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Lex Fridman · 2021-11-28 · 2h 42m

Robert Crews: Afghanistan, Taliban, Bin Laden, and War in the Middle East | Lex Fridman Podcast #244

Stanford historian Robert Crews argues the Afghanistan war was a mistake from day one and unpacks the Taliban, bin Laden, and the human cost of empire.

Robert Crews: Afghanistan, Taliban, Bin Laden, and War in the Middle East | Lex Fridman Podcast #244
The guest

Robert Crews — A historian at Stanford specializing in the history of Afghanistan, Russia, and Islam. He edits a journal on Afghanistan and is the author of books including Afghan Modern.

The gist

Lex Fridman talks with Stanford historian Robert Crews about why the 2001 U.S. invasion of Afghanistan was, in Crews' view, a panic-driven mistake that scapegoated a country with little real connection to al-Qaeda. Crews traces the region's history from the Soviet occupation through the rise of the mujahideen, bin Laden, and the Taliban, arguing bin Laden was a cosmopolitan political operator rather than a religious scholar. He describes the Taliban as a disciplined, largely Pashtun clerical-military movement skilled at media and diplomacy but incapable of governing, warning of looming economic collapse and mass starvation after the U.S. withdrawal. Throughout he stresses the humanity, cosmopolitanism, and wit of the Afghan people, and the leadership failures behind 20 years of war.

Big reveals

  • Crews answers flatly that invading Afghanistan in 2001 was a mistake, calling the Bush administration's response an act of panic and a crisis of legitimacy.
  • He emphasizes that the 9/11 muscle was Saudi, not Afghan, so attacking Afghanistan never geographically added up.
  • He claims U.S. authorities treated bin Laden's writings as taboo, so the public was kept from understanding what al-Qaeda was actually arguing.
  • Crews argues bin Laden's arguments were not fundamentally about Islam but about geopolitics, imperialism, inequality, environmentalism, and gender.
  • He says the Taliban now control all of Afghanistan but cannot rule, with the banking system frozen and starvation threatening hundreds of thousands.
  • He stresses the Taliban defeated NATO and the most powerful military alliance in history using light arms, mines, and suicide attacks.
  • Crews says the U.S. ran faked, fraudulent elections in Afghanistan as theater while really establishing control rather than building democracy.
  • He frames the final U.S. drone strike that killed an entire family, mostly children, as legalese turning a war crime into a non-crime.

Things worth remembering

  • 'Afghani' is the name of the currency, not the people; the respectful term is 'Afghan,' and using the wrong word offends.
  • The Soviet Red Army killed perhaps as many as two million Afghan civilians during its decade-long occupation.
  • Saudi Arabia used Afghanistan as a 'safety valve,' chartering jets and holding TV fundraisers to send would-be dissidents abroad to fight.
  • The Taliban once destroyed televisions and strung up videotapes from trees, but later became brilliant at using media and Hollywood-style drama.
  • Crews says he follows and is followed by senior Taliban leaders on Twitter.
  • Madeleine Albright said on 60 Minutes that the deaths of half a million Iraqi children were 'worth it' to contain Saddam Hussein.
  • Studies of attackers found no reliable profile; many had petty-crime backgrounds and were only nominally religious.
  • Afghanistan is the global center of opium production, feeding a worldwide market tied to the heroin and painkiller trade.
  • A documentary, Afghan Star, shows villagers hooking generators to televisions to watch and vote on an American Idol-style singing show.
  • Crews calls ISIS the best thing that ever happened to the Taliban, since posing as a counterterrorism force wins them international recognition.

Recommended in this episode

Books, products and media the guest or host genuinely endorsed here — with the buy link.

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Guest’s ownBook

Afghan Modern

Robert Crews

“one of the themes of of the book you know that you may or may not have read um you know afghan modern was about you know conceptualizing afghanistan as a cosmopolitan place” — Robert Crews 01:43:01
Find it on Amazon
RecommendedBook

global icons book (on bin Laden, Bob Marley, Tupac)

Jeremy Prestholdt

“there's a great book by um a great scholar at uc san diego um jeremy prestol who wrote a great book about global icons in which he has bin laden he has bob marley” — Robert Crews 00:56:30
Find it on Amazon
RecommendedMedia

Afghan Star

Havana Marking (inferred)

“there's a wonderful documentary called afghan star that i recommend to your listeners and viewers that it's about a singing show” — Robert Crews 01:50:14
Find it on Amazon
RecommendedMedia

Love Crimes of Kabul

Tanaz Eshaghian (inferred)

“there's another great documentary film called um love crimes of kabul which is a great snapshot of of the post 2000 world” — Robert Crews 02:28:57
Find it on Amazon