Treffer: Legitimacy Crisis in Afghanistan: Analyzing the Authority of the Afghan Republic and the Rise of the Islamic Emirate
Copyright (c) 2025 Ahmad Javid Shakib
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0
English
10.55544/ijrah.5.3.16
1523139747
From OAIster®, provided by the OCLC Cooperative.
Weitere Informationen
This article examines the legitimacy crisis faced by the Afghan Republic following the U.S.-led invasion in 2001. Utilizing Max Weber's framework of legitimacy—legal authority, traditional authority, and charismatic authority and how these concepts apply to the Afghan context. The paper analyzes the Afghan government's reliance on foreign military support rather than local traditions or democratic values. Despite being perceived as a legitimate government by Western narratives, the Afghan Republic struggled with corruption, lack of accountability, and social discontent. Article discusses the historical patterns of resistance against foreign intervention, the Taliban's successful use of Islamic values as a source of legitimacy, and the failures of the West’s efforts to impose a secular liberal democracy. The rise of the Taliban is portrayed not merely as a resurgence of insurgency but as a response rooted in local traditions and religious obligations. This contrast highlights a fundamental disconnection between the imposed secular liberal framework and the prevailing Afghan societal norms, raising questions about the sustainability of foreign-imposed governance models in deeply traditional societies.