Occupation, Insurgency, Withdrawal: Iraq and Afghanistan Revisited
MTA
In-depth case studies of intervention, counterinsurgency, and exit strategies from two seminal campaigns
2nd Edition
This book provides a comprehensive comparative analysis of the U.S.-led interventions in Iraq and Afghanistan, tracing their evolution from the initial invasions following 9/11 to the eventual withdrawals. It examines how early administrative decisions—such as the disbandment of the Iraqi Army and the empowerment of Afghan warlords—created security vacuums that fueled resilient insurgencies. By juxtaposing these two campaigns, the text illustrates how tactical shifts toward population-centric counterinsurgency (COIN) during the "surge" periods attempted to rectify initial missteps by prioritizing local partnerships, governance, and human intelligence over purely kinetic military operations.
The narrative explores the multifaceted challenges of nation-building, highlighting the corrosive impact of corruption, the complexities of training indigenous security forces, and the ethical dilemmas posed by detention policies and drone warfare. It delves into the "war economy," where massive influxes of international aid often inadvertently strengthened patronage networks and undermined the legitimacy of the central governments in Baghdad and Kabul. The book also emphasizes the role of regional actors like Iran and Pakistan, whose pursuit of their own strategic interests often provided "reverse sanctuaries" for insurgents, complicating the path to stability.
The final chapters focus on the politics of withdrawal, contrasting the 2011 exit from Iraq and the subsequent rise of ISIS with the 2021 collapse of the Afghan Republic following the Doha Agreement. The author argues that calendar-based withdrawal timelines frequently overrode conditions-based reality, leading to catastrophic results for partner forces and civil society. By analyzing the rapid fall of Kabul, the book underscores the fragility of security institutions that lack deep-rooted political legitimacy and are overly dependent on foreign logistical and aerial support.
Ultimately, the work distills actionable lessons for future foreign interventions, emphasizing that military success is inseparable from political design. It concludes that strategic victory depends less on technological superiority than on engineering the right relationships between intervening forces and local communities. The core claim is that lasting stability requires long-term commitment, cultural humility, and a rigorous focus on anti-corruption and host-nation ownership, warning that the manner of an exit is as consequential as the decision to intervene.
This book is essential reading for military strategists, policymakers, and national security officials involved in planning or evaluating intervention strategies. It will also benefit students and scholars of international relations, security studies, and Middle Eastern affairs seeking deep comparative case studies of modern counterinsurgency. Veterans, policymakers, and professionals working in post-conflict stabilization or nation-building will find practical insights applicable to future operations.
March 29, 2026
45,321 words
3 hours 10 minutes
Get unlimited access to this book + all books published by MixCache.com for $11.99/month
Subscribe to MTAOr purchase this book individually below
Click to buy this ebook:
Buy Now
Full ebook will be available immediately
- read online or download as a PDF file.
$5 account credit for all new MixCache.com accounts!
Have a question about the content? Ask our AI assistant!
Start by asking a question about "Occupation, Insurgency, Withdrawal: Iraq and Afghanistan Revisited"
Example: "Does this book mention William Shakespeare?"
Thinking...