Five years after taking power, the Taliban’s promises of peace and stability have proven hollow, replaced by ideological enforcement, support for terrorism, economic ruin and immense human cost.
1- Taliban Takeover 2021
Broken Promises and Imposed Ideology
When the Taliban captured Kabul in August 2021, they made repeated public assurances of moderation. In their first news conference after taking charge, Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid stated: “The rights of women will be protected within the framework of Islam.” He also said the Taliban “wished for peaceful relations with other countries” and that “no group will be allowed to use Afghan territory for attacks against any nation.”
In an interview with Al Jazeera on 17 August 2021, Suhail Shaheen Spokesman for the Taliban’s Political Office in Doha, Qatar stated they wanted “peaceful relations with the world” and would ensure “no one is harmed.” Yet reality has been the opposite of these pious declarations. The regime has imposed strict ideological control, rejecting inclusive governance and popular consent. Their actions like banning girl’s education, restricting women’s rights, supporting terrorist groups and centralizing power under a single leader show that the promises were mere words without any intention of implementation.
2- TTP Sanctuary and Cross-Border Terrorism
The Taliban’s provision of safe havens to the Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) and other extremist networks has severely damaged Afghanistan and the region. The UN Security Council Monitoring Team has documented thousands of TTP fighters operating from Afghan soil with Taliban tolerance or facilitation.
The real culprit is no longer hiding behind closed doors. The Afghan Taliban are providing safe havens to the Khawarij (TTP). By providing sanctuary to militant groups aiming to destabilize Pakistan, the Taliban are revealing their true nature. This regional instability is fueled by an Indo-Afghan nexus, where Indian backing provides the Taliban the leverage to threaten Pakistani security.
In 2025 alone, TTP carried out 600 attacks on Pakistani territory, mainly in the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) province, killing both security personnel and civilians. These operations planned and launched from Afghanistan, have created a direct security and economic backlash against the Afghan people themselves. The consequences of harboring TTP are measurable. According to the UN Monitoring Team, border closures and tensions linked to TTP activities have cost the Afghan economy approximately $1 million per day in lost trade.
3- Economic Fragility
The looming crisis is not merely an external pressure, the loophole is embedded in the Taliban’s own policy. By choosing ideological rigidity over economic pragmatism, they have paralyzed their own human capital. The World Bank warns of a 4% decline in GDP per capita in 2025 due to rapid population increase. Between 15.2 and 23.8 million Afghans nearly half the population live on less than $3.00 per day. Unemployment remains high at around 13.3%, with up to 900,000 jobs lost since 2021. The ban on girl’s education and women’s work costs the economy an estimated US$84 million annually (UNICEF). These figures show how the regime’s own policies are deepening poverty and fragility.
4- Humanitarian Crisis and Gender Apartheid
The human toll is catastrophic. In 2026, 21.9 million people need humanitarian assistance (UN OCHA). Over 17–18 million lack basic healthcare, while 17.4 million face acute food insecurity. More than 2.7 million Afghans returned in 2025, overwhelming services. Domestic violence has surged, and mental health has collapsed with UN Women reporting that 68% of women describe their mental health as bad or very bad, alongside rising suicide attempts cases among girls facing forced marriages and total restrictions.
Life in Afghanistan since 2021 has become a living hell especially for women. Their broken promises, provision of sanctuaries to groups like TTP and systematic exclusion of women have not only isolated Afghanistan but actively harmed its own people. Without genuine policy reversal on counterterrorism and gender rights, the country will remain trapped in chains of its own making paying the heaviest price for ideological choices that serve neither Afghanistan nor regional stability.
Afghanistan Bound in Deadliest Chains Taliban Rule, TTP Sanctuary, Economic Collapse and Human Suffering
Five years after taking power, the Taliban’s promises of peace and stability have proven hollow, replaced by ideological enforcement, support for terrorism, economic ruin and immense human cost.
1- Taliban Takeover 2021
Broken Promises and Imposed Ideology
When the Taliban captured Kabul in August 2021, they made repeated public assurances of moderation. In their first news conference after taking charge, Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid stated: “The rights of women will be protected within the framework of Islam.” He also said the Taliban “wished for peaceful relations with other countries” and that “no group will be allowed to use Afghan territory for attacks against any nation.”
In an interview with Al Jazeera on 17 August 2021, Suhail Shaheen Spokesman for the Taliban’s Political Office in Doha, Qatar stated they wanted “peaceful relations with the world” and would ensure “no one is harmed.” Yet reality has been the opposite of these pious declarations. The regime has imposed strict ideological control, rejecting inclusive governance and popular consent. Their actions like banning girl’s education, restricting women’s rights, supporting terrorist groups and centralizing power under a single leader show that the promises were mere words without any intention of implementation.
2- TTP Sanctuary and Cross-Border Terrorism
The Taliban’s provision of safe havens to the Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) and other extremist networks has severely damaged Afghanistan and the region. The UN Security Council Monitoring Team has documented thousands of TTP fighters operating from Afghan soil with Taliban tolerance or facilitation.
The real culprit is no longer hiding behind closed doors. The Afghan Taliban are providing safe havens to the Khawarij (TTP). By providing sanctuary to militant groups aiming to destabilize Pakistan, the Taliban are revealing their true nature. This regional instability is fueled by an Indo-Afghan nexus, where Indian backing provides the Taliban the leverage to threaten Pakistani security.
In 2025 alone, TTP carried out 600 attacks on Pakistani territory, mainly in the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) province, killing both security personnel and civilians. These operations planned and launched from Afghanistan, have created a direct security and economic backlash against the Afghan people themselves. The consequences of harboring TTP are measurable. According to the UN Monitoring Team, border closures and tensions linked to TTP activities have cost the Afghan economy approximately $1 million per day in lost trade.
3- Economic Fragility
The looming crisis is not merely an external pressure, the loophole is embedded in the Taliban’s own policy. By choosing ideological rigidity over economic pragmatism, they have paralyzed their own human capital. The World Bank warns of a 4% decline in GDP per capita in 2025 due to rapid population increase. Between 15.2 and 23.8 million Afghans nearly half the population live on less than $3.00 per day. Unemployment remains high at around 13.3%, with up to 900,000 jobs lost since 2021. The ban on girl’s education and women’s work costs the economy an estimated US$84 million annually (UNICEF). These figures show how the regime’s own policies are deepening poverty and fragility.
4- Humanitarian Crisis and Gender Apartheid
The human toll is catastrophic. In 2026, 21.9 million people need humanitarian assistance (UN OCHA). Over 17–18 million lack basic healthcare, while 17.4 million face acute food insecurity. More than 2.7 million Afghans returned in 2025, overwhelming services. Domestic violence has surged, and mental health has collapsed with UN Women reporting that 68% of women describe their mental health as bad or very bad, alongside rising suicide attempts cases among girls facing forced marriages and total restrictions.
Life in Afghanistan since 2021 has become a living hell especially for women. Their broken promises, provision of sanctuaries to groups like TTP and systematic exclusion of women have not only isolated Afghanistan but actively harmed its own people. Without genuine policy reversal on counterterrorism and gender rights, the country will remain trapped in chains of its own making paying the heaviest price for ideological choices that serve neither Afghanistan nor regional stability.
SAT Commentary
SAT Commentary
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