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No Good Men Among the Living

Page 34

by Anand Gopal

underground school of

  US forces and

  as a widow

  Hekmatyar, Gulbuddin

  Helmand Province

  Herakit-i-Inqilabi

  Herat

  heroin

  Hinduism

  Hindu Kush

  Hizb-i-Islami

  honor culture

  Host Nation Trucking

  Hotak, Musa

  IED Alley

  India

  informants

  infrastructure

  Taliban

  international aid

  Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI)

  Iran

  refugees in

  Taliban in

  Iraq War

  as distraction from stabilization efforts in Afghanistan

  Ishan

  Ishaqzais

  Islam

  jihad, see jihad

  law

  radical

  sharia

  Islamabad

  Islamism

  US-backed mujahedeen insurgency

  Ismail Khan

  Israel

  Istaliff

  Izzat, Mullah

  Jabbar

  Jacobabad

  Jalalabad

  Jalil, Mullah Abdul

  Jamiat-e-Islami

  Jan, Baba

  Jan, Malem

  jihad

  al-Qaeda and

  civil war

  martyrdom

  9/11 attacks

  Julian, Greg

  Kabul

  civil war

  fall of

  mujahedeen rule

  of 1970s

  post-Taliban

  refugees returning to

  Taliban

  Kabul River

  Kabul University

  Kafka, Franz, “In the Penal Colony”

  Kakar, Muhammad Hassan

  Kandahar

  civil war

  fall of

  Kandahar Airfield (KAF)

  Kandahar–Tirin Kot road

  Karachi

  Karimzais

  Karzai, Abdul Ahad

  Karzai, Ahmed Wali

  Karzai, Hamid

  background of

  becomes president

  first presidential election (2004)

  government of

  second presidential election (2009)

  Taliban surrender and

  Tirin Kot battle and Taliban defeat

  US and

  Khairkhwa, Khairullah

  khans

  Khas Uruzgan

  female vocational training center

  first presidential elections (2004)

  political killings

  Taliban insurgency in

  US raids on

  Khyber, Mir Akbar

  Koran

  Korengal Valley

  US operations in

  Kuchi, Naim

  Kuchis

  Kunar Province

  Laghman Province

  Lal, Muhammad

  Lal, Sabar

  Lala Khan

  Lashkar Gah

  Latif, Hajji

  Latif, Mufti Abdul

  Logar Province

  loya jirga

  Maiwand

  raids

  Taliban massacre

  US war in

  Malalai

  Manan, Mullah

  Mangal, Gulab

  Mansour, Aziz

  Mansur, Akhtar Muhammad

  Mansur, Saif ur-Rahman

  marriage

  arranged

  bride-price

  second wife

  martyrdom

  cult of

  Marx, Karl

  Massoud, Ahmad Shah

  Matin, Abdul

  Matiullah Khan

  McChrystal, Stanley

  McNabb, Duncan J.

  Mecca

  pilgrims

  media

  medical care

  midwifery

  Ministry of the Interior

  Miram Shah

  Mohaqeq, Muhammad

  Mohebullah

  Mohmand, Pir

  Mojumdar, Aunohita

  Moscow

  Mossad

  Muhammad, Ghulam

  Muhammad, Hajji

  Muhammad, Jan (JMK)

  civil war and

  as governor of Uruzgan

  murder of

  released from prison

  US operations in Tirin Kot overseen by

  Muhammad, Pai

  Muhammad, Shah

  Muhammad, Sher

  Muhammad, Syed

  Mujahed, Abdullah

  mujahedeen

  civil war

  factions

  religious law and

  US-backed

  Mujahedeen Union

  Mullah, Hajji

  Musharraf, Pervez

  Muslim Brotherhood

  Musqinyar

  dispute with police

  first presidential elections (2004) and

  murder of

  Mutassim, Agha Jan

  Mutawakkil, Mullah

  Mutmain, Abdul Hai

  Nabi, Ghulam

  Nabi, Muhammad

  Nafeh, Abdul

  Naim, Commander

  Naqibullah

  Nasim, Muhammad

  Nasir, Jamal

  Nasro, Hajji

  National Islamic Front

  NATO troops

  Navy SEALs

  New Garloch

  New York

  9/11 attacks

  New York Times

  New Zealand

  NGOs

  9/11 attacks

  Noor, Khoday

  Noorzais

  Northern Alliance

  emergence of

  Taliban vs.

  US and

  nursing

  Obaidullah, Hajji

  Obaidullah, Mullah

  Obama, Barack

  Afghanistan policy

  Omar, Mullah Muhammad

  surrender

  Omaryar, Abdul Karim

  Operation Anaconda

  opium

  Pakistan

  -Afghanistan rivalries

  colonialism

  intelligence

  refugees in

  Taliban in

  Paktika

  Panjshir Valley

  Parre, Commander

  Parwan

  Pashtoon, Khalid

  Pashtuns. See also specific tribes

  Pech

  Persia

  Peshawar

  photography

  Taliban use of

  pilgrims

  police

  corruption

  Musqinyar’s dispute with

  “new” force

  Popal, Rashid

  Popalzais

  poppies

  American program to eradicate

  cultivation

  pornography

  presidential elections

  first (2004)

  second (2009)

  private security companies

  property rights

  Pryor, Anthony

  purdah

  Qader, Abdul

  Qadir, Abdul

  Qadir, Commander

  Qadir, Hajji

  Qaher, Mullah

  Qale Nasro

  Qassim, Mullah

  Qudus, Abdul

  Qudus Khan

  murder of

  Quetta

  Quetta Shura

  Rabbani, Burhanuddin

  Ramadan

  rape

  Rauf, Malek

  Razak, Abdul

  Razaq, Mullah Abdul

  refugees

  civil war

  in Iran

  in Pakistan

  return to Kabul

  Rehmatullah

  religious law

  roads

  checkpoints

  Kandahar-Tirin Kot

  See also infrastructure; roadside bombs

  roadsi
de bombs

  Roper, A. J.

  Ruhollah, Uncle

  Rumsfeld, Donald

  Safavid Empire

  Samoud Khan

  Sangesar

  Saudi Arabia

  Sayyaf, Abdul Rasul

  Schefter, Karla

  Schiewek, Eckart

  Semple, Michael

  senate elections

  Shah, Muhammad

  Shah-i-Kot Valley

  Sharafuddin

  sharia

  Shaysta

  Sherzai, Gul Agha

  intelligence network

  Shias

  Shiraz

  Sidiqullah

  Sirat, Abdul Sattar

  “southern alliance”

  Soviet Union

  collapse of

  Soviet war in Afghanistan

  Swat Khan

  Sudan

  suicide bombings

  suzerainty

  Tajikistan

  Taliban

  Afghans mistaken for, by U.S. forces

  bin Laden and

  collapse of

  emergence of

  government

  in Guantanamo

  life of members after collapse of

  mullahs

  Northern Alliance vs.

  Omar leadership

  origins of

  in Pakistan

  Palace Guard

  prisons

  purity and virtue enforcement measures

  recruiting

  reemergence of, see Taliban insurgency

  rule

  sharia and

  surrenders

  Tirin Kot battle and defeat

  US war and

  women oppressed by

  in Zurmat

  Taliban insurgency

  abductions

  beheadings

  in Chak District

  district governors

  funds

  future of

  in Garloch

  governing activities

  growth of

  internal rivalries

  ISI and

  Maiwand massacre

  protests against

  recruiting

  roadside bombings

  suicide bombers

  in Tirin Kot

  US war and

  in Uruzgan

  weapons

  Tangi valley

  Tanzania

  Tehran

  Tirin Kot

  battle and Taliban defeat

  election workers in

  Taliban insurgency in

  US forces in

  Tofan, Zulmay

  Toomer, Perry

  Tora Bora Mountains

  Tor Khan, Hajji

  torture

  of Afghans by U.S.

  Guantanamo

  Touri

  tribal society

  elders

  feuding clans

  Ghilzai

  hierarchy

  honor culture

  law

  Maiwand

  origins of Taliban and

  property rights

  US relations and

  See also specific tribes

  Turabi, Mullah

  United Nations

  disarmament program

  United Nations Assistance Mission

  United States

  Afghan civil war and

  failure in Afghanistan

  invasion of Afghanistan (2001)

  Iraq War

  Karzai government and

  mujahedeen backed by

  9/11 attacks

  patronage and construction projects in Afghanistan

  torture of Afghans

  war in Afghanistan, see Afghanistan War

  war on terror

  withdrawal from Afghanistan

  US Special Operations Forces

  Afghans mistaken for Taliban by

  in Chak District

  civilian casualties and

  in Garloch

  in Korengal Valley

  in Maiwand

  Operation Anaconda

  in Tirin Kot

  withdrawal from Afghanistan

  in Zurmat

  universities

  Uruzgan

  first presidential elections (2004)

  political killings

  provincial council elections

  second presidential elections (2009)

  Taliban insurgency in

  Tirin Kot battle and Taliban defeat

  US operations in

  Uzbekistan

  villages

  informants

  mountain clan life

  police disputes

  tribal society, see tribal society

  See also specific villages

  voting

  first presidential elections (2004)

  proof of

  registration

  second presidential elections (2009)

  Wahabis

  Wahid, Abdul

  Wakil, Rohullah

  Wali, Ahmed

  Wali, Amir Sayed

  Wardak Province

  US forces in

  war in Afghanistan. See Afghanistan war (2001–present); civil war (1992–96); Soviet war in Afghanistan

  warlordism. See also mujahedeen

  war on terror

  water torture

  Waziristan

  weapons

  CIA-backed mujahedeen

  Taliban

  UN disarmament program

  Wodin, Hajji

  women

  civil war and

  domestic abuse

  education

  in government

  honor culture

  of 1970s

  pilgrims

  post-Taliban

  property rights

  rape

  segregation of

  single

  suicide

  Taliban oppression of

  US war and

  urban

  World Health Organization

  Yonts, Jim

  Yoshimoto, Alex

  Yunis, Tawildar

  Zabit

  Zabul

  Zadran, Pacha Khan

  Zahir, Commander

  Zaman, Hajji

  Zarin, Malik

  Zurmat

  US operations in

  ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

  I owe my deepest gratitude to the countless Afghans I have met over the years who provided me, a complete stranger, a glimpse into their anguishes and their desires. In particular, I am profoundly lucky to have found Heela, Akbar Gul, and Jan Muhammad, gifted storytellers in their own right, who spent hundreds of hours with me retracing their steps, poring over maps, and finding old friends for me to interview.

  In many ways, this book was a partnership between me and Zubair Babakarkhel, a talented Afghan journalist. I met Zubair when he was reporting for Pajhwok Afghan News, and was immediately won over by his unique combination of reporting chops, intelligence, and generosity. In our year of collaboration, Zubair dug deep, traveled far and wide, and taught me much about Afghanistan. He regularly made connections that I’d missed, and knew just how to guide interview subjects through delicate topics.

  While living in Afghanistan, I was fortunate to have made Afghan friends who took me into their homes and guided me through their country. Hamid Asir traveled with me across the countryside on motorcycle, giving me a glimpse of an Afghanistan foreigners rarely get to see. Habib Zahori was a colleague who quickly became one of my dearest friends in Kabul. M.S.S. embodies the best of the country’s vaunted hospitality. I am also indebted to Frotan Ghausuddin, Gul Kaka, Dr. Nasir Malikzai, Haroun Mir, Edris Nawin, Waliullah Rahmani, Habib Khan Totakhel, Dr. Roshanak Wardak, Shahir and Melek Zahine, and many others who, for security reasons or otherwise, I cannot name here.

  In the expatriate community, I am grateful to those who assisted me over the years, particularly when I first landed in Kabul without contacts or reporting experien
ce. They include: Daniel Cohen, Adam B. Ellick, Konrad Fiedler, Raymond Francis, Ricardo Grassi, Nic Lee, Aunohita Mojumdar, Mario Ragazzi, Christoph Reuter, Sujeet Sarkar, Michael Semple, and Reto Stocker. In particular, I would like to thank Sami Kovanen, whose meticulous data collection and research helped me make sense of the war, and Eckart Schiewek, whose wisdom on the country was invaluable.

  I wish to thank the many editors and colleagues who aided me over the years, including Ben Arnoldy, Roane Carey, Carol Huang, Dahr Jamail, and Ann Ninan.

  This book could not have been written without the generous support of the New America Foundation, where I benefited from a thriving intellectual community of fellow writers and researchers. I am deeply grateful to Peter Bergen, who encouraged me to apply for a fellowship and who commissioned the study on which the central thesis of this book is based. I would also like to thank Steve Coll and Andres Martinez for their support and encouragement.

  At Henry Holt, I am indebted to Sara Bershtel for taking a chance on a new author, and Grigory Tovbis, my editor, for his meticulous attention to my manuscript. In his hands, this book was vastly improved. I wish to thank John Wright, my agent, for offering many helpful suggestions during my writing process.

  I am grateful to those who aided in the manuscript’s completion, including: Azin Emami, whose expert research provided me with background information on northeastern Afghanistan; Becky Shafer and Kirsten Berg at New America, whose careful and rigorous fact-checking helped me spot numerous errors; Matthew Rubin, whose assistance in fact-checking material on Guantanamo was invaluable; David Pugliese, who generously provided material on the raid on Hajji Burget Khan’s compound; Peter Ter Velde, who helped me understand key battles in Uruzgan province; Martine van Bijlert, for educating me on Khas Uruzgan district; Tom Peter, for giving me a home in Kabul when I visited; and Michael Hastings, a friend and colleague who is sorely missed. I wish to thank Bette Dam, one of the most talented researchers I know, for providing me with much information over the years that aided my work. In particular, she shared transcripts of her meetings with Jan Muhammad, and tracked down a detailed history of Khas Uruzgan district. Her book A Man and a Motorcycle: How Hamid Karzai Became Afghanistan’s President, and Eric Blehm’s The Only Thing Worth Dying For, were valuable sources for Chapter 2, “The Battle of Tirin Kot.”

  I have benefited from a small community of writers and thinkers on Afghanistan, whom I am fortunate to also call friends. Graeme Smith’s consistently stellar journalism always gave me something to aspire to. Alex Strick van Linschoten and Felix Kuehn’s work, and my correspondence with them, have taught me much about the Taliban and southern Afghanistan. In particular, I am grateful to Alex for providing me with the source of narration of the Maiwand bus massacre described in chapter 12. Matthieu Aikins is not only one of my most respected peers, he was a pillar of friendship in the long years it took to write this book.

  I would like to thank my family, and in particular my parents, who put up with my long absences in far-flung places and never wavered in their encouragement of my work.

  Finally, there are two people I wish to thank for their profound influence on this project. The first is Tom Engelhardt, who first suggested that I should write a book and went beyond the call of duty time and again to make the manuscript the best it could be. Any young writer would be lucky to have such an editor and mentor. The second is Anita Sreedhar, one of the best writers I know, who taught me so much about storytelling. Every single page in this book bears her mark.

 

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