Shahabadi, Akbar Zare, Mohammad Bay Basharat Rahamani, and Sayed Mohammad Firozi. 2025. “A Critical Assessment of the Cultural Consequences of US Presence in Afghanistan (2001–2021).” Kardan Journal of Social Sciences and Humanities 8 (2): 115–35.

Abstract

The primary objective of this study is to critically examine the cultural impacts of the U.S. and allied presence in Afghanistan from 2001 to 2021. Utilizing a critical paradigm and a qualitative research approach, this study explores the perspectives of Afghan cultural and social elites. Data were collected through semi-structured interviews with 28 participants who were critical of the US and Western presence in Afghanistan. While the participants – and the critical research paradigm of this study – acknowledged that such presence had positive dimensions, the critical paradigm focused on examining its perceived negative cultural impacts, and was analyzed using thematic analysis. From the interviews, several key sub-themes emerged: the weakening of indigenous culture, the expansion of Western cultural values, project-based cultural institutions, the spread of militant cultural capital, cultural distortion, shifts in consumer behavior, cultural vulgarization, the secularization of social culture, changes in lifestyle, and cultural lag and discrimination. These sub-themes were synthesized into the overarching theme of a “cultural crisis.” The findings reveal that the two-decade presence of the United States in Afghanistan left profound cultural imprints beyond political and security dimensions. By introducing abrupt changes and externally imposed values, the intervention contributed to the erosion of cultural identity, social fragmentation, and increased cultural dependency. Instead of fostering sustainable development, Afghan society experienced intergenerational gaps, tensions between tradition and modernity, and the proliferation of an imitative culture, all culminating in an overarching cultural crisis.

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