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No Good Men Among the Living (American Empire Project) Paperback – May 5, 2015

4.7 4.7 out of 5 stars 943 ratings

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PULITZER PRIZE FINALIST
NATIONAL BOOK AWARD FINALIST
WINNER OF THE RIDENHOUR PRIZE

Anand Gopal's No Good Men Among the Living stunningly lays bare the workings of America's longest war and the truth behind its prolonged agony.

"Essential reading for anyone concerned about how America got Afghanistan so wrong. A devastating, well-honed prosecution detailing how our government bungled the initial salvo in the so-called war on terror, ignored attempts by top Taliban leaders to surrender, trusted the wrong people, and backed a feckless and corrupt Afghan regime . . . It is ultimately the most compelling account I've read of how Afghans themselves see the war."
--The New York Times Book Review

In a breathtaking chronicle, acclaimed journalist Anand Gopal traces the lives of three Afghans caught in America's war on terror. He follows a Taliban commander, who rises from scrawny teenager to leading insurgent; a U.S.-backed warlord, who uses the American military to gain wealth and power; and a village housewife trapped between the two sides, who discovers the devastating cost of neutrality. Through their dramatic stories emerges a stunning tale of how the United States had triumph in sight in Afghanistan―and then brought the Taliban back from the dead.

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Editorial Reviews

Review

“Gopal's book is essential reading for anyone concerned about how America got Afghanistan so wrong. It is a devastating, well-honed prosecution detailing how our government bungled the initial salvo in the so-called war on terror, ignored attempts by top Taliban leaders to surrender, trusted the wrong people and backed a feckless and corrupt Afghan regime.... It is ultimately the most compelling account I've read of how Afghans themselves see the war.”
The New York Times Book Review

“Astonishing stories... Such investigative reporting is very rare in Afghanistan, where foreign journalists have been targets since 2001. Gopal pursued his stories into the most active centers of the insurgency. He learned Dari and – more difficult – Pushtu. He won the trust of insurgent leaders. But his real genius lies in binding all these sources together and combining them with thousands of hours of interviews.... All this allows him to bring life to figures who have hitherto been caricatures.”
The New York Review of Books

“A brilliant analysis of our military's dysfunction and a startlingly clear account of the consequences”
Mother Jones

“Extraordinary... Brilliantly written... Gopal’s method of going deep into the lives of several Talibs, warlords, and ordinary Afghans – he includes an exhilarating portrait of one Afghan woman– demonstrates how different the Americans’ ‘mistakes’ feel when the dead, injured, and traumatized people have been amply humanized.”
Bookforum

“With a plethora of policy-oriented works on Afghanistan having appeared in recent years, Anand Gopal wisely chooses to tell the war's story from the personal perspective of three characters... Gopal displays a keen understanding of the levers of power in Afghan society and their sometimes devastating effect on individuals trying to make their way in the world.”
―Los Angeles Times

“Refreshingly complex and thought-provoking... Often reading like an adventure novel,
No Good Men Among the Living is certain to appeal to Afghan-ophiles and casual readers alike.... Gopal offers a unique perspective, an essential examination of policy, and a rock-solid narrative that ensures this will be one of the few books people still read years from now when they want to understand America's war in Afghanistan.”
The Christian Science Monitor

“The level of craftsmanship in this book is often awe-inspiring.... Provides unique insights into America's intervention in Afghanistan and makes important contributions to our understanding of the conflict there.”
Foreign Policy

“A brilliant, incisive work of storytelling and analysis. Of all the recent books on Afghanistan, this one stands out like a bright shining light, revealing the truth of the war from the ground up. Breathtaking and magnificent, this is a must read.”
―Ahmed Rashid, author of Taliban: Militant Islam, Oil and Fundamentalism in Central Asia

“If you read one book on Afghanistan today, make it this one.
No Good Men Among the Living is a masterfully told narrative of how, after 9/11, the Americans defeated the Taliban only to revive them. An admirable achievement.”
―Jon Lee Anderson, author of The Fall of Baghdad and The Lion’s Grave

“Anand Gopal, known for his extraordinarily brave firsthand accounts of the Taliban, now tells the story of the Afghan war through stories of the Afghans themselves―whose voices have been notably absent from almost all coverage of the conflict. With its deep reporting and excellent writing, No Good Men Among the Living is destined to became a classic of war reportage.”
―Peter Bergen, author of Manhunt: The Ten-Year Search for Bin Laden from 9/11 to Abbottabad

“Compelling... Gopal's chronology of how America's deadly incompetence and the predatory graft of Afghan authorities drove many Afghans to despair or rebellion is the product of sustained and impressive shoe-leather reporting. This is a valuable book.”
Maclean’s

“Haunting... Presents a stirring critique of American forces who commanded overwhelming firepower, but lacked the situational knowledge to achieve their objectives... Gopal reveals the fragility of the tenuous connection between intention and destiny in a war-torn land.”
Publishers Weekly

“Gopal puts the present Afghanistan in perspective... He presents his analysis of Afghanistan through three individuals: Mullah Cable, a Taliban commander; Jan Muhammad, a member of the U.S.-backed Afghan government; and Heela, a village housewife. His portraits of these three and their tumultuous lives are rich in detail, as are his descriptions of their stark and war-ravaged land.”
Kirkus Reviews

“Original and stimulating... Policymakers and informed readers will benefit immensely from this illuminating book”
Library Journal

About the Author

Anand Gopal is a freelance journalist covering Afghanistan, Egypt, Syria, and other international hotspots. He has served as an Afghanistan correspondent for The Wall Street Journal and The Christian Science Monitor, and his writing has appeared in The Nation, The New Republic, Harper’s, and Foreign Policy, among other publications. Gopal is a fellow at the New America Foundation. No Good Men Among the Living is his first book.

Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Picador Paper; Reprint edition (May 5, 2015)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Paperback ‏ : ‎ 317 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 1250069262
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1250069269
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 9.6 ounces
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 0.94 x 5.43 x 8.23 inches
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.7 4.7 out of 5 stars 943 ratings

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4.7 out of 5 stars
943 global ratings

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Customers say

Customers find the book insightful and fascinating, providing a context for understanding the futility of the Afghanistan war. They describe it as an absorbing read with well-written, beautiful storytelling. Readers praise the author's amazing way with words and consider the book a must-read for anyone interested in learning about this country.

AI-generated from the text of customer reviews

78 customers mention "Insight"71 positive7 negative

Customers find the book provides an insightful context for understanding the futility of Afghanistan. They find the stories fascinating and easy to read, providing good insight into a country we know little about. The book thoughtfully explores the varied points of view of diverse players. It is well-researched and structured, gathering sweet and telling details of its subjects' lives, giving the reader a deep view into Afghan society and the complexities of the conflict.

"This powerful work is by far the best book about the Afghan war that I have ever read...." Read more

"...beauty of this book is in the individual stories, that are as fascinating and (usually) as easy to read as any novel...." Read more

"...Ahmed Rashid noted, “A brilliant, incisive work of storytelling and analysis...." Read more

"Stunningly sad near-term history told as stories of individual, sometimes key player, life histories...." Read more

48 customers mention "Readability"48 positive0 negative

Customers find the book engaging and well-written. They describe it as an important read about the war in Afghanistan. Readers appreciate the incisive storytelling and complex issues handled well. Overall, they consider it an excellent source for anyone interested in learning more about the country and its history.

"This powerful work is by far the best book about the Afghan war that I have ever read...." Read more

"...The book is very readable, but of course it punctures the American myths most Americans believe in, so the people who need to reed it won't read it...." Read more

"...It's a work of art and as Ahmed Rashid noted, “A brilliant, incisive work of storytelling and analysis...." Read more

"...Certainly worth the read." Read more

37 customers mention "Writing quality"37 positive0 negative

Customers find the book well-written and engaging. They appreciate the author's skill with words and his thoughtful presentation. The book is described as easy to read and provides a comprehensive account of the Afghanistan war.

"...individual stories, that are as fascinating and (usually) as easy to read as any novel...." Read more

"Masterfully written, Shakespearean in emotional scope, this book reads with the beauty and rhythm of fiction, revealing the Kafka-like chaos Afghan..." Read more

"...Very well written, and documented, painful for me as a mother to read, both because of the deaths our policies caused, the vacuum we created for..." Read more

"...The writing is superb, as are the insights offered through the eyes of three Afghanis who reflect on how they experienced America's intrusion into..." Read more

17 customers mention "Storytelling"17 positive0 negative

Customers find the storytelling in the book powerful and instructive. They appreciate the fair and balanced account of true stories from real participants from all sides. The personal accounts provide a glimpse into a human tragedy and inspire courage and strength. Overall, customers find the book an excellent glimpse into a human story and a story of hope.

"...But the terrible beauty of this book is in the individual stories, that are as fascinating and (usually) as easy to read as any novel...." Read more

"...It's a work of art and as Ahmed Rashid noted, “A brilliant, incisive work of storytelling and analysis...." Read more

"...Each story is powerful and instructive in its own way, and each reflects the devastation wrought by the superpower that is the United States..." Read more

"...but Gopal is highly knowledgable about his subject, and the intimate accounts he offers are the result of intensive immersion into the setting...." Read more

9 customers mention "Pacing"6 positive3 negative

Customers have different views on the pacing. Some find it masterfully written and intimate, with sympathetic portrayals of real people. They appreciate the humanity of the interviewees and the constant danger described. Others describe it as a sad commentary on good intentions leading to bad outcomes.

"Masterfully written, Shakespearean in emotional scope, this book reads with the beauty and rhythm of fiction, revealing the Kafka-like chaos Afghan..." Read more

"...History has shown that we cannot do that. It is a great but sad read...." Read more

"Stunningly sad near-term history told as stories of individual, sometimes key player, life histories...." Read more

"...Heart wrenching and intimate in its portrayal." Read more

America does not fight the war on terror. We propagate it.
5 out of 5 stars
America does not fight the war on terror. We propagate it.
The United States had troops in Afghanistan for twenty years. We spent billions of dollars fighting our ‘war on terror’ and attempting to install democracy in a patriarchal country dominated by Islamic sentiments. We wanted revenge on Osama bin Laden for the September 11th attacks on our soil in addition to wiping out Al-Qaeda and the Taliban. With these statistics and goals in mind, the question remains: What actually happened in Afghanistan as a result of our occupation?In order to answer this question, we need to understand the recent history of the country. Like so many areas of the world, Afghanistan first found its feet in the modern age after defeating its European oppressors. In this case it was the British who finally resigned the fight in 1921, with The United States officially recognizing the country of Afghanistan in 1934. After the Second World War, Afghan King Muhammad Zahir Shah embraced Soviet communism and established friendly ties with the Union to his country’s north. Then, in the 1970’s, he was assassinated, and the country was thrown into turmoil, with the Soviets eventually invading on a mission to help aid the floundering communist government. This of course led the United States to fund and equip the resisting forces and Afghanistan became a proxy war zone in the global Cold War dispute between East and West. When the Soviets eventually left a decade later, the country descended into a horrific civil war with rival warlords fighting for scarce resources. Afghanistan was devastated from decades of war, and it was a religious band of students—the Taliban—that emerged in the mid 1990’s to end the warring factions and establish law and order. This they did, bringing nearly 90 percent of the country under their control, while simultaneously instituting a “draconian purity the likes of which the world had never witnessed.” Then, September 11th, 2001 saw terrorists attack the United States, and war was soon back.In his book, Gopal follows the lives of three different Afghans directly affected by US involvement in the country: There is the ‘pro-American’ warlord Jan Muhammad Khan, the Taliban commander Akbar Gul, and a rural housewife named Heela Achekzai. Each story is powerful and instructive in its own way, and each reflects the devastation wrought by the superpower that is the United States military.As American forces began to operate in the Afghan countryside, they needed a way to identify the Taliban. Their solution was to enlist the local leaders, and Jan Muhammad was one such collaborator, a man able to serve them up a multitude of Taliban party members. What Gopal’s reporting reveals, however, is that Jan Muhammad played the American’s for fools, simply branding his ethnic and economic rivals as Taliban and letting the American special forces do his dirty work for him, subtly increasing his power with every American strike on his personal enemies. He was not the only local warlord who figured out this simple game: Washington wanted tangible enemies, and leaders like Jan Muhammad were happy to oblige.Akbar Gul’s story is also a revealing one. Previously a Taliban fighter, he had turned his back on the organization and been attempting to live a quiet life. After a few years stuck between American raids on anyone fingered as a Taliban sympathizer on one side, and a corrupt and dangerous Afghan police force on the other, his only option was to once again pick up a gun and fight for his survival. His story is mirrored by many: people who simply wanted to live in peace were given no choice but to fight back against both foreign and domestic governments destroying their homeland.Most women in the Taliban’s Afghanistan are not permitted to leave the four walls of their home without a man. They have no rights, no personal property, and no decision making power within their own family: everything belongs to the men. While many women accept this way of life without protest, Heela’s story highlights the courage a woman put in impossible situations can find within herself. Believed to be a terrorist, her husband was murdered as a result of the American occupation. In addition, two of her sons sustained serious and life-altering injuries as mere toddlers. With nowhere to turn, she picked up a Kalashnikov and dragged her children with her to the American compound, where she was saved by the very nation that caused her family to be torn apart in the first place. She went on to become a Senator in the capital city of Kabul, one of the only women in the country involved in politics.While these three characters are the main focus of the book, the wider world of Afghan culture shines through its pages. It is a country of long-standing political corruption, one that seems to take two steps back for every one taken forward. “Of the $557 billion that Washington spent in Afghanistan between 2001 and 2011, only 5.4 percent went to development or governance,” Gopal reports, “the rest was mostly military expenditure, a significant chunk of which ended up in the coffers of regional strongmen like Jan Muhammad.” Most Afghans live beyond the reach of any central government and are at the mercy of their local leaders, men like Jan Muhammad, whose only real goal is increasing their own power. In this venture, the United States was a pawn (or, more accurately, an attack dog).The one truth that seems certain is that the US military’s involvement in Afghanistan made the Taliban into what it is today. Every innocent man that was killed, or taken to Guantanamo Bay and tortured, left broken family members behind, people who were ripe to join the anti-American cause. “With Afghan schools destroyed, millions of boys were instead educated across the border in Pakistani madrassas, or religious seminaries, where they were fed an extreme, violence-laden version of Islam,” Gopal writes. “Looking to keep the war fueled, Washington financed textbooks for schoolchildren in refugee camps that were festooned with illustrations of Kalashnikovs, swords, and overturned tanks.”We wanted to fight terror, but in a twisted fate of irony we became that very terror, dropping bombs from the sky on rural villagers herding goats. We are directly responsible for creating the terror that we professed wanting to root out and eliminate. The Taliban are now stronger than ever, and we only have ourselves and our incompetence to thank for it.
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Top reviews from the United States

  • Reviewed in the United States on June 30, 2016
    This powerful work is by far the best book about the Afghan war that I have ever read. It is in fact probably the best argument for thoroughgoing pacifism that I have ever seen. My attention was called to this book by an Amazon customer who commented on my review of "America's War for the Greater Middle East: A Military History," where I argued that the author of that book, Andrew Bacevich, was wrong to oppose the Afghan war.

    This book focuses on the experiences between 2001 and 2011 of three Afghans: pro-American warlord Jan Muhammad Khan, Taliban mid-level commander Akbar Gul (a pseudonym) and Uruzgan housewife (later nurse and senator) Heela Achekzai. The book's sole weakness is that it doesn't really follow any non-Pashtun Afghans, whose experience of the war I'm sure was significantly different from that of the Pashtuns; but that is not enough to deduct a star. (I was struck by the fact pre-Soviet Afghan leader Daud Khan had argued for "Pashtunistan" to be carved out of Afghanistan and Pakistan, an idea I myself have often thought might provide an acceptable solution to the present war.) At the end of the book Heela is a senator in Kabul, Akbar is a prisoner in Bagram Air Base, and Jan is dead, assassinated most likely by his own nephew Matiullah, who took over his old province of Uruzgan and sent Matiullah's ally Heela to Kabul to represent the province. It was published in 2014, just as the Americans were handing over security in the last Afghan provinces to Afghans and Hamid Karzai was leaving office, so the fates of the two surviving characters may have changed in the past two years.

    Heela's narrative is by far the most moving and you might argue the most paradoxical of the three. If the Americans had never come to Afghanistan, Heela's beloved husband Musqinyar would still be alive. If they had left before she was widowed in October 2004, two of her four sons would be dead and she herself would have been absorbed into the family of her brother-in-law Shaysta, never to emerge into the larger world (as indeed she mostly had not in ten years living in backward Uruzgan). Instead, she seized the initiative (and a Kalashnikov) and dragged her family to the nearest American base. They resettled her in Kandahar. When she came back to Uruzgan it was on her own terms and from then until the end of the story, she goes from strength to strength.

    Akbar Gul's story, however, is the most telling as to why the war evolved as it did. He actually attempted to become a small entrepreneur in the new society that was springing up in the wake of the Taliban's defeat and live in peace. It was not until 2005 that the unbearably corrupt Afghan police and continuous American-Afghan raids on suspected Taliban drove him back into the fight. These raids were in essence a necessity of the American presence. The problem in Afghanistan was not that there were too few Americans because of our involvement in Iraq; it was that any Americans stayed after bin Laden was driven into Pakistan. More broadly you could even argue that the problem was that the United States did not accept the Taliban's offer to turn over bin Laden for trial in an Islamic country (which would have had to be one of the three with whom they had formal diplomatic relations: Pakistan, Saudi Arabia or the United Arab Emirates). Before the Iraq and Afghan Wars, Islamic jurists in these countries (especially Saudi Arabia, for whom bin Laden was a bete noire) probably would have felt enough sympathy for America after 9/11 to convict and execute bin Laden.

    Lacking enemies after the Taliban disintegrated in the fall of 2001, the American troops turned to the warlords like Jan Muhammad Khan they had installed as the new ruling elite for "intelligence". These warlords used the American special forces as a club against their ethnic and economic rivals within Afghanistan. Presto, enemies of the United States to justify a gradual American buildup that at its height saw over 100,000 American soldiers in Afghanistan. It is indeed inconceivable that this would not happen in any country where United States troops intervened in the near future, which is why I see this book as an argument for thoroughgoing pacifism.

    I attempted to answer the question "Who won the Afghan War?" in an essay for the now-defunct website epinions in 2011. I don't even remember anymore what my argument was. My piece is overawed by the final paragraph of Gopal's superb book, which I will reproduce in full:

    "The darkness was coming on, and the mountains around the capital were already burning bright. Heela said it was time for her to go, and as she left, I knew I didn't need to ask her the final question I'd had in mind. The answer was right in front of me. Winning a war such as this was not about planting flags or defending territory or building fancy villas. It was not about titles or promotions or offices. It was not about democracy or jihad, freedom or honor. It was about resisting the categories chosen for you; about stubbornness in the face of grand designs and schemas. About doing what you had to do, whether they called you a terrorist or an infidel. To win a war like this was to master the ephemeral, to plan a future while knowing that it could all be over in an instant. To comfort your children when the air outside throbs in the middle of the night, to squeeze your spouse's hand tight when your taxi hits a pothole on an open highway, to go to school or the fields or a wedding and return to tell about it. To survive."
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  • Reviewed in the United States on October 20, 2017
    This book turns upside down the American perspective on the war - yet another circular firing squad operation from D.C. After the Soviets pulled their troops out in 1989 they didn't wash their hands of the country, rather they continued to support the communist government in Kabul, and the U.S. continued to support the mujahidin to counter the residual communist influence. Both the Soviets and the U.S. stopped their respective support in 1991 and the country was left with a power vacuum - the Soviets had wiped out the traditional structure of local governance run by elders and to fill this vacuum various warlords and wannabees battled for power in a nightmarish civil war: women were grabbed off the streets and raped, no property was safe from theft, and executions swift of anyone thought to oppose a newly-installed war lord. Opposition to this brutal internal battle for power grew, mainly among the Pashtun in the south, the Taliban was born, and by 1996 pretty much prevailed. Although the Taliban enforced strict Sharia law including no music, TV or other satanic pass times, they did mete out justice to protect the civilian population, a sense of security returned after the terror of the civil war. Then we had 9/11, the invasion of Afghanistan and the installation of Karzai in Kabul. The Taliban, that was a loose confederation of local actors, was immediately impressed (terrified) of American air power, had no objection to Karzai (a fellow Pashtun), decided to back the Kabul government and give up their weapons. They had had enough of war, one that was continuing with the Northern Alliance when the U.S. invaded, and wanted to retire to civilian life now that there was a credible central government. Instead, the U.S. targeted all-and-any Taliban, conducted night raids into homes - often killing innocent civilians - and arrested any ex-Taliban member who came in to surrender and shipped him off to Gitmo for years, at times even the wrong person. It did not take too many of these incidents to convince the Afghans that the Americans were an invading force out to destroy their culture and religion. The nascent movement was helped and organized by a Taliban central committee in Pakistan and the Afghans began to rearm - the Americans went from being saviors to an enemy rather quickly. The U.S. offered to make anyone rich by providing information on ex-Taliban and many sprang for this opportunity as it not only provided cash but an "in" with the Americans as an intelligence source, allowing local rivals to be liquidated by the Americans. We ended up with 400 scattered bases in Afghanistan, all of which needed to be supplied by truck and each convoy needed protection. You can guess the rest. Endless amounts of money were poured into local Afghan contractors, a key source of funding for the Taliban. America has spent over $100 billion for "reconstruction" in Afghanistan, a large portion of which simply disappeared; the government in Kabul is one of the most corrupt on the planet. The police force stood up by American advisors is totally corrupt and has fanned out across the country for seemingly one purpose - to extract money at the point of a gun from the locals.

    Since Al-Qaida - perhaps 100 strong? - immediately fled to Pakistan at the opening of the U.S. invasion, our troops had to "do something" once in country. The Taliban had been branded as terrorist and were therefor open game for the American military, still there 16 years later banging away. Washington totally misread the political-security situation that had developed in the 1990s and turned a potential ally (the Taliban) into an enemy. Thirty-eight years on from the Soviet invasion the country still finds itself at war, and Washington's take of the situation unchanged.
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Top reviews from other countries

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  • Greg A
    5.0 out of 5 stars Really good read
    Reviewed in Canada on January 22, 2021
    well written, sad story as it pointed out that there were so many missed opportunities for peace that were missed.
  • SS
    5.0 out of 5 stars A great read on a subject difficult to research
    Reviewed in the United Kingdom on October 3, 2021
    Feels like a balanced narrative of th most complex and opaque landscape. The bias from the narrotors being the main subjects is a bit unavoidable and especially felt this from the perspective of Heela.
    However it feels like a small detail in what is a great read explaining the realities in Afghanistan. The failures of America is all too clear to see
  • paresh
    5.0 out of 5 stars Terrific!
    Reviewed in India on August 23, 2021
    In 2014, Anand made the following observation: "It is clear to me that Americans would not be the victors. The Taliban has not surrendered or been defeated, the Afghan army is weak and unreliable, and the Afghan government is hopelessly corrupt.." Backed by solid on ground reporting, he nearly foresaw the future that's unravelling in 2021. Recommended for one and all!
  • N
    5.0 out of 5 stars Erschütternd, augenöffnend, brillant
    Reviewed in Germany on January 19, 2020
    Die Perspektive der Afghanen selber kommt bei Berichterstattung über den Krieg für gewöhnlich viel zu kurz. Dieses Buch zeigt eindrücklich, was es heißt, in einem Bürgerkriegsgebiet leben zu müssen und was die Konsequenzen einer Militäroffensive durch einen Industriestaat für die Menschen in dem Land der Offensive sind. Absolut zu empfehlen.
  • Andrea G
    5.0 out of 5 stars BEST BOOK THERE IS
    Reviewed in Spain on October 3, 2019
    One of the best books you could ever read about the Afghan conflict.