What’s the Future of the Taliban?

The Political Scene | The New Yorker | Sep 13, 2021

The U.S. invasion of Afghanistan began less than three weeks after the September 11th attacks, and forces finally withdrew just weeks before the twentieth anniversary of 9/11. The Taliban are once again in power, and claim to have adopted more permissive stances on issues like women’s rights and education. “We should be very skeptical of these sorts of claims,” Anand Gopal, who has reported extensively on the group, says. While Taliban senior leadership and diplomats may crave foreign recognition and investment, many supporters feel “that the Taliban should be trying to return to the nineteen-nineties,” Gopal tells David Remnick. “There’s a minority of the movement who say all the right things, who are a little more polished, who’ve spent time outside the country. But they don’t really have the power on the ground.”

Top Stories

America at 250: A View from Britain, with “The Rest Is History”

NYC Rent Guidelines Board approves 2-year rent freeze, fulfilling Mamdani campaign pledge

Are Carriage Horses a Thing of the Past?

Feds indict former Mayor Adams adviser Frank Carone in migrant housing bribery scheme

YOU ARE ONLINE