Afghanistan: The Labyrinth of ViolenceISBN: 978-0-7456-3114-1
Hardcover
232 pages
May 2004, Polity
Other Available Formats: Paperback
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Afghanistan has become synonymous with violence. In the past 25
years alone, the country has endured Russian invasion and
occupation, civil war and a US-led military campaign, resulting in
the combined loss of over 2 million lives, most of them civilian.
Even now, following the overthrow of the Taliban regime, old ethnic
animosities have resurfaced which seem likely to push the country
into another spell of internal war.
But why is it that Afghanistan has experienced such bloody
conflict and slaughter? What factors have allowed the country to be
exploited by external powers who have intervened to determine its
politics, social structure and, consequently, its place in the
world?
In this fascinating new book, Amalendu Misra seeks to provide answers to these pressing questions. By analysing the nature of conflict in Afghanistan, he exposes the various geopolitical, ethnic, economic and religious variables which have contributed to the breakdown of the Afghan state, and ponders whether post-war reconstruction could lead to a more democratic and peaceful Afghanistan.