INTERNATIONAL — May 8, 2026

Former US Inspector General Says International Institutions Profited From Afghanistan War Funds

Former US oversight official John Sopko and Afghan experts stated that international institutions channeled the majority of US reconstruction funds during the war in Afghanistan, with experts claiming most aid was mismanaged or failed to reach intended beneficiaries.

The Ehtebar Desk — originates with ToloNews2 min read

Former US Inspector General Says International Institutions Profited From Afghanistan War Funds
Image courtesy ToloNewsImage enhanced by AI for quality.

Former United States Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction John Sopko stated that international organizations, including the United Nations, World Bank, and Asian Development Bank, benefited financially from the American military campaign in Afghanistan. Speaking in an interview with VOA News, Sopko estimated that approximately sixty percent of US reconstruction funding was routed through these global institutions.

Sopko argued that inadequate oversight mechanisms allowed significant portions of the aid budget to be mismanaged. He also noted that US military operations and night raids resulted in civilian casualties, which in some cases drove survivors toward armed violence.

Former Afghan diplomat Aziz Moaraj echoed concerns regarding the distribution of foreign assistance. Moaraj stated that US aid programs suffered from a lack of strategic planning and financial controls, allowing institutions to exploit the system while failing to deliver resources to communities in need.

Economic analyst Abdul Shakoor Hahdwal provided further context on the utilization of international funds. Hahdwal claimed that less than twenty percent of foreign aid was deployed effectively, with the majority of resources lost to inefficiency and mismanagement.

The assessments highlight longstanding criticisms regarding the transparency and impact of reconstruction efforts during the two-decade international presence in Afghanistan. Officials and experts cited in the report emphasized that structural flaws in funding distribution ultimately limited the effectiveness of humanitarian and development programs.

Read the original reporting at ToloNews

Reliability assessment

Single-source report, but directly attributes statements to named public figures and experts (former SIGAR John Sopko, former diplomat Aziz Moaraj, economic expert Abdul Shakoor Hahdwal) in specific contexts (VOA News interview). Per verification guidelines, on-record statements by named officials constitute reliable reporting of what was said, regardless of the political sensitivity of the topic.

The source language reads straight.

Independent web corroboration

An independent web search turned up no separate corroborating reports. Treat the account as single-sourced until more outlets pick it up.

Across the newsrooms

Filed by

Filed under

InternationalJohn Sopko, US Aid, Afghanistan Reconstruction, World Bank, United Nations

Spotted an error or have more on this story? Tip the desk on Telegram → or WhatsApp →.