KUOW Program Archive
5/3/2006 9:00
am
Afghanistan's Future
RealAudio
MP3
It's been four years since the fall of the Taliban regime in Afghanistan. But
today an insurgency is raging, marked by roadside bombings and suicide attacks
by the Taliban and other militants. Is the country fracturing along ethnic and
political lines? On the military front, NATO plans to double its peacekeeping
operations. Britain, Canada and the Netherlands are moving to replace U.S.
forces in the South. Meanwhile, the U.S. is planning to reduce troop levels from
19,000 to 16,500 this year. What is the U.S. mission in Afghanistan today? When
will it be accomplished?
Guests:
Larry P. Goodson holds the General
Dwight D. Eisenhower Chair of National Security at the US Army War College,
where he also serves as professor of Middle East Studies in the Department of
National Security and Strategy. Between March-August 2004, he was a U.S. Central
Command (CENTCOM) Fellow, and served as advisor to General John Abizaid, the
CENTCOM Commander.
Nazif Shahrani an Afghan-American and professor of
anthropology at Indiana University who received his Ph.D from the University of
Washington in 1976. He is also a trustee of the new American University of
Afghanistan and recently in Kabul.
Related Links:
'Afghanistan:
The Long Road Ahead,' The Washington Post
'On
Tape, Bin Laden Warns of Long War,' The Washington Post
'Sen.
Clinton sees growing role for civilians in military efforts,' Newsday
'The Outlaw World,' The New
York Review of Books
'Picking up the
Pieces,' Hoover Digest