Tell Mr. Obama not to leave us alone, said Marjan, a 28-year-old political science student in Kabul. She spent five years at homefrom the age of 12 until the Taliban was toppled in 2001, when she was 17. Under Taliban rule, women were forbidden from leaving their homes without a male companion. When Marjan turned 12, she could no longer leave her house without being noticed, so to protect her from being harassed by the Taliban, her family forced her to stay home for five years. I have fair skin and bright eyes. I dont look like a lot of Afghans. A Mullah asked my family for my hand in marriage when I was 13. He was 50. My family was repulsed. But most girls are doomed. She was homeschooled by her parents, an opportunity not available to her friends with illiterate parents.
Marjans story is not unique. A large number of middle class Afghan women, who were teenagers during the Taliban era, are now attending universities in Kabul and other cities, taking advantage of the improvedalbeit still much troubledsituation for women in Afghanistan. Regardless of their political learnings, their misgivings for the government of President Hamid Karzai, or their views on the use of drones in targeted killings in Afghanistan, the women with whom I have spoke could not hide their fear of a post-2014, post-ISAF withdrawal from Afghanistan.
Zina, a 24-year-old English language student in Kabul describes her fear clearly: The Taliban will come back and I will have to stay home, or get married. My mother was beaten for talking to a man at the bakery. The Taliban will come back if the U.S. turns its back on us.