Germany and Japan after World War II After World War II, the Allied victors engaged in large-scale nation-building with considerable success in Germany. The United States, Britain, and France operated sectors that became
West Germany. The Soviet Union operated a sector that became
East Germany. In Japan, the victors were nominally in charge but in practice, the United States was in full control, again with considerable political, social, and economic impact.
NATO After the collapse of communism in
Yugoslavia in 1989,
a series of civil wars broke out. Following the
Dayton Agreement, also referred to as the Dayton Accords,
NATO (the North Atlantic Treaty Organization), and also the
European Union, engaged in stopping the civil wars, punishing more criminals, and operating nation-building programs especially in Bosnia and Herzegovina, as well as in Kosovo.
Afghanistan Soviet efforts Afghanistan was the target for Soviet-style nation-building during the
Soviet–Afghan War. However, Soviet efforts bogged down due to Afghan resistance, in which foreign nations (primarily the
United States) supported the
Afghan mujahideen due to the geopolitics of the
Cold War. The Soviet Union ultimately withdrew in 1988, ending the conflict.
NATO efforts After the Soviets left, the
Taliban established de facto control of much of Afghanistan. It tolerated the
Al Qaeda forces that carried out the
September 11, 2001 attacks on the United States. NATO responded under US leadership. In December 2001, after the Taliban government was overthrown, the
Afghan Interim Administration under
Hamid Karzai was formed. The
International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) was established by the UN Security Council to help assist the Karzai administration and provide basic security. By 2001, after two decades of civil war and famine, it had the lowest life expectancy, and much of the population were hungry. Many foreign donors—51 in all—started providing aid and assistance to rebuild the war-torn country. For example, Norway's had charge of the province of
Faryab. The Norwegian-led Provincial Reconstruction Team had the mission of effecting security, good governance, and economic development, 2005–2012. The initial invasion of Afghanistan, intended to disrupt
Al Qaeda's networks ballooned into a 20 year long
nation building project.
Frank McKenzie described it as "an attempt to impose a form of government, a state, that would be a state the way that we recognize a state." According to McKenzie, the US "lost track of why we were there". Afghanistan was not "ungovernable", according to the former
Marine Corps general, but it was "ungovernable with the Western model that will be imposed on it". He says the gradual shift to nation building put the US "far beyond the scope" of their original mission to disrupt Al Qaeda. ==References==