
By Uzma Ehtasham
The image is an uncomfortable one for Washington: American weapons, bought with US taxpayers’ money and intended to secure a fragile republic, now forming the backbone of the Taliban’s security forces. A new report by the Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction lays out this reality in forensic detail, and in doing so casts a long, unforgiving shadow over two decades of US engagement in Afghanistan. What was meant to build stability has instead strengthened the coercive power of a regime the United States spent 20 years fighting. Sigar’s latest assessment, a 137-page audit of America’s longest war, reads less like a routine watchdog report and more like a postmortem.
Between 2002 and 2021, the United States poured an estimated $145bn into Afghanistan’s reconstruction, the largest share of it aimed at building a modern security sector capable of defending a democratic state. The logic was clear enough: a trained army and police force, equipped with advanced hardware, would underpin political order and prevent a return to extremism. The reality that followed could hardly be further from that ambition. When the Afghan government collapsed in August 2021 and international forces withdrew in haste, the infrastructure of that security project was left behind. The US Department of Defense now acknowledges that equipment worth around $7.1bn remained in Afghanistan.
The scale of the inventory is striking: tens of thousands of vehicles, more than 427,000 small arms, night-vision equipment and over 160 aircraft. These were not symbolic leftovers but the core assets of a national army. Today, they have been absorbed into the Taliban’s security apparatus, enhancing its ability to police, intimidate and project force. This outcome was not merely the result of battlefield defeat; it was the culmination of years of structural weakness. Sigar’s report underscores how American strategy consistently prioritized speed over sustainability. Afghan forces were trained to operate sophisticated equipment that depended on US logistics, maintenance and air support.
When those supports vanished, so did the army’s capacity to function. The collapse was rapid not because Afghan soldiers lacked courage, but because the system built around them was never designed to stand on its own. The bitter irony is that the Taliban, a movement once defined by its rejection of modern state institutions, has inherited a ready-made security toolkit. Videos and images of Taliban fighters patrolling cities in armored vehicles, carrying advanced rifles and using night-vision goggles have become emblematic of the post-withdrawal order. For Afghans living under Taliban rule, this is not an abstract policy failure but a daily, physical presence.
The tools of authority that now enforce edicts on dress, speech and assembly are the remnants of a war that promised liberation and ended in abandonment. Sigar’s findings also expose a deeper accountability gap. For years, warning signs were visible. Corruption hollowed out Afghan institutions, inflated troop numbers and diverted resources. Successive US administrations measured progress through optimistic metrics that masked systemic fragility. Yet funding continued to flow, driven by the political need to show momentum rather than the strategic need to ensure durability. When the end came, there was no realistic plan to secure or disable the vast arsenal left behind.
The consequences extend beyond Afghanistan’s borders. A Taliban regime equipped with advanced military hardware alters regional calculations. While much of the equipment may degrade over time without proper maintenance, its immediate impact is undeniable. It bolsters the Taliban’s internal control and complicates efforts by neighboring states and international actors to pressure the regime on human rights or counterterrorism. The message it sends is troubling: even a defeated insurgency can emerge from a long war better armed than before. For the United States, the report is a stark reminder that military spending, however vast, cannot substitute for political legitimacy or institutional resilience.
The $145bn invested in reconstruction was not simply wasted; it was misdirected, shaped by assumptions that ignored Afghanistan’s social and political realities. The result is not only a failure to build democracy but the empowerment of an authoritarian system that uses American-made weapons to entrench itself. There is also a moral dimension that cannot be ignored. Afghans who believed in the promises of international support now live under a regime strengthened by that same support’s detritus. Women barred from education, journalists silenced and dissent crushed face security forces whose capacity is rooted in foreign largesse.
This is the human cost behind the balance sheets and inventories, a reminder that policy failures reverberate through ordinary lives long after officials move on. The Sigar report does not argue that the outcome was inevitable. Rather, it suggests that choices mattered at every stage: the decision to build a force dependent on external support, the reluctance to confront corruption decisively, the haste of withdrawal without securing sensitive equipment. Each choice narrowed the range of possible endings, until the worst became unavoidable. As Washington debates future engagements abroad, Afghanistan offers a cautionary tale. Nation-building through military means, without deep investment in governance and social trust, is a fragile enterprise.
(The writer is a public health professional, journalist, and possesses expertise in health communication, having keen interest in national and international affairs, can be reached at uzma@metro-morning.com)

