No one had thought what we do about people who are intrinsical to the effort of the west to create some kind of stable and legal governance in afghanistan. These were the west's human capital. What went wrong was that nobody thought about them. Whatever else went wrong, and the f c, do itself, has tried to get itself off the hook. Am, for appalling crisis management.
One year ago the United States decided to withdraw from Afghanistan after two decades in the country. The Taliban, a militant Islamist group that ran most of Afghanistan in the late 1990s, swept to power without much resistance from the Afghan army and captured Kabul on August 15 2021. The debacle left Western governments humiliated and ordinary Afghans afraid. What responsibility do countries like Britain and the United States have for the current crisis? To discuss these issues our host the journalist and broadcaster Manveen Rana is joined by Shabnam Nasimi, Policy Advisor to the U.K Home Office, BBC Middle East editor Jeremy Bowen, and Paul Mason, the journalist, writer and film-maker.
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