Asian Trips - The Punishment of Virtue: Inside Afghanistan After the Taliban

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Manufacturer: Penguin (Non-Classics)
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Average Customer Rating:     

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Binding: Paperback Dewey Decimal Number: 958.1047 EAN: 9780143112068 ISBN: 0143112066 Label: Penguin (Non-Classics) Manufacturer: Penguin (Non-Classics) Number Of Items: 1 Number Of Pages: 400 Publication Date: 2007-06-26 Publisher: Penguin (Non-Classics) Studio: Penguin (Non-Classics)
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Editorial Reviews:
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As a former star reporter for NPR, Sarah Chayes developed a devoted listenership for her on-site reports on conflicts around the world. In The Punishment of Virtue, she reveals the misguided U.S. policy in Afghanistan in the wake of the defeat of the Taliban, which has severely undermined the effort to build democracy and allowed corrupt tribal warlords back into positions of power and the Taliban to re-infiltrate the country. This is an eyeopening chronicle that highlights the often infuriating realities of a vital front in the war on terror, exposing deeper, fundamental problems with current U.S. strategy.
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Spotlight customer reviews:
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Customer Rating:      Summary: Insights, perspective & analysis of the Afghanistan slide back into chaos Comment: The author shares her insights into the problems that are cascading Afghanistan back into the arms of the Taliban and their allies. She has a unique perspective by virtue of her experience as a foreign correspondent and from living and working on the ground at the grassroots level with Afghan people.
This book is "must" reading for those leaders and workers who will soon be determining US policy and practices in formulating and implementing assistance to Afghanistan and its diverse peoples.
Sarah Chayes' is clearly an advocate, not a critic. Yet she is adamant and very specific in identifying the factors contributing to the growing resurgence of the Taliban and what is critically important to do to change that.
I highly recommend this book to every American who is concerned about helping Afghans and understanding why things have gone awry.
JW Barbee
Senior Advisor
Civil Society, Democracy & Development
Customer Rating:      Summary: Great Insight Comment: "The Punishment of Virtue" gives the reader great insight into the political conflicts that went on in Afghanistan during the early years of US occupation. It has much relevence to what is going on today. The book also provides a brief history of the country as well as some cultural background, good book!
Customer Rating:      Summary: Pulitzer! Comment: Starting and ending with the death of an honest Afgan, his friend Sarah Chayes, NPR reporter-turned Afgan activist, gives a well written, often warm, and often shocking account of the warlords, friends of Pakistan, and some-time friends of the US that made up Afganistan after the Taliban fled and before they had fully returned. The fact that a woman reporter could become friend and advisor to so many people in power in Afganistan - including, the president, several governors, several warlords, a chief of police (the murdered one), AND US Military Officers-helped to show the depth of leadership vacuum that existed. Nobody knew what to do, really, except the Warlords, and their occupation was making themselves rich and getting rid of their enemies, often with the help of the conned US Military, and usually with the help of Pakistan, who played both ends against the middle - the most shocking revelation. Well worth reading, and if as true and well-supported as it seems, worth a Pulitzer!
Customer Rating:      Summary: Fascinating insights Comment: Sarah Chayes, an NPR journalist and an historical scholar in her own right, provides an insider's look at Afghanistan before, during, and after the Taliban regime. Many provocative parallels can be drawn by the reader to the foreign policy problems facing the U.S. in Iraq, Afghanistan, and Pakistan today, for example: the primacy of tribal loyalties which supercede any national political identity, the misuse of American power to prop up questionable puppet governments, humanitarian aid which gets diverted by tribal elders to form their own militias, and the desperate economic instability which makes plundering and subsidy a way of life. In short, there appears to be an almost complete lack of cultural and anthropological understanding of the Middle East by U.S. policy makers. Whether you support or oppose the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, this treatise provides many fascinating insights into the Middle Eastern mind-set which could and should be applied by our government to the current conflicts. Highly recommended.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Interesting but poorly written Comment: An utterly confusing account of the war in Afghanistan. Its merit is that it gives the reader a probably realistic impression of the complexity and intransparency of Afghan politics and history...nothing is what it seems. Its flaws are chronological disorder, personal grudges and reporter-centrism...("look at me getting the real dope against all odds" and "look at me, the only sensitive observer").
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