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Pakistani Armed Groups Obtain U.S. Weapons Left Behind In Afghanistan

29th March, 2023 · admin

By Abubakar Siddique
Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty
March 29, 2023

When the United States pulled out its forces from Afghanistan in 2021, it left behind around $7 billion worth of military equipment and weapons, including firearms, communications gear, and even armored vehicles.

The Taliban seized the arms following the fall of the Western-backed Afghan government during the chaotic U.S. withdrawal, giving the hard-line Islamist group a vast war chest.

Since the Taliban takeover, some of the American military gear and weapons have turned up in neighboring Pakistan, where they have been used by armed groups, according to experts and security officials.

Observers say the influx of U.S. weapons has boosted the military capabilities of the Tehrik-e Taliban Pakistan (TTP) militant group and ethnic Baluch separatist groups that are waging insurgencies against the government in Pakistan, which has witnessed a surge in violence over the past two years.

“These weapons have added to the lethality of such groups,” said Asfandyar Mir, a senior analyst at the United States Institute of Peace, adding that a “robust and in many ways growing black market” for U.S. weapons is thriving in Pakistan.

Experts say armed groups have obtained advanced U.S. weapons and equipment like M16 machine guns and M4 assault rifles, night-vision goggles, and military communication gear.

A ‘Terrifying’ Impact

Abdul Sayed, a Sweden-based researcher who tracks the TTP, said the group’s access to sophisticated combat weapons has had a “terrifying” impact, especially on the lesser-equipped police force, in Pakistan.

A police officer in the northwestern province of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, which has borne the brunt of the TTP attacks, told RFE/RL that they were sitting ducks for militants.

“The fact is that they can see us in the dark while we can’t. That gives the terrorists an enormous advantage,” said the officer, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to the media.

Moazzam Jah Ansari, a former police chief of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, told journalists in November that militants “picked up sophisticated weapons left behind by the Americans and waged war against [the province’s] police.”

The TTP’s attacks in Pakistan have surged since the Taliban seized power in Afghanistan. The two militant groups are ideological and organizational allies.

According to the Pakistan Institute of Peace Studies (PIPS), a think tank in Islamabad, the number of terrorist attacks in the country increased by 27 percent last year compared to 2021. At least 419 people were killed, while 734 were injured in 262 terrorist attacks last year.

There are few signs that the number of attacks will drop. On January 15, senior police officer Sardar Hussain Khan and two policemen were killed in the northwestern city of Peshawar with a sniper gun, which was fitted with a thermal scope, according to the authorities.

The TTP has released numerous videos of sniper attacks on security check posts along Pakistan’s western border with Afghanistan over the last two years.

‘No Realistic Way To Retrieve’ Weapons

In March last year, the Pentagon reported to Congress that nearly $7.2 billion worth of aircraft, guns, vehicles, ammunition, and specialized equipment like night vision goggles and biometric devices were left behind in Afghanistan.

A Taliban official told Al Jazeera that the group seized more than 300,000 light arms, 26,000 heavy weapons, and around 61,000 military vehicles.

The Pentagon told U.S. government watchdog SIGAR that there is “currently is no realistic way to retrieve the materiel that remains in Afghanistan, given that the United States does not recognize the Taliban as a government.”

The Pentagon did not respond to RFE/RL’s requests for comments.

The Taliban has rejected claims that it has supplied TTP fighters with U.S. weapons and equipment. The group has also downplayed suggestions that it has sold off arms on the black market.

“If some weapons are being smuggled, they are far fewer and not of much concern,” Zabihullah Mujahid, a Taliban spokesman, told RFE/RL’s Radio Azadi.

Mujahid claimed that some former members of Afghanistan’s security forces sold their weapons after the fall of the internationally recognized government in Kabul.

‘Extremely Vulnerable’

Pakistani gun owners say the black market has been flooded by U.S. weapons since the Taliban takeover of Afghanistan.

“It’s like the 1980s, but, this time, many Western weapons are now available,” said Gohar Bacha, a gun owner from Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.

During that time, Western nations sent millions of dollars worth of arms to the Pakistan-based Afghan mujahedin, the U.S.-backed Islamist groups who were fighting Soviet forces that had invaded Afghanistan in 1979. The mujahedin were armed with mostly Chinese and captured Soviet weapons.

Bacha said the new U.S. weapons available on the black market “are of excellent quality and very lethal.” He said a U.S.-made M4 assault rifle in good condition can be purchased for around $1,400. U.S. military communication gear such as Harris Engineering Falcon Three Radios, meanwhile, can be bought for around $3,500.

Militants are not the only ones buying Western weapons on the Pakistani black market.

A civilian government bureaucrat in the southwestern province of Baluchistan told RFE/RL that he recently purchased an Austrian-made Glock handgun for $1500.

Pakistan’s gun laws allow civilians with a license to own firearms.

“I felt extremely vulnerable, so I wanted to carry a reliable weapon,” said the bureaucrat, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to the media, revealing that he had received threatening phone calls from armed groups.

“Security and governance are rapidly declining, so people are forced to fend for themselves,” he said.

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.
Posted in Pakistan-Afghanistan Relations, Taliban, US-Afghanistan Relations | Tags: Taliban blowback, Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan |

Heavy Rains and Flash Floods Affected 645 Families in Afghanistan: UN

29th March, 2023 · admin

Khaama: The United Nations mission in Afghanistan said due to the recent heavy rains and flash floods in seven provinces, at least 645 families have been affected. The organization has said that international aid organizations are assessing the delivery of life-saving aid to the affected families throughout Afghanistan during these difficult times. According to the UN agency, the low budget has restricted the organization’s ability to speed up its vital aid to needy families in the country. Amid the dire economic and humanitarian crisis in Afghanistan under the Taliban regime, natural disasters have added to the problems of ordinary people.  Click here to read more (external link).

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

Tolo News in Dari – March 29, 2023

29th March, 2023 · admin

Posted in News in Dari (Persian/Farsi) |

Stanikzai urges US to reopen its embassy in Kabul

29th March, 2023 · admin

Sher Mohammad Abbas Stanikzai

Ariana: Sher Mohammad Abbas Stanikzai, deputy foreign minister for political affairs, has called on the United States to reopen its embassy in Kabul. “Let us fulfill our responsibilities. Come and open your embassy. We take care of your security. When you come, other countries will do the same. Now, many countries are saying in private meetings with us that if America restores its relations with you, we will come immediately,” Stanikzai said while visiting the Afghan Consulate in Dubai. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Taliban, US-Afghanistan Relations | Tags: Sher Mohammad Abbas Stanakzai |

Taliban Close Game Zones in Herat

29th March, 2023 · admin

8am: Sources told Hasht-e-Subh on Thursday, March 29th, that the Taliban’s Ministry for the Promotion of Virtue in Herat had closed all game zones in this province yesterday. Meanwhile, in an interview, some owners of these game zones in Herat expressed concern to Hasht-e-Subh that although they had licenses to operate, their shops had been blocked by the Ministry for the Promotion of Virtue. According to them, they have made substantial investments in their game zones, and their closure has caused them financial losses. Click here to read more (external link).

Related

  • Decline in Theatre Activities in Herat Worries Artists
Posted in Art and Culture, Economic News, Entertainment News, Taliban | Tags: Herat, Life under Taliban rule |

Rashid Khan Regians Top Sport in ICC T20I Player Rankings

29th March, 2023 · admin

Rashid Khan

Khaama: Afghanistan star Rashid Khan regained the No.1 T20I bowling position in the most recent ICC rankings following his three wickets at less than a run a ball in Afghanistan’s historic 2-1 series win over Pakistan in Sharjah this week. Rashid has displaced Sri Lanka’s Wanindu Hasaranga to grab the top rank. Rashid took one wicket in the three T20Is, allowing 62 runs off his 12 overs. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Afghan Sports News | Tags: Cricket, Rashid Khan |

Taliban: Afghan Education Advocate Detained Over ‘Suspicious’ Activities

29th March, 2023 · admin

Matiullah Wesa

Ayaz Gul
VOA News
March 29, 2023

ISLAMABAD, PAKISTAN — Afghanistan’s Taliban confirmed Wednesday to VOA that they had detained a prominent education activist in the county, saying the man is being interrogated for “suspicious” activities.

The confirmation comes two days after Matiullah Wesa, the founder and head of PenPath—a community-based education support network—was picked up at gunpoint outside a mosque in the capital of Kabul after prayers on Monday evening, his family said.

The arrest has outraged the international community and drawn calls for his immediate release.

“Yes, Matiullah Wesa has been detained for investigation because the intelligence agency had some suspicious information about him,” Taliban chief spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid told VOA by phone.

“Wesa was organizing meetings and making contacts that were a cause of concern for us,” Mujahid said without elaborating. “It is the duty of the government to detain suspicious people and investigate them to ensure public order.”

On Tuesday, Thomas West, the U.S. special representative for Afghanistan, urged the Taliban to release the education activist.

“The United States is deeply concerned about reports that revered education and rights activist @matiullahwesa was arrested by the Taliban,” West said on Twitter. “He has been a tireless and effective advocate for the education of boys and girls nationwide.”

The United Nations mission in Afghanistan also sought clarification from de facto Taliban authorities about the reasons for Wesa’s arrest and “to ensure his access to legal representation and contact with family.”

Wesa’s PenPath network, established in 2009, has been promoting education and schools for girls and negotiating with village elders in the conservative Afghan society to allow their girls to go to school.

The network has hundreds of volunteers across Afghanistan who help set up local classrooms, find teachers, distribute books and stationery, and organize community gatherings in support of education for both boys and girls.

The Taliban, however, have closed secondary schools for teenage girls, suspended female students from university education and ordered most women government employees to stay home since they took control of Afghanistan in August 2021. The hardline group has also banned women employees of non-governmental organizations from workplaces.

The Taliban returned to power 19 months ago as the United States and its Western coalition partners withdrew their troops from the country after almost two decades of involvement in the Afghan war.

The international community has been pressing the Taliban to remove bans on women’s access to work and education and respect civil liberties before granting them legitimacy.

Taliban leaders have ruled out any compromise on their governance, saying it is in line with Afghan culture and Islamic law.

Posted in Afghan Children, Afghan Women, Crime and Punishment, Education, Human Rights, Taliban | Tags: Life under Taliban rule, Matiullah Wesa |

Unseen Taliban Leader Wields Godlike Powers in Afghanistan

28th March, 2023 · admin

Mullah Hibatullah Akhundzada

Akmal Dawi
VOA News
March 28, 2023

Hibatullah Akhundzada is officially referred to as the leader of the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan, commander of the faithful, and scholar of the Quran and the hadiths (sayings of the Prophet Muhammad).

His words, written or spoken, are high law and strictly enforced by a regime that does not have a constitution or limits on the unchecked powers of its supreme leader.

Except for some senior Taliban officials who claim to have seen him in person, Akhundzada, believed to be in his 70s, is an enigma to Afghans — and the world — because there is no information about the man who rules Afghanistan without being seen, elected or accountable to anyone.

A photo of a man with a long black beard and wearing a white turban, believed to have been taken in 1990 for a passport, is the only image of Akhundzada circulating in the media. But it has never been officially confirmed as authentic.

This month, Akhundzada, who reportedly resides in Kandahar province, issued an edict banning the distribution and sale of public lands except under his order, effectively undermining the entire state bureaucracy for land management in the capital, Kabul.

From appointing ministers and judges to selecting district administrators, Akhundzada decides everything in the Taliban regime.

If or when the Taliban will allow girls to return to secondary school and women to work are issues that will be resolved only at Akhundzada’s behest.

“First, he is fearful of Allah,” Shahabudin Dilawar, the Taliban’s minister of mines, told an Afghan reporter about the special characteristics of Akhundzada.

“Second, he knows the hadiths. He is [an] interpreter of the Quran. He is a faqih [jurist in Islamic law]. … In this previous jihad, his own son did [a] martyrdom [suicide] attack while he was emir.”

The identity of Akhundzada’s young son who carried out the attack remains unknown to the public, as is information about the rest of his family. He is said to have two wives and 11 children, though there is no official denial or confirmation of this rumor.

Legitimacy

Like his two predecessors, Akhundzada was declared emir by a small, all-male council of Taliban clerics. That occurred in 2016 after Akhtar Mohammad Mansour, the second Taliban emir, was killed by a U.S. drone strike in Pakistan.

The Taliban maintain that the council’s selection of the emir secured his public legitimacy under the Islamic term of bay’ah [pledge of allegiance].

In the past, Muslim jurists said that through bay’ah, an emir or caliph had to seek the approval of his constituency, according to Imam Feisal Abdul Rauf, an Islamic jurist and president of the Cordoba House in New York.

“Today, many modern jurists consider a democratic election to be an equivalent of a bay’ah,” Rauf told VOA.

In addition to a bay’ah, an emir should meet other conditions.

“He has to be just, and he has to be pious,” said Rauf.

In the absence of a written framework of Taliban governance, it is unclear how long the emir can stay in power, how and whether he can be replaced, and whether he can pick his own successor.

Lacking international recognition, even among majority Muslim countries, Akhundzada’s regime is also defied by Afghans inside and outside the country as authoritarian and illegitimate.

When challenged with the opinion that the regime lacks electoral legitimacy, Taliban Foreign Minister Amir Khan Muttaqi told a BBC reporter this month that not every country holds elections, and Afghanistan is just one among them.

Authoritarian rule

North Korea, Syria and Saudi Arabia are often reported as the most authoritarian regimes in the world, where autocratic leaders rule with unchecked power.

Akhundzada has no less power than the leaders of these three countries, but he has one main distinction: his unique style of operation.

“He is like a ghost,” a lecturer at Kabul University, who did not want to be identified out of concern for his personal security, told VOA. “Why he does not appear in public is a million-dollar question. But something is definitely wrong.”

Invisibility of the emir is exclusive to the Taliban.

By shutting schools and universities for women, suppressing the free press, criminalizing political dissidence and isolating the country from the international arena, Akhundzada is largely mirroring leaders of other authoritarian regimes.

“It is really important for them to keep their own people ignorant of the better lives that people elsewhere may have. And it is also an absolute requirement that they keep their people believing in an external, existential threat,” Peter Harms, a professor of management at the University of Alabama, told VOA.

Under the Taliban, Afghanistan has been plunged deeper into poverty, with more than half of its estimated 38 million people in dire need of humanitarian assistance. Nearly all Afghans rate their lives on a par with suffering, according to a Gallup poll published in December 2022.

Taliban leaders often brag about bringing peace and security to a war-torn Afghanistan. As an armed insurgency, the Taliban were blamed for perpetrating thousands of security incidents — suicide attacks, bomb blasts, targeted killings — annually from 2002 to August 2021, when they regained power.

“Many people seem willing to trade their freedoms for safety,” said Harms, describing the nature of autocratic regimes.

The Taliban’s return to power, after almost two decades of an internationalized democratization in Afghanistan, is not an exceptional case.

Around the world, authoritarian regimes are expanding their grip. Only 20% of the world’s population lives in free societies, while 39% lives in societies where civic and political freedoms are curtailed at varying levels, according to the nonprofit Freedom House in Washington.

“Authoritarian regimes have become more effective at co-opting and circumventing the norms and institutions meant to support basic rights and liberties,” Cathryn Grothe, a research analyst for Middle East and North Africa at Freedom House, told VOA in written answers.

In Akhundzada’s Afghanistan, such institutions — the national human rights commission, electoral bodies and parliament — have already been dissolved indefinitely.

Posted in Taliban | Tags: Hibatullah Akhundzada, Life under Taliban rule |

House GOP subpoenas Secretary of State Blinken for Afghanistan cable

28th March, 2023 · admin

Blinken

USA Today: House Republicans who have pilloried President Joe Biden’s foreign policy revved up their push to obtain information about disagreements within the administration over 2021 withdrawal of U.S. troops from Afghanistan.  A subpoena scheduled to be served at the State Department on Tuesday seeks an internal cable reportedly written by 23 U.S. officials criticizing aspects of the exit plan, which resulted in the almost immediate takeover by the Taliban.  Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in US-Afghanistan Relations |

Taliban unity shows cracks under Afghanistan’s isolation

28th March, 2023 · admin

Sirajuddin Haqqani

Nikkei: Possible signs of friction in Afghanistan’s Taliban leadership have forced the group to deny a rift at the top. While experts are not counting on mutiny, some say key leaders’ unusually public criticism of the war-torn country’s direction marks a significant change for the Islamist group. Last month, the Taliban’s interior minister, Sirajuddin Haqqani, spoke at a graduation ceremony at an Islamic school in Khost province and expressed discontent. “Monopolizing power and damaging the reputation of the whole system [of government] is not in our interest,” Haqqani said in the recorded address, which went viral online. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Political News, Taliban | Tags: Hibatullah Akhundzada, Sirajuddin Haqqani, Taliban Factions - Haqqanis versus Kandaharis, Taliban infighting |
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