The cover headline on an NBC News piece this morning reads, “The war in Afghanistan is officially over. Now, some wonder, are we back where we started?” It’s hardly an unreasonable question.
On the contrary, as the longest war in U.S. history comes to an end, the parallels seem obvious: At this point 20 years ago, the Taliban controlled Afghanistan, which was home to dangerous terrorist networks. As the last American troops exit the country, the Taliban again controls Afghanistan, which is again home to dangerous terrorist networks.
It’s why prominent Republicans such as Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina are making comments such as, “The chance of another 9/11 just went through the roof.”
But while the parallels matter, so too do the qualitative differences between then and now. Michael Leiter, the former director of the National Counterterrorism Center in the Bush and Obama administrations, wrote a persuasive Washington Post op-ed explaining that from a counterterrorism perspective, the United States and our allies are “vastly safer than we were the last time the Taliban ruled Afghanistan.”








