This book examines how the Taliban were able to regain power in Afghanistan in 2021, some 20 years after the US intervention.
The volume presents an analysis of the factors that contributed to the Taliban’s ability to seize power following the withdrawal of the international coalition in August 2021, marking the end of 20 years of international engagement in the country. It is the result of a thorough review of research and policy publications over the course of 20 years, and is based on open-source data, including threat assessments of the Danish intelligence services. There are multiple explanations in academic and policy reports as to why the Taliban were able to take power despite the efforts expected to prevent this from happening. Based on existing research literature, analyses,
studies and reports, the book identifies five factors that are central to understanding the outcome. These factors offer overarching explanations for why the Taliban were able to regain power, with each encompassing different clusters of challenges that constituted central conditions for the Taliban takeover. Although the book is not about assigning blame,
the explanations provided here can contribute to further discussion about how to ensure the necessary knowledge base for future decisions when confronted with new emergencies calling for possible international intervention.
| Publisher | CRC Press |
| Author | Mona Kanwal |
| Country | USA |
| Publication Date | 02/03/2026 |
| Pages | 264 |
| Edition | first |
| Size | 14.53 x 2.34 x 21.67 cm |
| About the Author | Mona Kanwal Sheikh is senior researcher and head of Global Security and Worldviews at DIIS. She is an expert on Islamist and jihadist movements and has particularly studied the Taliban movement in Pakistan and Afghanistan since 2007. |
| Publisher Address | orders@taylorandfrancis.com |
| ISBN | ISBN 9781041100188 |