From RAND Policy Currents <[email protected]>
Subject The U.S. 'Policy Trap' in Afghanistan: A Look Back
Date March 2, 2023 8:33 PM
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March 2, 2023


The U.S. 'Policy Trap' in Afghanistan: A Look Back

For 20 years, the United States pursued a single policy objective in Afghanistan: prevent a terrorist organization from using the country as a safe haven that might allow the group to carry out an attack against America. Despite deteriorating conditions and no apparent hope of military victory, this goal remained constant.

To understand why U.S. objectives in Afghanistan did not evolve, RAND researchers interviewed senior leaders involved in policy decisionmaking between 2001 and 2016. Overall, they found that the expanding, open-ended mission in Afghanistan led America into a "policy trap" in which victory seemed impossible but withdrawal was not politically or psychologically palatable.

Here are a few more key takeaways:
- The absence of clear, achievable metrics for success led to strategic scope creep as decisionmakers sought a strategy that would secure a positive outcome.
- Early decisions, such as lumping together the Taliban and al Qaeda, prevented a political settlement in the early years of the conflict that might have made peace attainable.
- Tension and mistrust characterized civil-military relations. The nature of the conflict forced the military into areas beyond its expertise and led to significant civilian involvement in military strategy and resourcing.

America's experience in Afghanistan has shown that de-escalating a conflict under conditions short of victory is tremendously difficult - both practically and politically.

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