'This is a remarkable and important book - erudite and detailed, yet pithy and provocative. As a soldier, intelligence analyst, policymaker, professor, and scholar, Paul D. Miller has certainly earned his right to write this book and offer his take on the history of America's Afghanistan experience. More, he has helped us understand what went so badly wrong there, even though Americans like him who served can take some solace that the war helped prevent another 9/11 despite its ultimate failure to achieve larger objectives.' Michael O'Hanlon, Phil Knight Chair in Defense and Strategy, the Brookings Institution, and author of To Dare Mighty Things: U.S. Defense Strategy Since the Revolution

'Paul D. Miller's detailed accounting of how the US lost the war in Afghanistan is an important, sobering analysis that every new policymaker should read.' Kori Schake, Director for Foreign and Defense Policy, American Enterprise Institute

'Paul D. Miller argues that the problem in Afghanistan was not too much reliance on counterinsurgency and nation-building, but too little - and flawed, inconsistent, rushed implementation where they were undertaken at all. His perceptive, penetrating analysis is essential reading for anyone interested not just in Afghanistan but in civil warfare and stabilization generally.' Stephen Biddle, Professor of International and Public Affairs, Columbia University

A truly unique all-embracing narrative of the American war in Afghanistan from the own words of its architects. Choosing Defeat takes an unparalleled inside look at America's longest war, pulling back the curtain on the inner deliberations behind the scenes. The author combines his own extensive experience in the Army, the CIA, and the White House, with interviews from policymakers within the Bush, Obama, and Trump administrations, to produce a groundbreaking study of how American leaders make wartime decisions. Transporting you inside the White House Situation Room, every key strategic debate over twenty years – from the immediate aftermath of 9/11, to Obama's surge and withdrawal, to Trump's negotiations with the Taliban, and Biden's final pullout is carefully reconstructed. Paul D. Miller identifies issues in US leadership, governance, military strategy, and policymaking that extend beyond the war in Afghanistan and highlight the existence of deeper problems in American foreign policy.
Les mer
1. Myths and mysteries of war in Afghanistan; 2. 2001: victory; 3. 2002–2003: neglect; 4. 2003–2005: refocus; 5. 2006: insurgency; 6. 2007–2008: counterinsurgency; 7. 2009: false start; 8. 2009: the hinge; 9. 2010–2011: surge; 10. 2010–2014: Negotiations; 11. 2012–2014: transition; 12. 2015–2016: Obama's forever war; 13. 2017–2018: Trump's forever war; 14. 2018–2020: Doha; 15. 2021: defeat; 16. Why did we lose?
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The first comprehensive narrative of the American war in Afghanistan drawn from the own words of policymakers.

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781009614375
Publisert
2025-10-07
Utgiver
Cambridge University Press; Cambridge University Press
Vekt
910 gr
Høyde
235 mm
Bredde
163 mm
Dybde
35 mm
Aldersnivå
G, 01
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
545

Forfatter

Om bidragsyterne

Paul D. Miller is Professor of the Practice of International Affairs at Georgetown University. He served as Director for Afghanistan and Pakistan on the National Security Council staff; worked as an intelligence analyst for the CIA; and served as a military intelligence officer in the US Army. He is a veteran of the war in Afghanistan and author of Just War and Ordered Liberty (Cambridge, 2021) and American Power and Liberal Order (2016).