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The Afghan Way of War - Culture and Pragmatism: A Critical History (Paperback)
Loot Price: R570
Discovery Miles 5 700
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The Afghan Way of War - Culture and Pragmatism: A Critical History (Paperback)
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Loot Price R570
Discovery Miles 5 700
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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Readers of this book are presented with a novelty, namely the
Afghan perspective on the successive military and counterinsurgency
campaigns that the British, Russians and Americans/Coalition have
fought against the Afghans, from the first encounter in the 1830s
to today's ongoing war waged by the Taliban. Included in the
narrative is the wider Pashtun population that lived astride the
British Imperial/Pakistan border, not just those Pashtuns resident
in the modern state of Afghanistan. The literature on the Afghan
wars and frontier actions is almost entirely Anglo-centric and
'agency' on the part of Afghans/Pashtuns is almost entirely absent.
Even modern accounts by journalists, former soldiers, policy-makers
and commentators have tended to reduce the Afghans and Pashtuns to
stereotypes and deprive them of any initiative. Ironically their
nineteenth-century contemporaries were rather more generous in
their appraisal of their fighting prowess. Rob Johnson therefore
presents more than just another military history of the Afghan
Wars; he seeks to open a new chapter in the debate about
Afghanistan and, crucially, aims to 'tell the story' from the
Afghan side, countering the inaccurate and sometimes rather
fanciful interpretations of events, in order to present a more
precise and utilitarian account of the military history of the
Afghans. Successive chapters illustrate the various methods adopted
by the Afghans to confront their enemies, focussing on a limited
number of themes to create coherence. Collectively, they
demonstrate that the 'Afghan Way of War' was eminently pragmatic,
but that the spirit by which Afghans fought the British, or the
Soviets, or each other, was coloured by a cultural code. In recent
decades, that code has been altered and eroded dramatically so that
in the last ten years what has been paramount is the Afghans' sense
that they are resisting coercive governance, foreign influences and
ideas and occupation.
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