Taliban Takeover : Why Afghan Forces Melted So Quickly?
June 4, 2026
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Taliban Takeover : Why Afghan Forces Melted So Quickly?

Manish RaiManish Rai
Aug 28, 2021, 12:00 am IST
in World
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A Talibani terrorist standing outside the Interior Ministry in Kabul, Afghanistan, August 16, 2021

A Talibani terrorist standing outside the Interior Ministry in Kabul, Afghanistan, August 16, 2021

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The United States has spent around $88 billion on Afghan security forces since 2001, still, theyout to be a huge disappointment. This astonishing military victory of the Taliban is more because of the weakness of Afghan forces rather than its strengths

 

The Taliban now control almost the whole of Afghanistan, including the capital city, Kabul, almost two decades since the United States (US) troops drove them out. It was widely expected that the Taliban will make significant territorial gains after the US complete withdrawal. But no one expected that it would happen at that fast pace, and 3,00,000 plus Afghan forces will melt so quickly in front of advancing Taliban forces. Taliban followed a well-calibrated military strategy. They started off an offensive by seizing large tracts of rural territory and then capturing key border crossings; at last, they started to besiege provincial capitals. But in this process, the Taliban didn’t encounter any stiff resistance from the Afghan government forces. The Taliban is much stronger now than at any point since it was ousted in 2001. Currently, Taliban forces number up to eighty-five thousand full-time fighters. But a valid question arises as to why numerically superior and more resourceful Afghan forces were not able to hold the Taliban. At many places, Afghan Army commanders contacted the Taliban and negotiated a safe passage for them and handed over their equipment and armaments to the Taliban. The US has spent around $88 billion on Afghan security forces since 2001, still, they turned out to be a huge disappointment. This astonishing military victory of the Taliban is more because of the weakness of Afghan forces rather than its strengths. Let’s have a look at some factors responsible for  this outcome.

Highly Demoralised: Afghan military that was heavily dependent on US support for airpower, intelligence, logistics, planning, and other vital enablers over the past two decades was fatally demoralised by the US decision to abandon it. In recent months, the Afghan military was finding it very hard to provide vital supplies such as food and ammunition to outposts scattered around the country. Some Afghan units, particularly the elite special forces commandos, fought hard nearly to the end. But getting ominous indication, most troops chose to cut deals with the Taliban, surrender, or melt away rather than risk their lives for a hopeless cause.

Corruption: Some analysts blame the military apparatus’s impotence on the institution’s established corruption. Public opinion and observers recognise the Army as a deeply corrupt and inept organisation, even lacking to provide enough food, ammunition, and proper clothing to its servicemen. Such ineptitude is the main reason for emboldening the Taliban to make advances against the government forces across the country and carry out fatal assaults against them and the public. 

Sectarian composition of Armed Forces: The Tajiks occupy more top posts than their population against other ethnic groups. For example, the presence of the Hazaras and other ethnic groups are smaller in size compared to their population. Pashtuns are also included, but many Pashtun personnel are from the eastern areas of the country. Only a small number of the southern Pashtuns who make up an ideological and ethnic base of Taliban are included in the armed forces. Such an imbalance created mistrust and misunderstanding among different sectarian groups towards the army, making it look like a foreign force.

Some analysts blame the military apparatus’s impotence on the institution’s established corruption. Public opinion and observers recognise the Army as a deeply corrupt and inept organisation, even lacking to provide enough food, ammunition, and proper clothing to its servicemen

No clear military Strategy: The country’s security apparatus as a complex lacked security and strategic analysts to lay the foundation of a combat policy ahead of the Afghan policymakers. To press forward against the militants using a well-studied defence programme. Rather than just focusing on responding to insurgent’s attacks, Afghan military strategists could have chalked out a proactive strategy that engages the enemy in their stronghold. 

Weak Intelligence: Afghan forces required a robust intelligence collection and targeting capability to counter the reinvigorated Taliban insurgency. Afghanistan intelligence agency, i.e. National Directorate of Security (NDS), not only suffered from an inability to share and disseminate actionable intelligence. But also is plagued by the controversy of favoritism and nepotism and its ethnic composition dominated by Panjshiris Tajiks from Panjshir a group affiliated with the former Northern Alliance. The NDS ethnic composition posed challenges to the intelligence agency’s ability to infiltrate the Pashtun groups most likely affiliated with the continued insurgency in Afghanistan. Also, no attention was paid to increase more advanced voice intercept capabilities and cross-communication between the National Directorate of Security (NDS) and security forces in the field.

Even the fate of the previous Afghan Army under former President Mohammed Najibullah was better than the current one. Najibullah’s forces disintegrated due to deep ethnic and factional divisions, the absence of good leadership, and declining financial and technical support from the Soviet Union. But that downfall of forces took years, but the current disaster even didn’t take months to happen. Certainly, the US pullout brutally exposed the shortcomings of the Afghan troops and precipitated the military’s collapse. But also timely corrective steps were not taken by the Afghan military leadership; hence government forces met with such a disgraceful end. 

 

Manish Rai
Manish Rai
The writer is a Political Analyst for West Asia and Af-Pak Region. [Read more]
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