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As the bloodshed in Iraq intensified in 2005, Afghanistan quickly
faded from the nation's front pages to become the "other war,"
supposedly going well and largely ignored. In fact, the insurgency
in Afghanistan was about to break out with renewed force, the drug
problem was worsening, and international coordination was losing
focus. That July, Ronald Neumann arrived in Kabul from Baghdad as
the U.S. ambassador, bringing the experience of a career diplomat
whose professional lifetime had been spent in the greater Middle
East, beginning thirty-eight years earlier in the same country in
which it ended-Afghanistan. Neumann's account of how the war in
Afghanistan unfolded over the next two years is rich with
heretofore unexamined details of operations, tensions, and policy
decisions. He demonstrates why the United States was slow to
recognize the challenge it faced and why it failed to make the
requisite commitment of economic, military, and civilian resources.
His account provides a new understanding of the problems of
alliance warfare in conducting simultaneous nation building and
counterinsurgency. Honest in recounting failures as well as
successes, the book is must reading as much for students of
international affairs who want to understand the reality of
diplomatic policymaking and implementation in the field as for
those who want to understand the nation's complex"other war."
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