The Afghan National Defense and Security Forces (ANDSF) were the official military, paramilitary, and police organizations of the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan, established in the early 2000s following the U.S.-led overthrow of the Taliban regime to counter insurgency and maintain national stability until their effective dissolution in August 2021.[1]
Comprised principally of the Afghan National Army (ANA), Afghan National Police (ANP), Afghan Air Force (AAF), and National Directorate of Security (NDS), the ANDSF aimed to field approximately 352,000 personnel at peak authorization, with the ANA forming the core combat element structured into corps, brigades, and specialized units.[1][2] Primarily funded and equipped by the United States through the Afghanistan Security Forces Fund, which disbursed over $88 billion from 2002 to 2021, the forces depended heavily on foreign sustainment for logistics, air support, and operational enablers.[3]
Despite conducting counterinsurgency operations that, with NATO assistance, temporarily recaptured territory from Taliban control in surges like 2010-2011, the ANDSF exhibited chronic deficiencies including widespread corruption, ethnic factionalism, leadership failures, and attrition rates exceeding 20 percent annually, rendering it incapable of independent nationwide security.[1][4] The rapid collapse in 2021, marked by mass surrenders and abandonments of equipment as Taliban offensives met negligible resistance post-U.S. withdrawal, underscored these structural weaknesses and the illusory nature of reported capabilities inflated by metrics like "district stability."[5][6][7]
History
Origins and Initial Formation (2001–2005)
The U.S.-led Operation Enduring Freedom toppled the Taliban regime by early December 2001, creating a security vacuum filled primarily by coalition forces and irregular militias from the Northern Alliance and other factions. The Bonn Agreement, signed on December 5, 2001, by Afghan delegates under UN auspices, established the Afghan Interim Authority effective December 22 and mandated the creation of unified national security forces to replace factional armies. Its provisions required all mujahidin, Afghan armed forces, and armed groups to integrate under the interim government's command and control, with the demobilization of non-integrated militias, while requesting international assistance to form a new Afghan National Army and Afghan National Police.[8]The Afghan National Army's formation fell under U.S. leadership, with the establishment of the Office of Military Cooperation-Afghanistan (OMC-A) in early 2002 to coordinate recruitment, training, and equipping. Training began in April 2002 at the Kabul Military Training Center, initially using U.S. Special Forces from the 1st Battalion, 3rd Special Forces Group to instruct 500 recruits in basic infantry skills, emphasizing ethnic balance to mitigate civil war-era divisions. The first operational ANA company deployed in September 2002 for internal security duties, followed by the graduation of the inaugural kandak (light infantrybattalion) in April 2003, marking the shift from zero to a nascent conventional force capable of limited independent operations.[9][10]Germany assumed lead-nation responsibility for Afghan National Police reform under the Bonn framework, targeting restructuring of the Ministry of Interior and basic training for a 50,000-strong force. A nationaltraining academy opened in Kabul in 2002, but substantive centralized programs lagged until May 2003, when a U.S.-supported initiative accelerated vetting and instruction amid rising instability. By late 2005, approximately 25,000 police had received basic training, though persistent issues like low literacy rates among recruits, inadequate vetting, and equipment shortages limited effectiveness, with U.S. funding and mentors supplementing German efforts from mid-2003 onward.[8][11][12]Initial ANSF development prioritized rapid fielding over rigorous standards, reflecting causal pressures from ongoing factional violence and Taliban remnants, but faced empirical hurdles including high desertion rates (up to 50% in early ANA cohorts due to pay delays and harsh conditions) and incomplete militia disarmament, as warlord loyalty programs deferred full integration. By December 2005, the ANA comprised about 27,000 personnel across four corps, while police forces hovered around 40,000 nominally trained but operationally fragmented.[12][13]
Expansion Under NATO Training (2006–2014)
In April 2006, the Combined Security Transition Command–Afghanistan (CSTC-A) was established to assume primary responsibility for developing the Afghan National Army (ANA) and Afghan National Police (ANP), marking a shift toward more structured NATO-led expansion efforts following initial U.S.-centric formation. At the time, the ANA numbered approximately 26,000 personnel, while the ANP stood at around 82,000 after U.S. pressure prompted recruitment drives. CSTC-A focused on building traininginfrastructure, such as expanding the Kabul Military Training Center to produce five kandaks (battalions) annually, and initiated programs to address foundational deficiencies like widespread illiteracy, estimated at 80% in the ANA.[1]The expansion accelerated after the March 2009 Obama administration strategy, which set an Afghan National Defense and Security Forces (ANDSF) end-strength target of 352,000—comprising 195,000 for the ANA (including air corps) and 157,000 for the ANP—amid the U.S. troop surge to counter Taliban gains. In November 2009, the NATO Training Mission–Afghanistan (NTM-A) was activated to consolidate and standardize multinational training, advising, and equipping efforts across 38 nations, merging with CSTC-A operations and becoming fully operational by February 2010 under U.S. Lt. Gen. William Caldwell. NTM-A emphasized higher-level training for leadership, logistics, and specialized units, including embedded training teams that partnered with Afghan units to improve combat readiness. By July 2008, ANA growth had been approved to reach 134,000, with fielded kandaks increasing from 117 to 179 by the early 2010s.[1][14][15]Personnel targets were largely met on paper: the ANA achieved its 195,000 strength in April 2012, ahead of the October deadline, while the ANP reached 149,208 by mid-2012 and was projected to hit 157,000 by October. Overall ANDSF numbers peaked near the 352,000 authorized level by 2013, with ANA at 185,817 and ANP at 152,340 in September. The Afghan Air Force grew to 5,728 personnel and 98 aircraft by 2012, supported by NATO's Air Training Command. These gains enabled ANSF to lead 40% of conventional operations and provide security for over 50% of the population by early 2012. However, actual operational strength was often lower due to systemic issues like payroll fraud and "ghost soldiers," as later audits revealed inflated reporting.[14][1]Training curricula evolved to include 64 hours of literacy instruction added to basic warrior training in 2009, shortening overall ANA basic training from 14 weeks to 10 while investing $200 million in literacy programs that reached 224,826 personnel at basic levels by 2013. The Focused DistrictDevelopment program for ANP, launched in 2008, aimed to cycle police through 5–9 week training for civilian policing skills, though only 65 of 365 districts were completed by 2011 due to delays. Equipment provision advanced via the 2006 NATO Equipment Donation Programme and the 2007 ANA Trust Fund, which raised over €489 million by 2012 for uniforms, ammunition, and sustainment; the NATO-Russia Council Helicopter Trust Fund (2011) further aided air force maintenance. Afghan Special Forces received 16-week specialized training, enhancing elite capabilities.[1][14]Despite numerical expansion, challenges persisted, including high attrition rates—24% annually for the ANA (2–3% monthly, exceeding the 1.4% goal) and 20% for the ANP—driven by desertions, casualties, and absent-without-leave issues, which undermined sustainability. Equipment shortages remained acute, with ANP units in 2005 possessing less than 15% of required weapons, a gap that lingered into the 2010s despite donations. Trainer shortages hampered NTM-A, with only 1,810 of 4,083 required personnel in early 2010. Corruption, poor leadership, and dependency on NATO logistics further eroded effectiveness, as ANSF casualty rates rose and insider attacks prompted training suspensions by 2012. By late 2014, as ISAF transitioned, planned reductions to 228,500 ANDSF reflected recognition of these overextensions.[1][14]
Transition and Resolute Support Phase (2015–2020)
In January 2015, NATO transitioned from the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) combat mission to the Resolute Support Mission (RSM), a non-combat advisory effort comprising approximately 13,000 troops from 39 nations focused on training, advising, and assisting the Afghan National Defense and Security Forces (ANDSF) to achieve self-sustaining security capabilities.[16][17] This shift formalized the ANDSF's lead role in combat operations nationwide, following the completion of the Inteqal transition process in 2014, whereby Afghan forces assumed responsibility for security across all provinces.[18] RSM emphasized institutional capacity building at the Afghan Ministry of Defense (MoD) and Ministry of Interior (MoI), alongside tactical advising at corps and brigade levels, with the goal of enabling ANDSF to independently counter insurgency threats without indefinite foreign combat support.[19]The ANDSF maintained an authorized end-strength of approximately 352,000 personnel during this period, including 195,000 for the Afghan National Army (ANA), 157,000 for the Afghan National Police (ANP), and smaller contingents for air and special forces, funded largely by U.S. contributions exceeding $80 billion since 2002.[1] RSM advisors embedded with ANDSF units facilitated operational planning and leadership development, contributing to ANDSF conducting over 90% of independent operations by 2017, including offensives against Taliban strongholds in Helmand and Kunduz provinces.[19] However, actual assigned strength consistently fell short of targets, averaging 10-20% below authorized levels due to recruitment shortfalls and high turnover, with U.S. Department of Defense assessments noting persistent gaps in junior officer and non-commissioned officer cadres critical for unit cohesion.[1]Persistent challenges undermined ANDSF effectiveness, including annual attrition rates of 20-30% driven by desertions, casualties, and non-reenlistment, necessitating the replacement of roughly one-third of ANA personnel in 2015 alone.[20] Casualties were severe, with over 28,500 ANDSF members killed between 2015 and mid-2018, exacerbating morale issues and operational fatigue amid an insurgency that controlled or contested up to 50% of districts by 2020.[21] Systemic corruption, including "ghost soldier" payroll fraud siphoning up to 40% of salaries in some units, eroded trust and sustainment, as documented in Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction (SIGAR) audits revealing inadequate MoD oversight and ethnic-based patronage in promotions.[1] Logistical dependencies on U.S. contractors for fuel, maintenance, and close air support persisted, with ANDSF aviation assets operating at 20-30% readiness due to maintenance shortfalls.[1]By 2020, U.S. troop levels under RSM had drawn down to 8,600, aligning with the U.S.-Taliban Doha Agreement signed February 29, 2020, which mandated full NATO withdrawal by May 2021 contingent on Taliban commitments.[19] While RSM improved ANDSF tactical proficiency in partnered operations, strategic assessments highlighted failures in fostering self-reliant institutions, as Taliban territorial gains accelerated and ANDSF units increasingly avoided contested areas without external enablers, foreshadowing vulnerabilities exposed in subsequent years.[1] SIGAR evaluations attributed these shortcomings to over-reliance on quantitative metrics like force size over qualitative reforms in leadership and accountability, amid political instability following the disputed 2019 presidential election.[5]
Decline and Prelude to Collapse (2021)
On April 14, 2021, U.S. President Joe Biden announced the completion of the American military withdrawal from Afghanistan by September 11, 2021, accelerating the drawdown initiated under the 2020 U.S.-Taliban agreement.[5] This decision removed critical enablers for the Afghan National Defense and Security Forces (ANDSF), including close air support, intelligence, surveillance, reconnaissance, logistics contractors, and maintenance for equipment, upon which the ANDSF had become heavily dependent after two decades of international assistance totaling $88.6 billion in security sector funding.[5][6] The Taliban launched a nationwide offensive on May 1, 2021, coinciding with the U.S. evacuation of Bagram Airfield by early July, exploiting the ANDSF's defensive posture and leading to the rapid loss of district centers.[6] By April 2021, the ANDSF effectively controlled only 129 of Afghanistan's 407 districts, a 40% decline from prior assessments, signaling pre-existing vulnerabilities amplified by the withdrawal.[6]The loss of U.S. support precipitated an immediate degradation in ANDSF operational capacity. Afghan Air Force helicopter readiness, for instance, fell from 77% for UH-60 Black Hawks in April-May 2021 to 39% by June, curtailing close air support essential for ground operations.[6]Logistics breakdowns ensued without the 17,000 contractors who previously handled sustainment, resulting in fuel shortages, unpaid salaries, and equipment immobility across units.[22] SIGAR assessments identified the U.S. withdrawal as the single most important factor in the ANDSF collapse, as it severed the "oxygen" of external sustainment, leaving forces unable to conduct independent maneuver warfare or hold contested terrain.[23]Taliban forces, unburdened by similar dependencies, advanced methodically, capturing over half of Afghanistan's 419 districts by August 1, 2021, often through encirclement rather than direct assault.[5]Internal ANDSF weaknesses, rooted in systemic corruption and leadership failures, accelerated the decline. Endemic graft, including "ghost soldiers" inflating authorized strength to 352,000 while actual deployable forces numbered far fewer, eroded unit cohesion and resource allocation, with commanders embezzling fuel and supplies.[24][5] President Ashraf Ghani's ethnic favoritism in appointments—prioritizing Pashtun loyalists—and micromanagement isolated military planners, fostering distrust among non-Pashtun units and preventing adaptive strategies.[24] Low morale, compounded by perceived abandonment and Talibanpropaganda promising amnesty, triggered mass desertions and negotiated surrenders; for example, 200 soldiers surrendered in Baghlan Province in May 2021, with similar pacts proliferating as provincial capitals like Kandahar and Herat fell on August 12-13.[6][5] Elite units, such as commandos, were overextended without rotation, suffering disproportionate casualties and contributing to cascading failures.[6]The prelude culminated in total disintegration by mid-August 2021, as ANDSF units fragmented without a coherent defense plan, allowing Taliban forces to seize four provincial capitals in 24 hours ending August 14.[6] Ghani fled Kabul on August 15, 2021, amid the government's collapse, exposing the ANDSF's inability to transition to self-reliance despite years of training.[5] Analyses from SIGAR and military observers attribute the speed not merely to numerical inferiority—Taliban fighters numbered around 75,000—but to the interplay of external withdrawal shocks and endogenous rot, rendering the forces psychologically defeated before major kinetic engagements.[22][5]
Organization and Components
Afghan National Army (ANA)
The Afghan National Army (ANA) formed the core land warfare component of the Afghan National Defense and Security Forces, tasked with conducting offensive operations against insurgents, securing key terrain, and supporting governance in contested areas from its establishment in December 2002 until the rapid Taliban offensive in August 2021.[1] Modeled on a light infantry force with U.S. and NATO advisory input via the Combined Security Transition Command–Afghanistan, the ANA prioritized rapid mobilization over heavy mechanization, drawing initial recruits from demobilized militias while enforcing an all-volunteer policy to foster national cohesion.[1] By 2011, its authorized strength stabilized at approximately 195,000 personnel, including combat, support, and training elements, though effective combat power was eroded by factors such as 2–3% monthly attrition rates and up to 30,000 "ghost soldiers" on payrolls as identified in audits through 2017.[1][25]Overall command fell under the Ministry of Defense and General Staff in Kabul, with operational control decentralized to regional corps headquarters aligned to police zones for integrated security.[1] The ANA organized into six maneuver corps and the 111th Capital Division by 2015, each comprising 2–3 brigades of 4,000–5,000 troops; brigades further divided into 4–6 kandaks (battalion equivalents of ~600 soldiers) focused on infantry, plus dedicated combat support kandaks for artillery, engineers, and intelligence, and combat service support kandaks for logistics and medical aid.[26][1]
The ANA Special Operations Command (ANASOC), established April 7, 2011, augmented conventional units with elite capabilities, growing to ~10,700 personnel by mid-2015 across two commando brigades, one special forces brigade, and nine kandaks for direct action, raids, and advising local forces.[1] Enabler components included limited armor (e.g., Soviet-era T-55/T-62 tanks and U.S.-supplied M1117 ASVs), field artillery (D-30 howitzers), and engineer units, but sustainment relied heavily on foreign contractors for maintenance.[1]Recruitment quotas aimed for ethnic proportionality—40–45% Pashtun, 30–35% Tajik, 10% Hazara, 10% Uzbek, and smaller minorities—to counter mujahedeen-era factionalism, with U.S. vetting of officers to enforce balance.[1] Initial dominance by Tajik officers from northern networks persisted despite reforms, contributing to command inefficiencies and uneven Pashtun enlistment from Taliban-stronghold south, as documented in Ministry of Defense personnel reviews through 2014.[1] Reserve battalions, numbering ~600 per major unit by 2016, supplemented active forces but suffered similar leadership and morale deficits.[1]
Afghan National Police (ANP) and Local Forces
The Afghan National Police (ANP) operated under the Ministry of Interior Affairs and comprised the primary law enforcement and internal security apparatus of the Afghan government from 2002 until the 2021 collapse. Authorized at 157,000 personnel by 2011, the ANP included the Afghan Uniformed Police for urban and district-level policing, Afghan Border Police for frontier security, Afghan National Civil Order Police (ANCOP) as a paramilitary rapid-response force, and specialized units like counternarcotics and family response teams.[1] An additional ~30,000 Afghan Local Police (ALP), community-based militias established in 2010 under village stability operations, supplemented the ANP in rural areas to counter Taliban influence through local recruitment and self-defense roles.[1][2] By 2020, actual ANP strength fell short of authorized levels due to attrition and ghost payrolls, with U.S. assessments estimating overall Afghan security forces at 82% of end-strength targets.[25]Training for ANP recruits, initially led by Germany from 2002 and later dominated by U.S. contractors like DynCorp, emphasized basic patrolman courses lasting 8 weeks by 2011, including 266 hours of instruction plus literacy training amid 70-90% illiteracy rates.[1] ALP training was abbreviated to 3-4 weeks, focusing on village-level defense without rigorous vetting, which contributed to inconsistent capabilities.[1] International mentors shifted ANP doctrine toward counterinsurgency support rather than community policing, deploying embedded teams that prioritized militarized tactics over rule-of-law development.[27] Despite $90 billion in U.S. security assistance since 2002, sustainment issues persisted, including equipment shortages (e.g., units with under 15% of required weapons in 2005) and dependency on U.S. logistics.[1][23]Corruption permeated the ANP, with the Ministry of Interior labeled the "heart of corruption" by President Ghani in 2017, manifesting in ghost personnel (e.g., only 76% verified in 2007 audits), extortion, and fuel theft that inflated payrolls by over $300 million annually in unaccounted U.S. funds.[1] ALP units faced similar problems, including bribery demands and human rights abuses like arbitrary arrests, as documented in U.S. audits revealing fraud in nearly $500 million of funding.[28]Attrition rates averaged 25% annually, driven by low morale, drug use, and casualties exceeding 5,500 ANDSF deaths in early 2016 alone.[1] These factors eroded effectiveness, with ANP often confined to static checkpoints vulnerable to Taliban encirclement rather than proactive operations.[23]In the lead-up to collapse, the ANP and ALP disintegrated rapidly after the U.S. withdrawal in July 2021, exacerbated by exclusion from U.S.-Taliban talks that signaled abandonment and halted critical enablers like airstrikes and contractor sustainment.[5][23] Ghost police inflated reported strengths (e.g., 14,000 claimed in Kandahar but only 700 present), while leadership micromanagement and unpaid salaries post-collapse prompted mass desertions and surrenders.[5] By August 15, 2021, Taliban forces controlled half of Afghanistan's districts, overwhelming under-resourced ANP units that lacked independent mobility or resupply.[5] SIGAR evaluations attribute the failure primarily to U.S. withdrawal timing but underscore endogenous issues like corruption and overreliance on external support as causal enablers of vulnerability.[23][5]
Afghan Air Force (AAF) and Special Operations
The Afghan Air Force (AAF), reestablished after the 2001 fall of the Taliban regime, depended on extensive U.S. funding and advisory support to rebuild capabilities in troop transport, close air support, and reconnaissance. By late 2020, its inventory included 167 aircraft—primarily UH-60 Black Hawk utility helicopters (over 50 delivered), MD-530F light scout-attack helicopters (around 60), A-29 Super Tucano light attack aircraft (20+ operational), and fixed-wing assets such as C-208 Caravans, PC-12s for surveillance, and a handful of C-130 Hercules transports—of which 136 were classified as usable.[29][30] The Special Mission Wing (SMW), an AAF subunit dedicated to intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance (ISR) for special operations, operated specialized platforms including additional PC-12s and Mi-17 helicopters, with U.S. investments totaling over $8.5 billion since 2010 to procure, train, and sustain these assets.[30]Sustainment proved a core weakness, as the AAF maintained only legacy Soviet-era Mi-17s at 95% proficiency while achieving 40% or lower independent maintenance rates for U.S.-supplied platforms like the UH-60 and A-29, relying instead on contractor logistics support funded at $576 million in FY2020 alone.[30] Personnel shortages compounded issues, with 7,505 assigned against 8,071 authorized for the AAF and even lower fill rates for the SMW's 1,216 slots, alongside systemic corruption such as fuel siphoning and "ghost" pilots inflating rosters to divert salaries.[30] These factors yielded inconsistent operational output, with the AAF logging thousands of sorties annually but often misallocating resources due to poor leadership and tactical overuse of aircraft in non-combat roles.[31]In the August 2021 Taliban advance, the AAF disintegrated amid severed U.S. enablers like real-time intelligence and contracting, resulting in pilot mutinies, hasty evacuations of dozens of aircraft to Uzbekistan and Tajikistan, and abandonment of most of the fleet at Afghan bases—leaving behind equipment valued in billions that the Taliban later attempted, with limited success, to operate or cannibalize.[31][32]The special operations element of Afghan National Security Forces centered on the Afghan National Army Special Operations Command (ANASOC), activated in 2011 under Ministry of Defense oversight to direct elite counterinsurgency and direct-action missions. ANASOC structured around two special operations brigades (including the 1st Special Forces Brigade's commando kandaks), a military intelligence kandak, and a national strategic reserve kandak, totaling several thousand personnel trained by U.S. Special Operations Joint Task Force-Afghanistan in tactics like raids, village stability operations, and high-value target captures.[33][34]ANASOC units outperformed conventional forces, sustaining lower attrition (under 1% monthly desertion in peak years versus 2-3% army-wide) and executing successful independent operations, such as clearing insurgent strongholds, due to rigorous selection, better pay, and U.S.-provided equipment like specialized weapons and vehicles.[33][35] Expansion to meet demand, however, strained quality control and logistics, with units overburdened by routine security tasks originally intended for regular troops, eroding specialized focus.[35]Ultimately, ANASOC's dependence on AAF close air support, national logistics, and centralized command—none of which endured the 2021 unraveling—led to rapid dispersal; isolated commando holds in provincial capitals gave way to surrenders as ammunition dwindled and higher echelons collapsed, underscoring the fragility of component-specific excellence amid holistic institutional decay.[36][32]
Intelligence and Support Elements
The primary intelligence component of the Afghan National Security Forces (ANSF) was the National Directorate of Security (NDS), Afghanistan's chief intelligence and internal security agency. Formed in 2002 following the U.S.-led invasion to replace the Soviet-era KHAD, the NDS operated with independent command authority, reporting directly to the president rather than through the Ministries of Defense or Interior. Its core functions encompassed human intelligence collection, counterterrorism operations, counterintelligence, and investigations into threats to national stability, including insurgent networks and organized crime. The agency maintained provincial stations and specialized units for surveillance, detention, and rendition, often conducting joint operations with ANSF combat elements.[37]Despite significant U.S. and NATO investment—exceeding $1 billion annually by the late 2010s for training, equipment, and technical assistance—the NDS exhibited structural weaknesses that limited its effectiveness. Assessments highlighted deficiencies in strategic-level analysis, overreliance on tactical human intelligence from paid informants vulnerable to Taliban double-agents, and inadequate technological capabilities like signals intelligence. By 2019, the NDS struggled with persistent gaps in high-value targeting and predictive intelligence, exacerbated by internal corruption, ethnic factionalism, and infiltration; for instance, Taliban operatives reportedly compromised NDS facilities, leading to assassinations of key personnel. These issues were compounded by human rights concerns, including documented cases of arbitrary detentions and torture in NDS facilities, which eroded public trust and recruitment quality. In the prelude to the 2021 collapse, NDS warnings of Taliban advances were dismissed by political leadership, underscoring failures in intelligence-policy integration.[38][39]ANSF support elements, distinct from core combat and police units, included logistics, medical, engineering, and sustainment commands primarily aligned under the Afghan National Army (ANA) and Ministry of Defense. The ANA's National Logistics Command, established around 2010 with NATO mentoring, was tasked with managing supply chains, fuel distribution, vehicle maintenance, and infrastructure repair across 34 provinces, aiming for self-sufficiency by 2017. However, these units suffered from systemic mismanagement: U.S. audits revealed up to 40% of fuel allocations diverted through corruption, while "ghost" personnel inflated payrolls without delivering services, leading to operational halts during offensives. Medical support, via facilities like the National Military Hospital in Kabul, provided casualty care but operated at low capacity due to equipment shortages and untrained staff, with evacuation reliant on foreign airlifts until 2020. Engineering elements focused on route clearance and base construction but lacked heavy equipment, forcing dependency on contractors. Overall, support inadequacies—rooted in poor inventory tracking, illiterate logistics personnel, and aid diversion—contributed to ANSF's unsustainable posture, as coalition withdrawals exposed these frailties in 2021.[1][40]
International mentoring and capacity building for the Afghan National Security Forces (ANSF) commenced shortly after the U.S.-led invasion in late 2001, initially through the Office of Military Cooperation-Afghanistan (OMC-A), which simultaneously constructed bases and trained early Afghan National Army (ANA) units amid ongoing combat operations.[41] By April 2006, the Combined Security Transition Command-Afghanistan (CSTC-A) was established as a U.S.-led multinational entity to systematize training, advising, equipping, and sustaining the ANA and Afghan National Police (ANP), absorbing prior efforts and managing billions in annual funding flows to Afghan ministries.[1] CSTC-A oversaw programs like electronic payroll initiation in 2007 to curb corruption, though implementation faltered due to ministerial resistance and widespread pay skimming.[1]In November 2009, NATO activated the NATO Training Mission-Afghanistan (NTM-A) to consolidate allied training efforts under a unified command, merging with CSTC-A to enhance coherence in developing ANSF institutional capacity, including leadership training, literacy programs, and specialized units like ANA commandos operational by August 2008.[42][1] NTM-A addressed shortfalls such as a 50% embedded tactical trainer deficit in 2007 and only 1,810 of 4,083 required trainers by February 2010, while expanding ANSF from roughly 110,000 personnel in 2009 to a target of 352,000 by late 2012 through accelerated recruitment and Focused District Development for ANP professionalization.[1][43] Initiatives included $200 million in literacy contracts by 2014, achieving Level 1 proficiency for 224,826 ANSF members by October 2013, though retention issues persisted with annual attrition rates of 33% for ANA and 20% for ANP.[1]The mission evolved into the non-combat Resolute Support Mission (RSM) on January 1, 2015, shifting focus from direct training to advising and assisting at corps and ministerial levels to foster self-reliance under Afghanistan's four-year security roadmap launched in 2017.[44][1] U.S. contributions emphasized Security Force Assistance Teams (SFATs) and later Security Force Assistance Brigades (SFABs), with over 3,000 ANSF trained stateside since 2003 at $112.6 million cost, alongside programs like the Afghan Air Force's A-29 pilot training yielding 88% precision in guided munitions by 2018.[34] Total U.S. expenditure exceeded $70 billion from 2002 to 2016—60% of reconstruction funds—with $18.6 billion specifically on arming and equipping, including 600,000 weapons and 76,000 vehicles by 2016.[1][45]Despite these inputs, capacity building yielded uneven results, with elite elements like the Afghan National Army Special Operations Command (ANASOC) demonstrating relative effectiveness due to rigorous vetting and training, while conventional forces exhibited persistent deficiencies in logistics, ministerial oversight, and independent operations.[1] High monthly attrition (2-3% for ANA/ANP by 2016), coupled with systemic corruption—manifest in ghost soldiers (30,000 removed by January 2017) and fuel fraud—eroded built capacities, as did ethnic imbalances in leadership favoring Tajiks and dependency on U.S. enablers like air support and contractors.[1][34] SIGAR assessments identified causal failures including short advisor rotations (6-12 months), ad hoc planning without Afghan ownership, and inadequate pre-deployment cultural preparation, leading to psychological reliance and rapid unraveling post-2021 withdrawal.[34][46] The ANSF's swift collapse in August 2021, despite peak strength of 352,000 in 2013 and control of 72% of provinces in 2015, underscored that mentoring prioritized quantity over sustainable quality, with conventional units unable to conduct offensive operations without coalition support.[1][6]
Armament, Sustainment, and Technological Dependencies
The Afghan National Security Forces (ANSF) received the majority of their armament from U.S. and NATO donors, with the United States alone providing over 600,000 infantry weapons—including M16 and M4 rifles—along with 162,000 pieces of communications equipment, 16,000 night-vision goggles, and 358,530 hand grenades between 2003 and 2021.[47] Additional transfers included approximately 80,000 vehicles, such as Humvees and MRAPs, and heavier systems like artillery pieces and anti-tank weapons, often sourced through U.S. procurement channels that bypassed Afghan institutional development.[48] These provisions aimed to equip an force projected at around 352,000 personnel by 2017, but procurement was predominantly handled externally, fostering dependencies rather than self-sufficiency.[23]Sustainment efforts faltered due to pervasive corruption, inadequate maintenance infrastructure, and flawed logistics systems within the Afghan Ministry of Defense (MoD) and Ministry of Interior (MoI). SIGAR assessments documented widespread "ghost soldiers" on payrolls, inflating reported troop numbers and diverting billions in U.S. funds—estimated at $19 billion for ANSF sustainment from 2002 to 2020—toward fictitious personnel rather than operational needs like fuel and parts.[49] Vehicle maintenance rates hovered below 50% by 2015, exacerbated by poor accountability; DoD inspectors found incomplete inventories, enabling waste and resale of equipment on black markets.[50] Afghan forces struggled to transition to independent supply chains, as U.S.-led contracting handled most repairs, leaving ANSF unable to service even basic assets without external advisors.[51]Technological dependencies were acute in aviation and surveillance, where the Afghan Air Force (AAF) relied on U.S. contractors for operating and maintaining advanced platforms like UH-60 Black Hawks, A-29 Super Tucanos, and MD-530 helicopters, acquired at a cost exceeding $8.5 billion.[52] Without ongoing American logistical support—including specialized parts, software updates, and pilot training—the AAF's operational readiness plummeted; by mid-2021, contractor withdrawal grounded much of the fleet, as Afghans lacked the technical expertise for independent sustainment.[53] Ground forces similarly depended on U.S.-provided intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance (ISR) systems, such as ScanEagle UAVs, which required foreign maintenance and integrated poorly with Afghan command structures, rendering them ineffective post-withdrawal.[54] This over-reliance on high-tech imports, unaccompanied by scalable domestic capabilities, contributed decisively to ANSF's rapid disintegration in August 2021.[23]
Operational Record
Major Engagements and Territorial Control
The Afghan National Security Forces (ANSF) assumed primary responsibility for territorial security following the NATO combat mission's end on December 31, 2014, initially holding major cities, highways, and population centers amid Taliban control of rural hinterlands. By mid-2015, insurgent gains accelerated, with the Taliban seizing districts like Musa Qala in Helmand Province and briefly capturing Kunduz City—the first provincial capital lost since 2001—on September 28, 2015, after overrunning poorly coordinated ANSF defenses despite a numerical advantage of approximately 7,000 government troops. ANSF, reliant on U.S. airstrikes and special operations raids, retook the city after 15 days of fighting, incurring heavy casualties and exposing vulnerabilities in holding contested terrain without external enablers.[55]Subsequent years saw fluctuating but net Taliban advances in rural districts, where ANSF prioritized static defense of urban enclaves over mobile counterinsurgency. In Helmand Province, prolonged engagements around Lashkar Gah from 2015–2017 resulted in Taliban capture of key districts like Sangin by October 2017, forcing ANSF retreats amid ammunition shortages and high attrition. Elite ANSF units, such as commandos and the Afghan Special Security Forces, conducted limited offensives—retaking seven districts across Faryab, Baghlan, and Paktia provinces between June 25–30, 2021—but these gains proved ephemeral without sustained logistics or air cover. By June 19, 2021, the Taliban controlled 134 of Afghanistan's 407 districts outright, with 178 contested, reflecting ANSF's contraction to core urban holdings.[55][6]The Taliban's spring 2021 offensive, triggered by U.S. troop reductions, dismantled ANSF territorial control in a cascade of surrenders and routs. From May 1 to June 29, 2021, Taliban-held districts doubled, including the unresisted seizure of the Shirkhan Bandar border crossing on June 22; ANSF counterattacks, such as retaking Pul-e-Khumri in Baghlan, faltered due to isolated garrisons. Major clashes in northern provinces yielded 4,000 ANSF killed and 1,000 missing between July 1 and August 15, 2021, culminating in the fall of all 34 provincial capitals within 11 days (August 6–15), with Mazar-i-Sharif captured on August 14 after minimal resistance.[55][6][56]
Date
Taliban-Controlled Districts
ANSF/Government-Controlled Districts
Notes/Source
April 2021
77
129
Pre-offensive baseline; contested areas excluded.[6][57]
June 15, 2021
104
94
Doubling of Taliban gains since May.[6]
July 15, 2021
216
73
Half of districts lost; urban focus failed.[6][57]
August 2021
407 (full control post-Kabul)
0
Collapse after provincial capitals fell.[55]
Measured Achievements in Counterinsurgency
The Afghan Special Security Forces (ASSF), comprising units such as the Afghan National Army Special Operations Command (ANASOC) and the Special Mission Wing (SMW), conducted precision operations against insurgent networks, supporting broader counterinsurgency efforts by regional ANA corps. ANASOC included 10 Special Operations Kandaks, 6 Mobile Strike Kandaks, and 2 Cobra Strike Kandaks by 2020, enhancing mobility and enabling targeted strikes on Taliban and ISIS-Khorasan (ISIS-K) leadership.[19] The SMW's Helicopter Assault Force increased missions by 90% prior to COVID-19 disruptions, averaging 19 assaults per month compared to 10 previously, with execution rates reaching 80% unilaterally and 100% after the U.S.-Taliban agreement in February 2020; these supported 90% counterterrorism and 10% counter-narcotics missions.[19]In territorial terms, the ANSF maintained control over Kabul, all provincial capitals, major population centers, most district centers, and key ground lines of communication through 2020, preventing Taliban dominance in urban areas housing the majority of the population. Specific gains included the recapture of Khamyab and Qarqin districts in Jowzjan province in April 2020, bolstering northern security. Against ISIS-K, ANSF operations from December 2019 to April 2020 inflicted sustained degradation through enemy killings, captures, and surrenders, compelling the group to cede territory in Nangarhar and Kunar provinces and disrupting high-profile attack planning.[19][19][19]The General Command of Police Special Units (GCPSU) responded effectively to high-profile attacks in Kabul, including those on Mazari Day and the presidential inauguration in 2019–2020, while establishing three new National Mission Units in Herat, Mazar-e Sharif, and Jalalabad, achieving full operational capability by March 2020. These efforts contributed to temporary reductions in insurgent-initiated attacks during periods of coordinated pressure, such as the February 2020 Reduction-in-Violence initiative, synchronized via the Combined Situational Awareness Room established in 2019. Overall, ASSF independent counterterrorism operations demonstrated tactical proficiency, particularly in disrupting ISIS-K networks in eastern Afghanistan, though broader Taliban resilience limited strategic gains.[19][19]
Persistent Shortcomings and Tactical Failures
Despite extensive training and equipping efforts, the Afghan National Security Forces (ANSF) demonstrated persistent tactical shortcomings, primarily stemming from over-dependence on U.S. enablers such as close air support, intelligence, and logistics, which precluded the development of autonomous combat capabilities. SIGAR evaluations indicated that ANDSF units routinely substituted coalition assets for self-generated firepower and sustainment, limiting offensive initiatives and exposing vulnerabilities in prolonged engagements without external intervention.[1] For instance, post-2009 surge operations revealed ANA formations deferring to NATO close air support rather than maneuvering independently, as tactical proficiency remained underdeveloped despite $83 billion in U.S. investments over two decades.[58][1]High attrition and absenteeism rates compounded these deficiencies, with annual attrition climbing to 25% by 2020, often leaving frontline units at 50-60% authorized strength and impairing coordinated maneuvers or defensive holds.[58] AWOL incidents surged during intensified Taliban offensives, as personnel prioritized survival over positional defense, exemplified by widespread post abandonments that enabled insurgent territorial gains.[1] This eroded unit cohesion and tactical adaptability, with SIGAR noting that such losses undermined the ANSF's capacity to contest or retain ground independently.[1]Leadership failures at tactical echelons further manifested in poor decision-making and accountability, including ineffective command in key theaters; in 2016, roughly 40% of ANA corps leaders in Helmand and Kandahar provinces were assessed as incapable, prompting dismissals and operational disruptions.[1] Inadequate non-commissioned officer development and ethnic imbalances in officer corps—such as Tajik overrepresentation early on—fostered patronage over merit, leading to erratic tactical execution and reluctance to engage without assured resupply.[1]Concrete operational failures underscored these patterns: the 215th Corps in Helmand disintegrated in summer 2015 absent consistent U.S. advising, ceding districts like Musa Qala; similarly, the Taliban seized Kunduz City in September 2015, requiring coalition airstrikes for ANSF reclamation, as local forces proved unable to mount effective counterattacks or hold urban perimeters.[1] ANP elements abandoned 112 checkpoints in late 2016 amid equipment deficits and training gaps, facilitating Taliban infiltration and highlighting failures in static defense and patrol sustainment.[1]Logistical breakdowns directly impeded tactical mobility and firepower projection, with ANA sustainment systems rated "broken" as early as 2006—operating at only 60% of required mission-critical equipmentavailability—and persistent spare parts shortages rendering vehicles and weapons inoperable during engagements.[1]Corruption in procurement exacerbated this, diverting fuels and munitions, while shortened recruit training (e.g., ANA basic from 14 weeks in 2005 to 10 weeks by 2007) and 90% illiteracy rates in early cohorts yielded forces deficient in marksmanship, fire discipline, and small-unit tactics.[1][58] Overall, these elements perpetuated a cycle where ANSF tactical performance lagged behind numerical growth, prioritizing survival over decisive action.[1]
Internal Challenges and Criticisms
Systemic Corruption and Resource Misallocation
Systemic corruption permeated the Afghan National Security Forces (ANDSF), encompassing the Afghan National Army (ANA), Afghan National Police (ANP), and related elements, through practices such as fabricating personnel records to siphon salaries and diverting supplies intended for operational use. Commanders routinely reported "ghost soldiers"—non-existent, deceased, or absent personnel—to inflate authorized troop strengths and collect unearned pay, a problem SIGAR identified as persistent since at least 2015. In four Afghan provinces audited in 2020, 50-70% of ANP positions were occupied by ghost soldiers, while in Kandahar City, official records claimed 14,000 officers against an actual count of about 700.[59][5] A 2019 Afghan government crackdown reduced reported ANDSF strength by nearly 10%, from 296,400 to about 270,000, highlighting prior overreporting.[60]Resource misallocation extended to theft and black-market sales of U.S.-supplied fuel and equipment, depriving forward units of essentials and generating illicit revenue streams. Fuel, described by SIGAR as "liquid gold" in conflict zones, was systematically pilfered from ANDSF stocks, with investigations revealing bribery schemes involving U.S. and Afghan personnel; by 2012, SIGAR had secured guilty pleas from six Americans in related cases.[61][62] SIGAR conducted over 70 probes into fuel theft alone, uncovering networks that diverted millions of gallons annually, often with complicity from base commanders who sold supplies to insurgents or smugglers.[62] Vehicles, weapons, and other materiel provided under the $88 billion U.S. investment in ANDSF sustainment from 2002-2021 were similarly misused, resold, or abandoned due to poor accountability, exacerbating logistical breakdowns.[5]Senior ANDSF leadership facilitated this graft through nepotism, extortion, and ties to illicit economies like narcotics trafficking, embedding corruption at institutional levels rather than isolating it to isolated actors. Reports documented generals and provincial chiefs demanding bribes for promotions or deployments, while warlords in uniform, such as those in Kandahar, profited from protection rackets and resource skimming.[63][5] Despite U.S. efforts like biometric enrollment to curb ghosts, enforcement faltered under Afghan political pressure, as presidents Karzai and Ghani shielded allies to maintain coalitions, prioritizing loyalty over merit.[64] This patronage system, SIGAR noted in 2016, diverted reconstruction funds—totaling over $115 billion by then—reducing effective aid delivery and fostering a culture where junior ranks viewed superiors as predatory.[64]The ramifications hollowed out ANDSF combat capability, eroding morale as soldiers received inconsistent pay or supplies while leaders amassed wealth, contributing directly to operational failures and the 2021 collapse. Inflated rosters masked true attrition rates exceeding 20% annually in some units, leading to understrength formations unable to hold territory; by 2016, government control slipped from 72% to 57% of districts amid such deficiencies.[25][5]Corruption alienated rural populations by equating ANDSF with extortion, bolstering Taliban recruitment, and recycled stolen resources into insurgent hands, per SIGAR analyses.[64] Of the $145 billion in total U.S. appropriations for Afghanistan through 2021, roughly $36 billion earmarked for governance and security was undermined by these practices, yielding forces more focused on self-enrichment than counterinsurgency.[5]
Leadership, Morale, and Cohesion Deficiencies
The Afghan National Security Forces (ANSF) suffered from systemic leadership failures, including predatory command practices and insufficient accountability, which prioritized personal enrichment over operational effectiveness. Commanders frequently engaged in corruption by inflating personnel rosters with "ghost soldiers"—nonexistent troops whose salaries were diverted—leading to distorted force strength reporting and misallocation of U.S.-funded resources. By 2017, over 30,000 ghost soldiers had been identified and removed from Afghan National Army (ANA) payrolls, representing potentially 17% of authorized strength in some units, with biometric verification efforts revealing ongoing discrepancies as late as 2019 when an additional 42,000 fictitious personnel were purged.[65][66] These practices persisted despite U.S. mentoring, as Afghan leaders resisted reforms that threatened patronage networks, resulting in inadequate training oversight and tactical incompetence at lower echelons.[67]Morale within the ANSF was chronically low, exacerbated by irregular salary payments—often withheld due to corrupt diversions—and exposure to high casualty rates without reliable medical evacuation or resupply. Annual attrition averaged 2.3% across the ANA and Afghan National Police (ANP), but desertion rates climbed to 7-10% yearly, with seasonal spikes reaching an annualized 35% during agricultural harvests when soldiers prioritized family obligations over duty.[65][20] In 2015 alone, the ANA had to replace approximately one-third of its 170,000 personnel due to desertions, combat losses, and failure to re-enlist, reflecting a force where economic incentives outweighed ideological commitment.[68] Subpar leadership, including absentee officers and favoritism in promotions, further demoralized ranks, as junior troops perceived commanders as self-serving rather than inspirational.[65]Cohesion deficiencies stemmed from eroded trust in the chain of command and fragmented unit loyalty, compounded by high turnover and inconsistent mentoring that failed to instill discipline or shared purpose. SIGAR evaluations noted that systemic corruption fostered mistrust of central authority, while frequent unit rotations—intended to prevent warlordism—disrupted bonding and left formations without experienced non-commissioned officers.[67] This resulted in brittle formations prone to collapse under pressure, as evidenced by the 2021 disintegration where ANA units surrendered en masse without fighting, citing leadership abandonment and lack of will. Analyses from military experts attribute this to a foundational absence of cohesive ethos, where predatory elites undermined the collective resolve needed for sustained defense.[6][69]
Ethnic Tribalism and Infiltration Vulnerabilities
The Afghan National Security Forces (ANSF) exhibited significant ethnic imbalances that exacerbated tribal loyalties over national cohesion, with Pashtuns—comprising approximately 42% of Afghanistan's population—constituting only about 43% of the Afghan National Army (ANA) enlisted ranks by 2021, while Tajiks, at roughly 27% of the population, made up 32%. [70][71] Officer corps were disproportionately dominated by non-Pashtun groups, particularly Tajiks from the Northern Alliance legacy, leading to perceptions of favoritism in promotions and command assignments that prioritized ethnic affiliations rather than merit or performance. [72] These disparities fostered resentment among Pashtun recruits, who often viewed the ANSF as an extension of Tajik-dominated political elites in Kabul, undermining unit loyalty and operational effectiveness in Pashtun-majority regions like the south and east. [1]Tribal affiliations further compounded these issues, as recruitment frequently relied on local power brokers who filled quotas with kin networks, resulting in subunits bound more by clan ties than professional discipline; for instance, Pashtun tribal codes like pashtunwali clashed with centralized command structures, contributing to desertions and localized mutinies when units faced Taliban offensives in home territories. [73] Efforts to impose ethnic quotas—aiming for 40-45% Pashtun officers, 30-35% Tajik, and 10-12% Uzbek or Hazara—failed to mitigate tensions, as implementation was inconsistent and often overridden by patronage systems that rewarded loyalty to specific warlords or factions. [72] This tribal fragmentation eroded morale, with reports indicating that ethnic animosities led to intra-ANSF violence and reduced willingness to reinforce ethnically diverse or rival-group areas, particularly as Taliban gains intensified after 2014. [1]Infiltration vulnerabilities stemmed directly from these ethnic and tribal fissures, enabling the Taliban—predominantly Pashtun—to exploit familial and clan connections for embedding operatives within ANSF ranks; coalition assessments estimated that 25% of "green-on-blue" insider attacks (Afghan forces attacking NATO allies) resulted from direct Taliban infiltration, with another 15% from coerced or bribed members via threats to families. [74][75] By disguising insurgents as recruits or using sympathetic tribal intermediaries, the Taliban conducted hundreds of such attacks, peaking in surges like the 82% increase in infiltrator-initiated incidents in the first quarter of 2021 amid U.S. withdrawal preparations. [76]Vetting processes proved inadequate against tribal opacity, where false identities or endorsements from local elders masked insurgents, while ethnic distrust hampered reporting of suspicious behavior within units, allowing infiltrators to gather intelligence, sabotage equipment, or execute massacres like the 2012 Camp Chapel attack that killed three U.S. personnel. [77][78] Ultimately, these vulnerabilities accelerated ANSF disintegration, as Taliban operatives not only inflicted direct casualties but also amplified perceptions of betrayal, eroding trust and combat readiness across ethnically divided formations.[79]
External Dependencies and Strategic Flaws
Reliance on U.S. Airpower and Logistics
The Afghan National Security Forces (ANSF) exhibited profound operational dependence on U.S. close air support (CAS) and airlift, which functioned as essential force multipliers compensating for deficiencies in ground maneuver and firepower. During the U.S. surge from 2009 to 2014, Afghan ground units increasingly integrated U.S.-provided advanced capabilities, fostering a reliance where Afghan officers became "addicted" to CAS for breaking Taliban stalemates and enabling advances.[1] The Afghan Air Force (AAF), intended to assume these roles, remained underdeveloped, with delayed procurement of aircraft like Mi-35 helicopters not achieving operational status until summer 2013, leaving combat units vulnerable during the post-2014 coalition drawdown.[1]This airpower dependency persisted due to the AAF's inability to sustain independent operations, as U.S. contractors handled maintenance and logistics through at least 2023, with only one-third of required maintainers qualified by June 2014.[1] Despite $8.5 billion invested in AAF development from 2010 to 2019, the fleet suffered from overuse, ammunition shortages, and inadequate support personnel training—focusing on pilots while neglecting 86% of the workforce—rendering most aircraft grounded by early 2021.[52] The May 2021 contractor exodus, following the U.S.-Taliban agreement and withdrawal directives, grounded 60% of UH-60 Black Hawks within weeks, halting CAS, resupply, and medical evacuations that ANSF had come to expect daily.[80] U.S. airstrikes, peaking at 7,423 in 2019, plummeted to 1,631 in 2020 after restrictions under the February 2020 Doha accord, directly correlating with Taliban territorial gains and ANSF retreats.[80]Logistical sustainment amplified these vulnerabilities, as ANSF logistics systems were "broken" from inception—evident as early as 2007—with U.S. forces substituting for Afghan supply chains, inventory management via systems like CoreIMS, and enablers such as route clearance and fuel distribution.[1] Complex NATO-standard equipment and a shift to pull-based logistics in 2011 exacerbated corruption and inefficiency, rendering Afghan Ministry of Defense processes immature and unable to identify or distribute requirements independently.[1] Post-withdrawal, inaccessible contractor-managed data and severed air resupply lines left stockpiles unusable, as bases in contested areas like Helmand relied on U.S. helicopters for isolated deliveries.[80]Such dependencies eroded ANSF combat effectiveness, with territorial control dropping from 72% of districts in 2015 to 63% by August 2016 amid reduced U.S. enablers, and manifesting in collapses like the ANA 215th Corps in Helmand in 2015.[1] SIGAR assessments, including a January 2021 warning from Inspector General John Sopko, forecasted AAF disintegration without U.S. aid, attributing it to human capital gaps and leadership failures rather than equipment shortages alone; this materialized in August 2021, when absent CAS and logistics prompted widespread surrenders.[52][80] The reliance stemmed from U.S. "mirror imaging" of its own sophisticated doctrines onto a force lacking literacy, infrastructure, and institutional maturity, prioritizing rapid expansion over sustainable capacity.[1]
Political Leadership Failures in Kabul
The Afghan government's political leadership in Kabul, particularly under President Ashraf Ghani from 2014 to 2021, exacerbated ANSF vulnerabilities through systemic corruption that diverted resources intended for military sustainment. Endemic corruption, including the inflation of troop numbers via "ghost soldiers" and embezzlement of salaries, eroded operational effectiveness, with U.S. funds—totaling over $88 billion for ANSF from 2002 to 2021—frequently siphoned by officials, leading to unpaid troops and equipment shortages.[5] Predatory behavior by senior leaders, such as demanding bribes for promotions and postings, further demoralized forces, contributing to high desertion rates that reached 20-30% annually in the late 2010s.[5][81]Ghani's ethnocentric appointments prioritized Pashtun loyalists in key ANSF command positions, fostering ethnic divisions and alienating non-Pashtun units, which undermined cohesion and combat readiness. This favoritism, evident in the replacement of experienced officers with untested allies during 2020-2021 restructurings, was intended to combat nepotism but instead amplified tribal grievances, as non-Pashtun soldiers perceived systemic bias in promotions and resource allocation.[82] SIGAR assessments noted that such leadership choices directly impaired morale, with ANSF units collapsing faster in areas dominated by rival ethnic groups during the Taliban's 2021 offensive.[5]Strategic planning deficiencies in Kabul compounded these issues, as the government failed to formulate a viable post-U.S. withdrawal national securitystrategy, leaving ANSF without clear directives for decentralized operations. Despite warnings, Ghani's administration did not decentralize authority to provincial governors or invest in local militias effectively, relying instead on centralized control that proved brittle when communications faltered in mid-2021.[7] This mismanagement ignored lessons from prior offensives, such as the 2015 Kunduz fall, where poor coordination between Kabul and field commanders enabled Taliban breakthroughs.[5]Ultimately, these failures eroded the government's legitimacy among ANSF ranks, as troops viewed Kabul elites as detached and self-serving, unwilling to fight for a regime perceived as corrupt and ineffective. SIGAR documented how persistent electoral fraud and elite predation alienated the population, depriving ANSF of civilian support essential for counterinsurgency, with surrender deals proliferating as units anticipated abandonment by political leaders.[5] Ghani's abrupt flight from Kabul on August 15, 2021, amid the capital's fall, symbolized this abandonment, accelerating mass defections and the rapid disintegration of organized resistance.[83][5]
Impact of U.S. Withdrawal Decisions
The U.S.-TalibanDoha Agreement, signed on February 29, 2020, committed the United States to a full military withdrawal by May 1, 2021, in exchange for Taliban assurances on counterterrorism and intra-Afghan negotiations, but excluded the Afghan government from talks, undermining its legitimacy and signaling abandonment to Afghan National Defense and Security Forces (ANDSF) personnel.[5] The agreement boosted Taliban confidence, as they refrained from attacking U.S. forces while escalating operations against ANDSF units, leading to increased territorial gains and a demoralizing effect on Afghan troops who perceived reduced U.S. commitment.[5] Taliban non-compliance with violence reduction pledges was evident, yet the deal's momentum persisted, setting conditions for ANDSF vulnerabilities without addressing core dependencies.[5]President Biden's April 14, 2021, announcement extended the withdrawal timeline to September 11, 2021, despite Taliban failure to meet Doha conditions like severing al-Qaeda ties and curbing attacks, prioritizing an end to U.S. involvement over sustained support for ANDSF sustainability.[5] The rapid drawdown, including Bagram Air Base's handover on July 2, 2021, accelerated the cessation of critical enablers, with U.S. military forces fully withdrawn by August 31, 2021, leaving ANDSF without the operational backbone that SIGAR identified as the single most important factor in their August 2021 collapse.[5] This decision compounded prior dependencies, as ANDSF had been structured around U.S. integration rather than independent resilience.[49]The withdrawal's termination of U.S. close air support (CAS) devastated ANDSF combat effectiveness, as Afghan forces had developed a heavy reliance on American airstrikes—often described in assessments as an "addiction"—to offset ground disadvantages against Taliban offensives, with no viable Afghan substitute emerging by 2021.[31] Post-July 2021, the absence of CAS enabled Taliban breakthroughs, as ANDSF units abandoned positions without aerial cover to suppress enemy advances or resupply isolated garrisons.[5] Concurrently, the exodus of U.S. contractors—numbering over 17,000 at peak—halted maintenance for ANDSF equipment, grounding much of the Afghan Air Force's fleet, including 60% of U.S.-provided UH-60 Black Hawks within months due to unsustainable logistics chains.[5]These decisions precipitated a swift territorial disintegration, with the Taliban controlling approximately half of Afghanistan's 419 districts by early August 2021, culminating in Kabul's fall on August 15 after ANDSF defenses crumbled in days amid mass surrenders and desertions driven by eroded morale and logistical starvation.[5] While ANDSF internal issues like corruption persisted, the U.S. withdrawal removed irreplaceable enablers, transforming localized Taliban pressure into systemic collapse, as evidenced by the force's inability to hold even major urban centers without external sustainment.[5][49]
The 2021 Collapse
Precipitating Events and Rapid Disintegration
The Taliban initiated a major offensive on May 1, 2021, targeting district centers across Afghanistan, coinciding with the U.S. military's ongoing withdrawal and the onset of the traditional fighting season.[5] This campaign gained momentum after the U.S. handover of Bagram Airfield on July 2, 2021, which reduced Afghan National Security Forces (ANDSF) access to critical close air support and logistics enablers previously provided by U.S. forces. By late July, the Taliban had captured or influenced over 200 of Afghanistan's 407 district centers, eroding ANDSF control in rural areas and straining supply lines to urban holdouts.[67]The precipitating breakthrough occurred on August 6, 2021, when Taliban forces seized Zaranj, the capital of Nimruz Province, marking the first provincial capital to fall; local ANDSF commanders surrendered with minimal resistance, abandoning equipment and positions.[67] This event triggered a cascade of defeats, as Taliban advances exploited ANDSF demoralization and coordination failures. On August 7, Sheberghan (Jowzjan Province) and Sar-e Pol fell, followed by Kunduz City and Taloqan (Takhhar Province) on August 8, where ANDSF units either fled or negotiated surrenders, leaving behind U.S.-supplied weapons and vehicles.[6] The loss of these northern hubs severed key ANDSF reinforcement routes, amplifying perceptions of inevitable defeat among troops.[5]By August 12, the disintegration accelerated with the rapid capitulation of six additional provincial capitals—Ghazni, Herat, Kandahar, Lashkar Gah (Helmand), Pul-e Alam (Logar), and Farah—forcing ANDSF garrisons to disband en masse amid reports of mass desertions and unpaid salaries.[84] ANDSF strength, nominally around 300,000 personnel including Afghan National Army (ANA) and Afghan National Police, proved illusory; widespread "ghost soldier" payroll fraud had inflated numbers, leaving actual combat-effective forces far lower and unable to sustain prolonged engagements without external sustainment. Taliban fighters, numbering approximately 75,000, capitalized on this vacuum, advancing with minimal casualties due to ANDSF collapses rather than decisive battles.[6]The final phase unfolded on August 13–15, 2021, as Taliban forces encircled Kabul without opposition; President Ashraf Ghani fled the country on August 15, prompting the ANDSF high command to dissolve and units to surrender or disperse, enabling unresisted Taliban entry into the capital.[5] This sequence exposed the ANDSF's structural fragility, where the abrupt cessation of U.S. operational support— including intelligence, airstrikes, and contracting—precipitated a psychological and logistical breakdown, resulting in the abandonment of billions in military equipment and the near-total territorial loss within 11 days.[6]
Causal Analysis: Internal vs. External Factors
The collapse of the Afghan National Security Forces (ANSF) in August 2021 stemmed from a confluence of entrenched internal deficiencies and acute external dependencies, though assessments vary on their relative weight. Internal factors, including systemic corruption and leadership failures, had eroded the ANSF's operational capacity over two decades, creating a force plagued by inflated rosters, low morale, and widespread desertions. For instance, U.S.-funded payrolls supported an estimated 300,000 personnel on paper, but audits revealed up to 50% were "ghost soldiers"—fictitious entries siphoning billions in salaries, with SIGAR estimating $19 billion in aid lost to corruption between 2002 and 2020.[5]Desertion rates compounded this, exceeding 50,000 absent without leave in 2020 alone, driven by unpaid wages, inadequate supplies, and ethnic-based command favoritism that alienated Pashtun recruits and fostered infiltration by Taliban sympathizers.[6] These issues manifested in units surrendering en masse without combat, as local commanders struck illicit deals with insurgents, reflecting a profound lack of cohesion and will to fight independent of foreign backing.[85]External factors, particularly the U.S. military withdrawal, acted as a catalyst by stripping away critical enablers that had sustained the ANSF. The forces relied heavily on U.S. airpower for 80% of Taliban casualties inflicted, alongside contractor logistics for fuel, maintenance, and intelligence, without which ground units could not maneuver effectively.[23] The 2020 Doha Agreement and subsequent drawdown signaled abandonment to Afghan troops, accelerating psychological collapse; SIGAR assessments note that the agreement's prisoner releases bolstered Taliban momentum, while the rushed U.S. exit in July 2021 severed sustainment, leaving bases undefendable.[5] Political instability in Kabul, including President Ghani's erratic decisions and failure to decentralize command, further amplified this, as central government collapse triggered provincial domino effects.[6]Causal realism underscores that internal pathologies were foundational, rendering external support a temporary prop for an inherently unsustainable structure. While the withdrawal precipitated rapid disintegration—Taliban forces overran 11 provincial capitals in days due to absent close air support—pre-existing rot ensured viability absent perpetual intervention. SIGAR evaluations, drawing from declassified intelligence and Afghan interviews, highlight that even during U.S. presence, ANSF attrition outpaced recruitment, with corruption undermining training and equipment efficacy; units often melted away upon U.S. advisor departure in prior surges.[23][6] External blame, prevalent in some policy critiques, overlooks Afghan agency: leaders like Ghani prioritized patronage over merit, fostering tribal fissures that Taliban exploited via psychological operations promising amnesty. Absent internal reform—evident in persistent graft despite $88 billion in U.S. security aid—the ANSF lacked the organic resilience for self-defense, making collapse inevitable once the external crutch vanished.[5] This interplay reveals nation-building's limits where local institutions fail to internalize accountability.
Immediate Aftermath for Forces and Personnel
Following the Taliban seizure of Kabul on August 15, 2021, the Afghan National Security Forces (ANSF) underwent rapid disintegration, with organized units ceasing to exist as coherent military structures; personnel abandoned posts en masse, often surrendering weapons and equipment to Taliban fighters without resistance in major cities including Kabul, Herat, and Kandahar.[5][86] This collapse left an estimated 300,000 nominal ANSF members—though actual operational strength was likely far lower due to prior attrition and ghost payrolls—scattered, with no central command remaining functional after President Ashraf Ghani's flight from the country.[5][4]On August 16, 2021, Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid publicly announced a general amnesty for former Afghan government employees, including ANSF personnel, urging them to return home and pledge allegiance rather than flee or resist, with promises of no reprisals for past service.[87] However, this declaration was inconsistently applied; in the immediate weeks following the takeover, Taliban forces conducted summary executions and enforced disappearances targeting surrendering ANSF members, particularly in northern and eastern provinces like Kunduz, Takhar, and Panjshir, where captured soldiers were often killed after laying down arms.[88][87]Human Rights Watch documented at least 47 cases of such executions or disappearances of former ANSF personnel between August and October 2021, based on interviews with witnesses and families, with victims including Afghan National Army (ANA) soldiers and National Police officers who had surrendered under assurances of safety.[88] Corroborating reports indicated dozens more killings in similar circumstances, often involving mid- and lower-ranking personnel accused of collaborating with U.S. or NATO forces, though Taliban spokesmen denied systematic targeting and attributed deaths to isolated incidents or revenge by local commanders.[87] Many surviving personnel stripped off uniforms, destroyed documents, and went into hiding in urban areas or rural villages to evade identification, while a small number—primarily elite commandos or special forces—attempted to join nascent resistance groups in Panjshir or flee across borders to Pakistan and Iran.[88][89]Evacuation efforts at Hamid Karzai International Airport from August 14 to 31, 2021, prioritized civilians and some interpreters, with fewer than 1,000 ANSF members among the approximately 123,000 airlifted abroad, leaving the vast majority domestically stranded without pay, supplies, or institutional support.[5] The abrupt halt of U.S. logistical sustainment exacerbated personal hardships, as unpaid salaries—frozen after the collapse—and lack of pensions forced many ex-personnel into informal labor or smuggling, while others faced immediate economic desperation amid Taliban consolidation.[5] By late August, Taliban patrols began registering former ANSF members in some areas under the amnesty pretext, but this often served as a prelude to surveillance and selective purges rather than genuine reintegration.[90][91]
Post-Collapse Status and Legacy
Dissolution Under Taliban Governance
Upon assuming control of Afghanistan on August 15, 2021, the Taliban effectively disbanded the Afghan National Security Forces (ANSF), which encompassed the Afghan National Army (ANA), Afghan National Police (ANP), and Afghan Air Force (AAF), by ceasing their operations and integrating select functions into a new Taliban-led security structure. The ANSF, previously numbering around 300,000 personnel at peak strength, collapsed amid the rapid Taliban offensive, with most units surrendering without significant resistance due to logistical failures, low morale, and leadership abandonment.[5] The Taliban did not formally dissolve the ANSF through decree but rendered it obsolete by occupying bases, seizing equipment—estimated at over 300,000 weapons and 64,000 vehicles left by U.S. forces—and repurposing assets for their own forces.[6]On August 16, 2021, Taliban spokesperson Zabihullah Mujahid announced a general amnesty for former government officials and ANSF personnel, urging them to return home and pledge allegiance, with promises of no reprisals.[92] This was framed as an effort to foster national reconciliation, though Taliban leaders later clarified it applied only to low- and mid-level ranks who had not committed atrocities against insurgents, excluding senior officers and those involved in anti-Taliban operations.[93] In practice, enforcement was inconsistent; a 2023 UN Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA) report documented over 800 cases of arbitrary detention, torture, and extrajudicial killings targeting former ANSF members, including police and soldiers accused of espionage or collaboration with U.S./NATO forces.[94] These violations persisted into 2024, with reports of Taliban fighters systematically hunting ex-ANA and ANP personnel in rural areas, often under the pretext of the amnesty's exceptions.[89]The Taliban reconstituted security institutions under their ideological framework, reviving the Ministry for the Propagation of Virtue and the Prevention of Vice in September 2021 to enforce moral policing, replacing elements of the former ANP's community roles with ideologically aligned enforcers.[95] By June 2022, the Taliban introduced new non-military uniforms for its police force, signaling a shift from the ANSF's Western-trained model to a mujahedeen-style apparatus, though core functions like checkpoints and patrols absorbed some former ANP practices in Pashtun-dominated areas.[96] Limited integration occurred for lower-ranking ANP officers willing to swear loyalty, particularly in local policing, but the ANA faced near-total exclusion, with most surviving personnel either fleeing abroad—over 100,000 ANSF members sought relocation via U.S. programs—or going underground amid ongoing purges.[97] As of 2025, the amnesty's ambiguity has enabled selective enforcement, with no verifiable large-scale reintegration or reconciliation, contributing to a security vacuum filled by Taliban factions and opportunistic militias.[98]
Remnants, Amnesties, and Underground Resistance
Following the Taliban's capture of Kabul on August 15, 2021, remnants of the Afghan National Defense and Security Forces (ANDSF) dispersed amid widespread surrenders, desertions, and flight abroad, with estimates suggesting tens of thousands of personnel survived the initial collapse but faced immediate threats from Taliban reprisals.[88] Many former soldiers and police hid in rural areas, urban centers, or crossed into neighboring countries like Pakistan and Iran, where they remained vulnerable to targeted killings by Taliban intelligence networks.[98] By late 2021, Human Rights Watch documented at least 47 cases of summary executions or enforced disappearances of ANDSF members, primarily in provinces like Kandahar, Helmand, and Kunduz, often involving low-ranking personnel lured out of hiding under false pretenses of safety.[88]The Taliban leadership publicly declared a general amnesty for former ANDSF members and government officials shortly after taking power, with spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid stating on August 16, 2021, that no revenge would be sought against those who did not resist the takeover.[91] This policy was reiterated in subsequent statements, including a June 2025 assurance from Prime Minister Mohammad Hassan Akhund targeting Afghans abroad, amid U.S. travel restrictions.[99] However, United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA) reports from August 2023 documented over 200 extrajudicial killings of former ANDSF personnel since August 2021, with violations concentrated in Taliban-controlled detention sites involving torture and forced confessions before execution.[94] An October 2025 investigation identified 110 confirmed killings of ex-ANDSF members, indicating persistent breaches despite official amnesties, often attributed to decentralized Taliban commanders overriding central directives.[98] European Union Agency for Asylum analyses note that while some mid-level officers received nominal reintegration into Taliban security roles, rank-and-file survivors frequently endured arbitrary arrests, with credibility of the amnesty undermined by lack of accountability mechanisms.[97]Underground resistance efforts have incorporated surviving ANDSF elements, primarily through groups like the National Resistance Front (NRF), formed in August 2021 under Ahmad Massoud in Panjshir province, comprising former ANDSF soldiers, Northern Alliance veterans, and local militias opposing Taliban rule.[100] The NRF, drawing on ex-ANDSF expertise for guerrilla tactics, claimed responsibility for attacks in northern Afghanistan, including a September 2025 operation killing a Taliban commander in Takhar province.[101] Similarly, the Afghanistan Freedom Front (AFF), led by former Afghan army general Yasin Zia, has expanded operations since 2023, conducting ambushes such as a June 2025 assault in Kunduz wounding four Taliban fighters, leveraging defected ANDSF networks for intelligence and hit-and-run capabilities.[102] These factions operate clandestinely, avoiding large-scale confrontations due to Taliban numerical superiority and air restrictions, with EUAA assessments estimating NRF forces at several thousand by 2023, sustained by cross-border support but hampered by internal Taliban crackdowns that have killed or captured hundreds of suspected resisters.[100] Despite sporadic successes, such as disrupting Taliban supply lines in Badakhshan, the resistance remains fragmented and territorially limited as of October 2025, reflecting the ANDSF's prior erosion from corruption, unpaid salaries, and dependency on foreign logistics.[103]
Broader Implications for Nation-Building Efforts
The collapse of the Afghan National Security Forces (ANSF), despite over $88 billion in U.S. funding from 2002 to 2021, underscored the inherent fragility of externally imposed security institutions in nation-building endeavors, where sustained viability requires endogenous political will and institutional legitimacy rather than exogenous material support alone.[5] SIGAR assessments identified that ANSF dependency on U.S. airpower, logistics, and contracting—accounting for up to 80% of operational enablers—created a brittle structure incapable of independent function, collapsing rapidly in August 2021 once these were withdrawn, with districts falling in days rather than the projected years.[58][6] This outcome highlighted a core causal flaw: nation-building efforts often overestimate the transferability of advanced military capabilities to societies lacking unified national identity, resulting in forces prone to disintegration under internal stresses like low morale and leadership vacuums.[5]Systemic corruption within Afghan governance exacerbated this vulnerability, siphoning resources—such as fuel, salaries, and equipment—intended for ANSF sustainment, with "ghost soldiers" inflating authorized strength to 352,000 by 2017 while actual deployable personnel hovered below 200,000.[49][104] SIGAR's analysis revealed that unchecked graft, tolerated to maintain short-term stability, eroded unit cohesion and combat effectiveness, fostering distrust that accelerated surrenders during the Taliban offensive; for instance, by mid-August 2021, over 200 districts had capitulated amid reports of unpaid troops and absent commanders.[5][105] In broader terms, this demonstrated that anti-corruption measures in nation-building must prioritize dismantling patronage networks at elite levels, as superficial audits fail against entrenched incentives, leading to recurrent aid dissipation and institutional hollowing.[104]Ethnic and tribal fractures further illustrated the limits of top-down state-building, as ANSF recruitment and command structures reflected Ghani-era favoritism toward Pashtuns, alienating minorities and undermining loyalty; SIGAR noted that such divisions, unaddressed despite warnings, contributed to uneven fighting spirit, with non-Pashtun units disproportionately collapsing in 2021.[5][106] These dynamics imply that future interventions must integrate local social institutions—such as tribal alliances—into security frameworks rather than supplanting them with centralized models, as imposed uniformity invites internal subversion over organic resilience.[106] Moreover, the ANSF experience critiques overambitious timelines, with two decades insufficient to forge self-sustaining forces amid persistent insurgency, signaling that nation-building succeeds only when scaled to verifiable milestones like domestic revenue generation (Afghanistan covered under 20% of its budget pre-collapse) and graduated aid withdrawal.[107][58]Ultimately, the ANSF's demise has prompted reevaluation of U.S. security assistance paradigms, advocating reforms like condition-based transitions and metrics emphasizing cultural adaptability over numerical benchmarks, as evidenced in post-2021 analyses urging avoidance of perpetual dependency traps.[6] While successes in tactical training existed—such as improved special forces units—their subordination to flawed overarching strategies amplified failure, reinforcing empirical caution against conflating resource inputs with institutional outputs in unstable polities.[108][5] This legacy tempers optimism for analogous efforts, prioritizing limited, exit-oriented engagements that foster minimal viable security over comprehensive reconstruction prone to reversal upon donor fatigue.[109]