however, have always had a different relationship with the village. They are village boys themselves. They live among rural families, marry into village networks, and govern through shuras rather than against them. This social symbiosis is precisely why they survived two decades of counterinsurgency. But symbiosis is not the same as ...