Taliban vs. the Corrupt Warlords: The Stark Reality of Afghanistan’s USAID Funds

Ahmad Fawad Arsala

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The Taliban’s policies regarding Afghan women’s education and employment are indefensible and must change to align with the religious and cultural norms of the Afghan people. However, when it comes to the use of USAID funds, the harsh truth is this: the Islamic Emirate has governed with far more efficiency and discipline than the kleptocratic warlords and corrupt technocrats who looted Afghanistan for two decades.

From 2001 to 2021, more than $105 billion in U.S. aid was funneled into Afghanistan under the Karzai and Ghani administrations. What does Afghanistan have to show for it? Ghost schools, nonexistent hospitals, and a failed military that collapsed in a matter of days. The funds meant for reconstruction and governance were siphoned off by warlords, bureaucrats, and their cronies—most of whom lived in Dubai mansions and padded Swiss bank accounts while ordinary Afghans starved. Corruption wasn’t just a byproduct of the previous regimes—it was the system itself.

And USAID was just a small part of this enormous misuse of funds. Billions more were funneled through military contracts, foreign NGOs, and other international programs, most of which ended up enriching corrupt officials and power brokers rather than benefiting the Afghan people. The so-called 20 years of democracy were, in reality, a two-decade-long feeding frenzy for Afghanistan’s elites and their foreign partners.

In stark contrast, from 2022 to 2024, the Taliban received $3.7 billion in USAID funds, a fraction of what was wasted under Karzai and Ghani. Yet, unlike their predecessors, the Taliban have thousands of completed projects to show for it, including roads, irrigation systems, and the ambitious Qosh Tapa Canal project, which promises to transform Afghanistan’s agricultural landscape. Infrastructure that had been nothing more than a mirage during the occupation is now materializing under a government that, despite its oppressive social policies, at least governs with a centralized authority and a clear vision.

The reason is simple: the Taliban, for all their flaws, operate under a rigid, top-down governance model that does not tolerate the blatant kleptocracy that defined the previous U.S.-backed governments. The Karzai and Ghani regimes were plagued by factionalism, with various ethnic and political groups treating state resources as personal property. The warlords and technocrats operated like mafia bosses, turning Afghanistan into a playground for corruption, where development funds were merely a means to sustain their power.

The Taliban’s rule is unquestionably brutal, and their medieval stance on women’s rights must be confronted. But their approach to governance—particularly in managing foreign aid—has demonstrated a level of order and efficiency that the so-called democratic governments utterly failed to achieve. The irony is undeniable: the very group that the U.S. spent trillions fighting has, in just two years, made better use of American aid money than the warlords and crooks who were once Washington’s darlings.

This is the harsh reality that policymakers must grapple with. While the world must continue pressuring the Taliban to respect fundamental human rights, particularly those of Afghan women, the lesson from the past two decades is clear: a corrupt, fragmented government is just as damaging—if not more so—than an authoritarian one. The West bet on the wrong horse for 20 years. Now, Afghanistan is left to rebuild itself under those it once fought, and ironically, they are proving far more competent in at least one crucial aspect—governance.

A Nation at the Crossroads: Seizing the Moment for Change in Afghanistan

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