Rebuilding Afghanistan State from the Foundation Up
Rebuilding the Afghan State from the Foundation Up Introduction This book asks a single, urgent question: how can Afghanistan be fixed—if it still can be fixed at all? Since the overthrow of the constitutional monarchy in 1973, Afghanistan has passed through a succession of political systems: the republic of Sardar Daud, the Democratic Republic led by left-wing officers, the Mujahideen era, the first rule of the Taliban, the pro-Western Islamic Republic, and once again the Islamic Emirate under the Taliban. These regimes differed in ideology, foreign patrons, and governing styles. Yet they shared one defining outcome: none succeeded in producing a stable, unified, and self-sustaining state. This repetition of failure suggests that Afghanistan’s crisis is not ideological, but structural. Faced with this relentless cycle, a fundamentally different approach is required—one that looks forward rather than backward. This book does not seek to assign blame. Afghanistan’s ...