By CARLOTTA GALL MARCH 19, 2014
Shortly after the Sept. 11 attacks, I went to live and report for The New York
Times in Afghanistan. I would spend most of the next 12 years there, following
the overthrow of the Taliban, feeling the excitement of the freedom and
prosperity that was promised in its wake and then watching the gradual
dissolution of that hope. A new Constitution and two rounds of elections did
not improve the lives of ordinary Afghans; the Taliban regrouped and found increasing
numbers of supporters for their guerrilla actions; by 2006, as they mounted an
ambitious offensive to retake southern Afghanistan and unleashed more than a
hundred suicide bombers, it was clear that a deadly and determined opponent was
growing in strength, not losing it. As I toured the bomb sites and
battlegrounds of the Taliban resurgence, Afghans kept telling me the same
thing: The organizers of the insurgency were in Pakistan, specifically in the
western district of Quetta. Police investigators were finding that many of the
bombers, too, were coming from Pakistan……To Read More….
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