What Afghanistan’s Qosh Tepa Canal Means for Central Asia
The Qosh Tepa canal turns water from a technical resource question into Central Asia’s hardest political bargain: how much ecological and agricultural stress can Uzbekistan and Turkmenistan absorb to avoid destabilising Afghanistan. Its real subject is not irrigation but the architecture of regional interdependence after the Taliban’s return, where ignoring Kabul is impossible and disciplining it may be worse.
A rare Central Asia piece that treats infrastructure as political theory in concrete form.
