Afghanistan After the Fall: Power, Fragmentation, and the Limits of Centralisation

Why the Taliban victory did not end Afghanistan’s political problem — it merely inverted it.


A personal preface

Recently, I received New Year’s wishes from an Afghan colleague I had worked with many years ago, back when Afghanistan was still the object of large-scale international programmes, donor coordination meetings, and endless PowerPoint decks about “capacity building.” He now lives in the UK. The message was warm, ordinary — and quietly disarming.

It reminded me how long it has been since I last tried to understand what is actually going on in Afghanistan today. Like many others who have served there for a long time in one role or another, I instinctively stopped following the country after the collapse of the internationally supported government in 2021. Not out of indifference, but because it was painful to watch so much money, effort, and human energy apparently evaporate.

This post is an attempt to look again — calmly, structurally, and without nostalgia.


The Taliban were never a monolith

The media still speak of “the Taliban” as if it were a single, unified actor. It never was.

Historically, the Taliban functioned as a loose coalition of regional, tribal, clerical, and militant networks. What bound these networks together was not a shared blueprint for governance, but a narrower set of common denominators:

  • a fundamentalist religious worldview,
  • rejection of foreign domination and foreign ideas,
  • reliance on local legitimacy rather than abstract institutions,
  • and, ultimately, victory.

That victory in 2021 did not resolve internal differences. It simply suspended them.

Insurgent movements tend to fracture after they win, not while they fight. Afghanistan is no exception.


Three fault lines inside Taliban rule

1. Clerical absolutism vs. operational realism

At the core of today’s Emirate lies a clerical leadership that sees the Taliban’s success as a divine mandate. For this group, governance is primarily a moral and religious project. Compromise, pragmatism, or external conditionality are viewed not as tools, but as corruption.

Opposing this outlook — quietly, often indirectly — are Taliban figures responsible for security, administration, borders, and economic survival. They face the everyday reality that a country cannot function on ideology alone. Their concern is not liberal reform, but basic governability.

This tension explains much of the regime’s paralysis: cohesion is prioritized over competence.

2. Security networks vs. traditional authority

A second fault line runs between the old clerical core and powerful security-oriented networks that control intelligence, policing, and internal coercion. These actors are more accustomed to regional bargaining, informal diplomacy, and transactional relationships.

Their influence is practical rather than theological. That makes them indispensable — and suspect.

3. Centre vs. periphery: the Afghan constant

Afghanistan has never functioned as a strongly centralized state in the modern sense. Authority has always been negotiated locally.

The internationally backed governments after 2001 tried to impose centralization: ministries, national systems, uniform laws, donor-driven coherence. With hindsight, the failure was predictable.

Ironically, the Taliban succeeded partly because they did not try to out-centralize the state. They tolerated local variation, informal authority, and pragmatic arrangements.

Now, as rulers, they face the same paradox as every Afghan government before them: governing requires central authority — but enforcing it risks fragmentation.


Women’s rights as a proxy battlefield

The harsh restrictions on women and girls are often described as simple ideology. Internally, they serve a second function: they are a mechanism of power.

By enforcing uncompromising social rules, the clerical core asserts dominance over pragmatists and technocrats. Opposition becomes heresy rather than policy disagreement.

The result is a state that signals purity at the cost of functionality — and deepens its own isolation.


The Najibullah comparison: useful, but limited

Some analysts compare today’s Taliban rule with the late Najibullah period of the 1980s: a regime surviving through local deals, external support, and careful balancing.

The comparison is instructive — but inverted.

Najibullah presided over a centralized state trying to buy local compliance. The Taliban preside over a decentralized movement trying to become a state.

The warning from history is not collapse, but dependency: Afghan regimes become fragile when they cannot arbitrate between local power centers or sustain the flows (financial, political, symbolic) that keep those centers aligned.


What slow fragmentation actually looks like

If fragmentation comes, it is unlikely to resemble a dramatic civil war — at least not initially.

More likely scenarios include:

  • An Emirate on paper, provinces in practice: national decrees exist, but enforcement varies widely.
  • Competing centres of gravity: clerical authority and security-administrative power drift apart without a formal split.
  • Warlordisation under a single flag: local strongmen retain Taliban branding while operating autonomously.

This kind of fragmentation is quiet, deniable, and often stable — until it suddenly isn’t.


Why Afghanistan faded from Western attention

Afghanistan did not disappear because it became peaceful, nor because its problems were solved. It faded because it stopped fitting the Western geopolitical narrative.

For two decades, Afghanistan was framed as a test case: of liberal state‑building, of counter‑terrorism doctrine, of the belief that institutions, elections, and aid could rewire political legitimacy. Once that test was lost, attention moved on. There was no rival great power visibly “winning” Afghanistan in 2021 — no Cold War mirror image, no adversary to contain, no geopolitical drama that required sustained explanation.

Unlike Ukraine, the Middle East, or the US–China relationship, Afghanistan no longer offered a stage for strategic signalling. What remained was something Western politics is deeply uncomfortable with: a failure that could not be blamed on an external enemy.

In that sense, Afghanistan became politically inconvenient rather than strategically urgent.


State‑building as geopolitics — and its quiet collapse

The post‑2001 state‑building project in Afghanistan was never ideologically neutral. It was embedded in a broader geopolitical ambition: to demonstrate that Western‑backed governance could succeed where earlier imperial or Soviet efforts had failed.

There is a crucial and uncomfortable difference, however, between the Soviet experience and the later US‑led one.

The Soviet intervention unfolded within a clear geopolitical contest. The Afghan resistance was heavily funded, armed, and sustained through regional and international channels. The collapse of Soviet control can be read — at least in part — as the outcome of external opposition.

The Western project faced no comparable external spoiler.

There was no superpower arming a rival Afghan state, no sustained counter‑intervention designed to bleed NATO forces into withdrawal. What undermined the project was not foreign competition, but internal contradiction: the attempt to impose a centralized, technocratic state on a society whose political logic had never been centralized to begin with.

The Afghan Republic did not fall because it was outgunned by an external enemy. It collapsed because the institutions built in its name were not organically rooted in Afghan legitimacy structures. When external support was reduced, the system did not resist — it evaporated.

That makes the failure bleaker than earlier interventions. It failed under its own assumptions.


A closing thought

The Taliban understood Afghanistan’s political grammar better than their predecessors, which is why they prevailed militarily. But military victory does not resolve the deeper Afghan paradox: authority must be local to be legitimate, yet centralized enough to govern.

Every attempt to rule Afghanistan has eventually collided with that contradiction.

The Taliban have not escaped it. They have merely inherited it.


This post was generated by ChatGPT, based on me playing the devil’s advocate with it, verified news sources, and game‑theoretical analysis patterns. It was moderated and approved by a human editor (me) for clarity, neutrality, ethical framing, and attribution. Responsibility for the views expressed remains entirely my own.

Tags: #Afghanistan #Geopolitics #State-building #Governance #Institutional failure

Sun Tzu again: Ethics-Signaling is Not Strategy !

Sanctions are the West’s favorite placebo. They make politicians feel decisive and moralists feel righteous, but they rarely change the battlefield. From Russia to China and now Israel, Europe is mistaking ethics-signaling for strategy — and paying the price for it.


When I wrote about Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022, I took flak for refusing to reduce a complex war to black-and-white slogans. Let me be clear: I was never a defender of Moscow. In fact, in those early months I joined the Volunteer Legion, put my own life at risk, and saw the folly of that war up close. My critique was — and remains — about strategy, not sympathy.

The same applies today. Hamas’s October attack on Israel was brutal and strange in equal measure. Israel’s initial military response could still be framed as “forward self-defense.” But what followed spiraled far beyond proportionality. If the International Criminal Court believes there are grounds for a genocide case and has issued an arrest warrant for Netanyahu, then it is no longer civil or credible to argue that Israel’s government is “on the right side of history.”

I already wrote in July that Israel’s strategic logic is breaking down in full view of the region. What began as deterrence has curdled into recursive escalation — strikes in Gaza, Syria, even Qatar — that alienate allies and erode Israel’s long-term legitimacy. Whether one agrees or disagrees with the morality of it all, it is bad strategy.

And yet, Europe’s reaction is once again to reach for the sanctions lever.

The Sanctions Reflex

Sanctions sound tough. They signal resolve. They please moralists. But they rarely work. Even the most optimistic studies put their “success rate” below 40%; more skeptical analyses suggest closer to 5%. That is not strategy. That is roulette.

And when the wheel stops against you, you lose twice: once in economic blowback, and again in strategic realignment. Europe’s energy crisis, and Russia’s accelerated pivot to Beijing, are Exhibit A.

Now: Israel

Fast forward to today. The EU is late — very late — in criticizing Israel’s conduct in Gaza. Public opinion is finally forcing politicians to “do something.” And what do they reach for? Trade measures. Suspension of preferential tariffs. Targeted listings. The familiar reflex.

It is, once more, ethics-signaling. Politicians get to look righteous. The moralists applaud. But will Netanyahu change course because the EU slaps tariffs on Israeli machinery or chemicals? Hardly. He has already decided his war aims. His calculus does not turn on Brussels.

Meanwhile, Israel is deeply integrated into European supply chains, R&D networks, and technology flows. Broad trade measures risk collateral damage to ourselves — again.

The Bitter Logic

So the chain grows longer:

  • Russia: sanctions, energy pain, Moscow–Beijing axis.
  • China: tariffs, tech “rip-and-replace” policies, and other spirals of retaliation.
  • Israel: now, the same reflex — trade as punishment.

Where does it stop? If tomorrow Europe decides that America is no longer a functioning democracy, do we cut trade with the US too? That sounds absurd — but the logic, once embraced, rolls downhill fast.

Sun Tzu’s Counsel

Sun Tzu told us to weigh five heads of war: the Moral Law, Heaven, Earth, Command, and Method. In 2022, I wrote that Europe scored poorly on all of them. Nothing has changed.

  • Moral Law: shouting “justice!” without a strategy is not moral strength, it is posturing.
  • Heaven and Earth: the conditions are not on our side; we cannot wish them away.
  • Command: our leaders confuse signaling with purpose.
  • Method and Discipline: sanctions are a substitute for action, not disciplined statecraft.

A Better Course

If the EU is serious about law, it should enforce the measures it already has:

  • No settlement goods in our markets.
  • No weapons or dual-use items where there is a risk of IHL violations.
  • Full cooperation with the ICC and ICJ.

That is lawful. That is targeted. That has integrity.

But let us drop the delusion that broad trade sanctions are a lever of strategy. They are not. They are the political sugar rush of the moment: sweet on the tongue, destructive to the body.


Conclusion:
Ethics-signaling is not strategy. It is an abdication of strategy. And Europe, once again, risks paying the price.


This post was generated by ChatGPT, based on me playing the devil’s advocate with it, verified news sources and game-theoretical analysis patterns. However, it was — of course — moderated and approved by a human editor (me) for clarity, neutrality, ethical framing and — yes — legitimacy or attribution (only me bears responsibility for my opinion, isn’t it).

#MiddleEast #Israel #Syria #Geopolitics #SecurityDilemma #StrategicLogic #AICommentary #webeunews

Israel’s Strategic Logic Is Breaking Down — In Full View of the Region

ChatGPT-generated commentary on real-time events, moderated and published by a human observer. This post reflects no official stance — only the unfolding facts and patterns visible to those willing to look.


I. The Latest Strike: A New Line Crossed

On July 16, 2025, Israel conducted precision airstrikes on the Syrian Ministry of Defence in Damascus, as well as on targets near the presidential palace. These were not routine operations against Iranian proxies or covert shipments. They were overt hits on the central nervous system of the Syrian state.

Israel justified the move as a defensive response to Syrian military deployments in Suwayda, where clashes between Druze fighters and Bedouin militias have spiraled into civil bloodshed. With over 250 people killed in Suwayda in recent weeks, Israeli leadership claimed a moral imperative to intervene — framing the strikes as part of a protective deterrence strategy for regional minorities.

But the world is not convinced.
And neither, it seems, are many within Israel’s traditional alliance network.


II. From Precision to Pattern: The Logic of Escalation

In less than a month, Israel has struck:

  • Iran (in a surprise operation that even U.S. intelligence was only partially briefed on),
  • Hezbollah positions in southern Lebanon (as part of its “perpetual containment doctrine”),
  • and now central Damascus — openly targeting a sovereign state’s most symbolic and institutional assets.

This is no longer the quiet shadow war that Israel has managed for over a decade. It is something else:

  • Visible, not deniable.
  • Reactive, not strategic.
  • And increasingly uncoordinated, even among allies.

The logic appears to be unraveling.


III. Game Theory in Real Time: A Security Dilemma, Accelerated

What’s unfolding is a textbook case of the security dilemma — where every move made in the name of security triggers greater insecurity in return.

Israel believes it is acting rationally:

  • Pre-empt threats.
  • Signal strength.
  • Protect vulnerable communities (e.g., the Druze).

But in game-theoretical terms, it is moving into a high-risk tit-for-tat sequence, where actions meant to reduce long-term threats only amplify short-term volatility. This is no longer deterrence. It is recursive escalation.

The regional players are watching closely — and adjusting their posture:

  • Syria, though institutionally weakened post-Assad, is now being recast in international discourse as a target rather than an actor.
  • Iran, already hit earlier this month, now has a broader diplomatic justification for retaliation — or at least narrative leverage.
  • The United States, Israel’s most consistent backer, is publicly urging restraint. The Biden administration reportedly warned that such moves could jeopardize wider regional normalization efforts.
  • Turkey, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Qatar — normally divergent in rhetoric — have converged in their condemnation of Israel’s “destabilizing behavior.”

The message: This is not a local matter anymore.


IV. Strategic Blindness? Or Strategic Exhaustion?

It is tempting to search for a coherent doctrine behind Israel’s moves:
A new perimeter? A preventive containment of collapsing Arab states? A domestic show of strength?

But perhaps what we’re witnessing is not doctrine at all — but strategic fatigue:

  • A democracy stretched between multiple frontlines.
  • A leadership under increasing internal and external pressure.
  • An army accustomed to dominance but less attuned to narrative warfare, where images of destruction can undo years of legitimacy-building.

Israel remains the region’s most capable military actor — but it is now playing without clear lines of restraint, and without the consent of the geopolitical arena it once dominated.


V. The Coming Reframing: From Protector to Provoker?

The Suwayda argument — that Israel is protecting minorities in lawless zones — may hold moral appeal. But geopolitics isn’t built on moral appeal alone. It is built on:

  • Predictability,
  • Credibility, and
  • Coalition tolerance.

If Israel loses all three, it risks being seen not as the strategic adult in the room — but as a rogue actor with a nuclear arsenal and no endgame.

The shift is already happening:

  • Western editorial boards are more cautious in their support.
  • Neutral states are treating Israeli moves as destabilizing, not stabilizing.
  • The international legal discourse is slowly creeping toward language of proportionality and sovereignty — with Syria, of all countries, gaining rhetorical ground.

VI. Closing Reflection: Strategic Moves, Emotional Traps

From a purely strategic standpoint, Israel may be playing against itself. Every successful strike now adds weight to a narrative that delegitimizes Israel’s position long-term, even if it wins the tactical exchange.

This is not a question of right or wrong. It is a question of outcomes.

What outcome is now achievable?
Who remains willing to share the burden of escalation?
How many moves ahead is anyone really thinking?

As one observer put it:

“After the surprise strikes on Iran, Israel is further escalating in some kind of logic that no one understands — not even its allies.”

That sentence may turn out to be the most honest intelligence brief of the week.


This post was generated by ChatGPT, based on verified news sources and game-theoretical analysis patterns. It was moderated and approved by a human editor for clarity, neutrality, and ethical framing.

#MiddleEast #Israel #Syria #Geopolitics #SecurityDilemma #StrategicLogic #AICommentary #webeunews

Tech Wars and the Logic of Cooperation: Lessons from a Divided World

Disclaimer:

This post was generated by ChatGPT-4o based on my prompts and GPT going through previous posts and the history of our chats.

Introduction:

As we celebrated the New Year with awe-inspiring drone-powered light shows, the undercurrents of global technology and commerce revealed a stark reality: the world is witnessing a rapid escalation of the tech war between major powers. Beneath the surface, strategic decisions are shaping the future of technology in ways that may have profound consequences for innovation and international relations.

The Battle for Semiconductor Sovereignty:

The semiconductor industry sits at the heart of this conflict. Recent reports and analyses highlight that Russia and China are doubling down on their efforts to develop homegrown lithography equipment and advanced chip-making capabilities. These moves come as a direct response to US-led sanctions and export restrictions targeting critical technologies.

While claims of surpassing Western technology may be overstated, the underlying trend is clear: sanctions are driving targeted nations to achieve greater self-reliance, potentially reshaping the balance of power in the global tech ecosystem.

The Unintended Consequences of Sanctions:

Sanctions often serve as tools of economic and technological containment, but their long-term effectiveness is debatable. Historically, isolation has sometimes spurred innovation among targeted nations, enabling them to leapfrog technological barriers. The current strategy risks triggering a race that results not in dominance but in deeper global division.

Isolating key players like China and Russia may ultimately weaken the collaborative fabric that underpins global technological progress. For decades, innovation has thrived on shared knowledge, multinational partnerships, and open markets. In the absence of such dynamics, the costs of duplication and inefficiency could weigh heavily on all sides.

A Pragmatic View of Geopolitical Strategy:

A call for “joining forces” might seem naive in today’s polarized world, but ignoring the potential of rival nations is equally shortsighted. With their vast engineering talent pools and state-backed initiatives, countries like China and Russia are well-positioned to disrupt existing technological hierarchies. Geopolitical strategists in the US and EU should approach these dynamics with caution and realism, recognizing that cooperation may sometimes yield better outcomes than confrontation.

The Road Ahead:

The current trajectory suggests a long-term game of competition, where each side vies for supremacy in emerging technologies like AI, quantum computing, and space exploration. While collaboration may not be immediately feasible given current geopolitical realities, it’s worth asking whether the continued escalation of tech wars is sustainable—or even desirable.

Even amid rivalry, there are opportunities for selective cooperation in areas of mutual concern, such as climate change or cybersecurity. These small steps may not resolve the broader conflicts but could pave the way for future dialogue.

Conclusion:

The global tech war reflects deeper tensions that won’t be easily resolved. Yet, acknowledging these complexities can lead to more thoughtful and balanced strategies. While the ideal of full cooperation remains distant, a pragmatic approach—one that blends competition with carefully chosen collaboration—may offer a more realistic path forward. As nations chart their courses, they must consider not just how to gain the upper hand but also how to avoid undermining the very system of innovation that has driven progress for decades.