RFE
02 Aug 2025, 03:30 GMT+10
A US body set up in 2008 to assess efforts to support Afghanistan has made its 68th and final quarterly report to Congress -- with damning details of waste andpervasive corruptionover the course of the nearly 20-year Western intervention as well as concerns about Trump administration aid cuts.
The report was issued by the Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction (SIGAR), a government agency, on July 30, two weeks before the fourth anniversary of theTalibanretaking power in Afghanistan.
In a section titled End-Of-Mission Highlights, it says the Western-backed Afghan government sometimes didnt even want projects that the United States proposed.
For example, SIGAR found that most of the buildings at five Afghan Border Police facilities costing $26 million were either unoccupied or being used for unintended purposes, including one used as a chicken coop, it says.
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The 99-page report notes that it is the final installment in a highly detailed series that charted the ups and downs of the US-led mission in Afghanistan, as US aid for the country is being wound up.
If you followed those reports, you were clearly aware where it was going and how it would end, veteran Afghanistan analyst Thomas Ruttig told RFE/RL.
Politicians chose to ignore this and continue to give us good messages from Afghanistan until the troops had to flee in August 2021. It's a very valuable archive of data on what went wrong in Afghanistan. It would have been much better if donors and particularly the US government would have acted on it, he added.
Elsewhere, the report states that Western countries and global institutions flooded Afghanistan with money that fueled corruption, which US officials overlooked as they prioritized security and political goals.
Ruttig, who worked in Afghanistan for the United Nations, the European Union, and Germany in a series of stints from 2000-2006, agreed with this assessment of Western engagement.
There was an awareness that [corruption] is a big problem, but it collided with the political strategy and took only second rank, he said. Security won.
But the final SIGAR report is not only a lookback at the mission as a whole.
It also underlines the humanitarian impact of the Trump administrations decisions to cut aid to Afghanistan and says the State Department did not explain why specific programs were being terminated.
An Afghan woman waits to receive a food ration in Kabul in May 2022.
States Bureau of Population, Refugees, and Migration (PRM), told SIGAR they were not informed why individual awards had been canceled, nor were they involved in the decision-making process, the report noted.
RFE/RL has asked the State Department to respond to this and other elements of the report.
SIGAR says Washington terminated all foreign assistance awards with activities in Afghanistan in April.
This followed anExecutive Orderin January that said The United States foreign aid industry and bureaucracy are not aligned with American interests and in many cases antithetical to American values.
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Within days, the Trump administration began moves to rapidly dismantleUSAID, which was the primary U.S. government agency responsible for administering civilian foreign aid and development assistance.
The SIGAR report also notes conflicting reports of Taliban efforts to seize assets, including military vehicles, from USAID operations being wound down in Afghanistan this year.
USAID noted that heavily armored units from the Taliban general directorate of intelligence forcibly entered implementing partner compounds on multiple occasions, seizing equipment, cash, and project documentation, it said, adding that staff had been detained and interrogated.
But this contradicted official information from Washington, SIGAR said.
"Both State PRM and PM/WRA (Office of Weapons Removal and Abatement) said their implementing partners have not reported any Taliban demands for assets, data, or staff personal information, and, as previously noted, State F (Office of Foreign Assistance) declined to answer any of SIGARs questions this quarter," the report stated.
The issue is sensitive, with US President Donald Trump demanding the Taliban hand over military equipment left behind by US forces in 2021.
"Afghanistan is one of the biggest sellers of military equipment in the world, you know why? They're selling the equipment that we left," Trump said in January. We want our military equipment back.
SIGAR will cease operations in September.
Before then, it will produce one more report looking at how lessons learned in Afghanistan, Gaza, Syria, and elsewhere can be applied to future situations where aid missions face interference in undemocratic countries.
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