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Unrecognized Taliban Aims To Boost Legitimacy By Wresting Control Of Afghan Diplomatic Missions

7th April, 2023 · admin

By Abubakar Siddique
Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty
April 7, 2023

More than 18 months after toppling the internationally recognized Afghan government and forcibly seizing power, the Taliban remains unrecognized by any country.

The militant group’s human rights abuses and links to extremist groups have once again made it a pariah. The international community has blacklisted Taliban leaders and cut off the group from the global financial system.

But the Taliban has tried to boost its legitimacy by wresting control of Afghan diplomatic missions abroad, many of which are still run by diplomats appointed by the previous government.

The hard-line Islamist group claims that it has a diplomatic presence in 14 countries, including in all neighboring countries barring Tajikistan. The group is also believed to have gained control of missions in Russia, China, Turkey, and Indonesia.

Analysts said concerns over terrorism and migration have prompted some neighboring countries to establish diplomatic relations with the Taliban government. Other countries where the Taliban has sent diplomats, including Pakistan and Iran, have longtime ties with the militant group.

“Control of diplomatic missions paves the way for the Taliban to lobby for formal recognition in those countries,” said an Afghan ambassador based in Europe, who spoke to RFE/RL on condition of anonymity. “The Taliban are hoping that these countries will relent over time.”

The Taliban has not gained control of any Afghan missions in the West. Afghan embassies and consulates in Europe and North America still fly the black-red-and-green tricolor flag. They generate revenue by providing consular services for Afghans abroad and foreigners seeking to travel to Afghanistan. Some missions have been abandoned due to a lack of funds. Others have relocated or downsized to cut costs.

Western nations have tied recognition to the Taliban establishing an inclusive government, ensuring women’s rights, and breaking ties with Al-Qaeda. But the militants have refused to share power, severely eroded women’s freedoms, and maintained links with terrorist groups, according to observers.

“The Taliban and the international community are on completely different wavelengths,” said another Afghan ambassador based in Europe, who also spoke to RFE/RL on condition of anonymity.

‘Transactional’ Relationships

In recent months, the Taliban has ramped up its efforts to wrestle control of Afghanistan’s 65 foreign posts.

Last month, the Taliban took over the Afghan Embassy in Turkmenistan and a consulate in the United Arab Emirates. In February, the Taliban gained control of the Afghan Embassy in Tehran.

The Taliban’s next target appears to be Tajikistan, the only neighboring country to publicly oppose the Taliban’s return to power in Afghanistan. Dushanbe has hosted some of the leaders of the National Resistance Front (NRF), an anti-Taliban resistance group that is largely made up of ethnic Tajiks from Afghanistan.

Last month, the Taliban claimed that its officials visited the Afghan consulate in the eastern city of Khorog. Tajik officials have not commented.

Mohammad Zahir Aghbar, the Afghan ambassador in Dushanbe, said he was skeptical. “The Taliban have not backed their claims by publishing photos of their visit or meetings,” he told RFE/RL’s Tajik Service.

But a former Afghan diplomat based in Europe who is affiliated with the NRF said the Taliban was engaged in secret talks with the Tajik government.

“After a year, the resistance has not achieved much,” the diplomat said, referring to how the Taliban has largely crushed the NRF’s armed opposition. “The Tajik government is looking to balance how they can keep the officials in Afghanistan happy and the resistance [leaders] in Tajikistan happy.”

In the 1990s, the anti-Taliban Northern Alliance successfully prevented the Taliban regime from seizing control of the entire country. Based in northeastern Afghanistan, the opposition had bases in Tajikistan and received assistance from countries in the region.

This time, a handful of small armed groups have opposed Taliban rule in different regions of the country. But they remain weak, divided, and have no sanctuary or outside help, experts said.

“This removes the possibility of alternatives to the Taliban regime for the foreseeable future,” said Hameed Hakimi, an Afghanistan expert at the Washington-based Atlantic Council think tank. “Which in turn ensures that the Taliban can have amicable, or at least sort of transactional, relationships with countries in the region.”

Hakimi said the threat posed by extremist groups based in Afghanistan, including the Islamic State-Khorasan (IS-K), Tehrik-e Taliban Pakistan, the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan (IMU), and Jamaat Ansarullah, has also prompted Afghanistan’s neighbors to establish diplomatic relations with the Taliban.

IS-K militants have carried out deadly attacks against the Taliban, religious minorities, and foreign missions in Kabul.

“Keeping the Taliban on good terms is to the advantage of regional and neighboring countries that hope the Taliban will be useful against the threat of terrorism,” said Hakimi.

Copyright (c) 2023. RFE/RL, Inc. Reprinted with the permission of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, 1201 Connecticut Ave NW, Ste 400, Washington DC 20036.

Related

  • Afghanistan’s Ambassadors Fly the Flag Against the Taliban
Posted in NRF - National Resistance Front, Political News, Tajikistan-Afghanistan Relations, Taliban | Tags: Mohammad Zahir Aghbar |

Tolo News in Dari – April 7, 2023

7th April, 2023 · admin

Posted in News in Dari (Persian/Farsi) |

Taliban moves spokesman’s office to Kandahar

7th April, 2023 · admin

Zabihullah Mujahid

Ariana: The main spokesman [Zabihullah Mujahid] for the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan (IEA) [Taliban] will move his office from the capital to the southern city of Kandahar, the information ministry said on Wednesday. The move, seen as a sign of the growing importance of Kandahar, is home to the IEA’s supreme leader, and is the historical birthplace of the IEA. Supreme leader Haibatullah Akhundzada lives there and rarely makes public visits to Kabul, about 450 km to the north, where national government offices, the cabinet and the acting prime minister are based. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Political News, Taliban | Tags: Kandahar, Zabihullah Mujahid |

Taliban’s Arrest Campaign Continues: Two Former Military Officers Detained in Parwan and Panjshir Provinces

7th April, 2023 · admin

8am: Sources told that in the first incident, Taliban arrested the administrative deputy of the security command of Anaba district in Panjshir and transferred him to an unknown location. The individual, known as Delagha, was detained on Thursday, 17, in Ab Darah village of Anaba district. After taking control of Panjshir, Taliban wanted Delagha to resume his duties, but after a while, they dismissed him. In another incident, Taliban arrested a former military officer in Salang district of Parwan province for the second time. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Taliban | Tags: Life under Taliban rule, Panjshir, Parwan, Taliban Amnesty Violation |

Earthquake Strikes Afghanistan’s Badakhshan Province

7th April, 2023 · admin

Khaama: An earthquake of Magnitude 3.9 jolted the northeastern province of Afghanistan, Badakhshan, on Friday, according to the Volcano Discovery. The tremor’s epicentre was Badakhshan, 16km west of Ishqashim of Tajikistan, felt around 7:19 am local time on April 7. Badakhshan is one of the provinces in the country primarily prone to natural disasters, including earthquakes, landslides, flooding, and avalanches. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Environmental News | Tags: Badakhshan, Earthquake, Natural Disasters |

Chaotic US Withdrawal from Afghanistan is Trump’s Fault, Biden Review Says

7th April, 2023 · admin

Donald Trump

Patsy Widakuswara
VOA News
April 6, 2023

WHITE HOUSE — The White House pinned most of the blame for the chaotic U.S. military exit from Afghanistan in 2021 on the previous administration in a publicly released summary of classified reports sent to Congress on Thursday by the departments of State and Defense.

President Joe Biden was “severely constrained” by conditions created by his predecessor, President Donald Trump, said the document outlining after-action reports examining the widely criticized withdrawal.

“While it was always the president’s intent to end that war, it is also undeniable that decisions made and the lack of planning done by the previous administration significantly limited options available,” said John Kirby, National Security Council coordinator for strategic communications, during a briefing to reporters Thursday.

The 12-page summary blamed Trump for a series of American troop drawdowns from Afghanistan and for negotiating the 2020 Doha Agreement with the Taliban, under which the United States agreed to withdraw all U.S. forces by May 2021.

“During the transition from the Trump Administration to the Biden Administration, the outgoing Administration provided no plans for how to conduct the final withdrawal or to evacuate Americans and Afghan allies,” the document said.

“As a result, when President Biden took office on January 20, 2021, the Taliban were in the strongest military position that they had been in since 2001, controlling or contesting nearly half of the country,” the summary said.

“At the same time, the United States had only 2,500 troops on the ground — the lowest number of troops in Afghanistan since 2001 — and President Biden was facing President Trump’s near-term deadline to withdraw all U.S. forces from Afghanistan by May 2021, or the Taliban would resume its attacks on U.S. and allied troops.”

The White House summary noted the assessment of the U.S. intelligence community in May 2021 that “Kabul would probably not come under serious pressure until late 2021 after U.S. troops departed.” No U.S. agency predicted that the group would take over so quickly, Kirby said, nor that the Afghans would “fail to fight for their country, especially after 20 years of American support.”

House Republicans are likely to use the classified reports to ramp up probes into the administration’s handling of the military exit from Afghanistan.

“John Kirby’s comments during today’s White House press briefing were disgraceful and insulting,” House Foreign Affairs Committee Chairman Michael McCaul, a Republican lawmaker, said in a statement Thursday.

“President Biden made the decision to withdraw and even picked the exact date; he is responsible for the massive failures in planning and execution.”

Chaos from lack of clarity

Much of the chaos during the withdrawal stems from what aid groups and evacuees have described as inconsistent policies regarding which Afghans were allowed to board evacuation flights out of the country. Some of these Afghans, including those who had worked as interpreters and in other supporting roles for the U.S. military, were vulnerable to retaliation by the Taliban.

Footage of dozens of desperate Afghans running after a U.S. military plane taking off from Hamid Karzai International Airport, climbing onto the landing gear and some falling to their deaths have become the defining images of the withdrawal and triggered massive criticism of the administration.

Kirby took issue with reporters who characterized the withdrawal as chaotic and sidestepped a question from VOA on how the Trump administration could be responsible for the determination of who was allowed to board these evacuation flights.

“Those first few days were very, very tough. They were very hectic because we didn’t have a force presence at Karzai International Airport,” Kirby said, adding that a “remarkable,” massive evacuation process was soon established.

“At one point during the evacuation there was an aircraft taking off full of people, Americans and Afghans alike, every 48 minutes. And not one single mission was missed,” he added.

While more than 124,000 American citizens, permanent residents and Afghans were ultimately evacuated, some planes left empty while thousands of people were stranded in Kabul.

Aid groups assisting with the evacuation said that problems plaguing the airlift were mainly the result of inconsistent U.S. policies and a lack of coordination between the State Department and the Pentagon. As a result, vulnerable Afghans were left behind while those who were not at risk were evacuated.

“It appears that while some elements of the Department of State and Department of Defense did an incredible job, they did so despite a lack of interagency coordination and at times incoherent direction from the White House,” said Mark Jacobson, who assisted in organizing evacuees out of Afghanistan, to VOA.

Jacobson served in 2006 in Afghanistan as a naval intelligence officer and from 2009-2011 as the deputy NATO representative and deputy political adviser at the International Security Assistance Force.

In its summary, the White House said one of the lessons learned from the withdrawal is to “prioritize earlier evacuations when faced with a degrading security situation.” It said officials have used lessons from Afghanistan to improve evacuation procedures in Ethiopia and Ukraine.

“If there’s any silver lining it is that they at least acknowledged what a s___ show Afghanistan was and did work much harder to consider potential courses of action in Ukraine,” Jacobson said.

“What remains disturbing is that despite successful efforts to get Ukrainian refugees into the U.S., too many brave Afghans are still languishing in camps in the UAE and other third countries with no hope of getting to the United States, not to mention families left behind in Afghanistan.”

No regrets

Biden has repeatedly said he does not regret his decision to withdraw forces from Afghanistan, arguing the U.S. spent an estimated $2 billion and lost some 2,400 American lives over two decades fighting in the country.

Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin has also said he has “no regrets” about the withdrawal, in which 13 American soldiers and 169 Afghans were killed in a suicide bombing at the Kabul airport claimed by the Islamic State-Khorasan Province.

Kirby said Biden is “very proud of the manner” in which his administration conducted the withdrawal, and the reviews done voluntarily by the departments show “how seriously the president felt about learning lessons from this withdrawal.”

Posted in US-Afghanistan Relations | Tags: US betrayal of Afghans |

Addiction Patients Treated with Sleeping Pills in Ghazni Province: Sources

6th April, 2023 · admin

8am: According to sources, a group of 25 individuals was discharged from the addiction treatment center in Ghazni province after completing a 45-day treatment period. However, due to the lack of facilities, they were only given sleeping pills during their treatment. It should be noted that in the past, several addicts have been treated at this center, but most of them have relapsed after discharge due to a lack of employment and easy access to drugs. Click here to read more (external link).

Other Health News

  • Health situation in Afghanistan worsening
Posted in Drugs, Health News | Tags: Drug Addiction, Ghazni, Taliban and Drugs, Taliban government failure |

Tolo News in Dari – April 6, 2023

6th April, 2023 · admin

Posted in News in Dari (Persian/Farsi) |

Flash Flood Kills 1, wounds 10 in Northeast Afghanistan

6th April, 2023 · admin

Khaama: Heavy rains and flood killed one person and hurt more than ten others in the Bangi District of Takhar province, said Qari Mohibullah Nikzad, director for information and culture, on Wednesday. Meanwhile, he added that the natural disaster had human and financial losses. The flash flood destroyed several houses and damaged thousands of acres of agricultural land. The last two weeks were the deadliest regarding natural disasters in Afghanistan. More than 21 people died, and over 100 people were injured due to heavy rains, floods, earthquakes and avalanches, officials said. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Economic News, Environmental News | Tags: Flood, Natural Disasters, Rain, Takhar, Weather |

Taliban Crackdown on Press: Three Journalists Arrested in Baghlan Province

6th April, 2023 · admin

8am: Sources from the province report that Gholam-Ali Wahdat, a journalist for the private television network “Tanwir,” as well as Safiullah Wafa and Noor-Agha, reporters for “Radio Television Afghanistan” were arrested from their homes in Pul-e-Khumri, the center of Baghlan, on Thursday morning. These journalists were reportedly detained by Taliban intelligence, but the reason for their arrest remains unclear. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Censorship, Media, Taliban | Tags: Afghan Journalists, Baghlan, Press Freedom |
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