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Taliban Overrun Second Provincial City As Afghan Government Forces Retreat

7th August, 2021 · admin

Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty
August 7, 2021

A senior police official in Jawzjan Province told RFE/RL’s Radio Azadi on August 7 that the Taliban has seized Sheberghan, the capital of the province, after reports of heavy fighting in and around the city.

Another Jawzjan police official told Radio Azadi that the Taliban had set fire to the palace of warlord and long-time foe of the militant group Abdul Rashid Dostum in Sheberghan and the Jawzjan provincial office building. The officials spoke to Radio Azadi on condition of anonymity.

Afghan security forces in Sheberghan retreated to the airport and the Jangalbagh area near the city, one of the police officials said.

Jawzjan Deputy Governor Abdul Qadir Malia said security forces were trying to retake Sheberghan in a series of clearing operations. Malia said the Taliban had launched attacks on the city from four directions just before midday.

Dostum was in Kabul, where he met with President Ashraf Ghani on August 7 in an attempt to persuade him to fly in reinforcements, aides to Dostum told the AFP news agency.

A spokesman for the Afghan Interior Ministry told Radio Azadi previously that the Taliban had entered some areas of the city, but reinforcements had arrived, adding that the Taliban had suffered heavy losses.

A Taliban spokesman told Radio Azadi earlier on August 7 that the militants had captured the city and that facilities such as the governor’s office, the police headquarters, and the intelligence service’s building were under Taliban control.

The Taliban claims could not be immediately verified.

There were also reports of significant fighting overnight near Kunduz, the capital of Kunduz Province; Taloquan, the capital of Takhar Province; and Faiz Abad, the capital of Badakhshan Province.

Government sources told Radio Azadi that Taliban attacks had been repelled near all three cities and that the militants suffered heavy casualties.

The previous day, Taliban militants captured Zaranj, the capital of Nimroz Province. Local officials said the town of around 31,000 people fell without a fight.

Taliban militants shot dead the head of the government’s Information and Media Center in Kabul the same day.

In New York, the UN Security Council discussed the security situation in Afghanistan, with UN special envoy for Afghanistan, Deborah Lyons, expressing doubt about the Taliban’s commitment to a political settlement.

Russian UN Ambassador Vassily Nebenzia said the prospect of a protracted civil war in Afghanistan “is a stark reality.”

Fighting in Afghanistan has intensified since May 1, when the United States and other countries officially began withdrawing their forces in a pullout that is expected to be completed this month.

Britain warned its citizens on August 6 to leave Afghanistan immediately as the security situation in the country continues to deteriorate.

This story is based on reporting by RFE/RL’s Radio Azadi correspondents on the ground in Afghanistan. Their names are being withheld for their protection.

With reporting by AP Reuters, and AFP

Copyright (c) 2021. RFE/RL, Inc. Reprinted with the permission of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, 1201 Connecticut Ave NW, Ste 400, Washington DC 20036.

Related

  • “Even before the Taliban attacks… most of the security forces put their weapons on the ground, took off their uniforms, and left their units and fled.”
Posted in Security, Taliban | Tags: Ashraf Ghani Government Security Failure, Dostum, Jowzjan, United States handing Pakistan control of Afghanistan |

1TV Afghanistan Dari News – August 7, 2021

7th August, 2021 · admin

Posted in News in Dari (Persian/Farsi) |

Ghani discusses crisis in north with Marshal Dostum

7th August, 2021 · admin

File Photo – Dostum (left) with Ghani (right)

Ariana: This comes amid heavy fighting in numerous provinces around the country, including Dostum’s home province of Jawzjan. In line with Ghani’s calls last week for the people of Afghanistan to support the Afghan National Defense and Security Forces, Dostum in turn said: “It is time to stand by ANDSF to defend the values and provide security.” Heavy clashes are ongoing in Dostum’s hometown, Sheberghan, the capital of Jawzjan. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Political News, Security, Taliban | Tags: Ashraf Ghani, Dostum, Jowzjan |

US sends B-52s to bombard Taliban in Afghanistan

7th August, 2021 · admin

1TV: US B-52 bombers and Spectre gunships have been sent into action against the Taliban to try to stop the militants’ march on three key cities, according to media reports. The Times, citing US defense sources, reported that the B-52s and AC-130s are targeting insurgents around Kandahar, Herat and Lashkargah cities. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Security, Taliban, US-Afghanistan Relations |

Who’s Who In The Taliban: The Men Who Run The Extremist Group And How They Operate

7th August, 2021 · admin

Mullah Hibatullah Akhundzada

By Ron Synovitz
RFE/RL’s Radio Azadi
August 6, 2021

With the Taliban in control of more than half of all districts in Afghanistan, promises made by Taliban political negotiators in Doha appear to be falling by the wayside.

The movement’s so-called Political Affairs Commission in Doha had vowed in a February 2020 peace deal with the United States that the Taliban would respect human rights and keep foreign fighters out of the territory it controls.

But recent reporting by RFE/RL’s Radio Azadi and Tajik Service belies Taliban claims that it has no foreign fighters in Afghanistan, as there are thousands of them — mostly Pakistanis — fighting under the Taliban banner.

Meanwhile, Human Rights Watch said Taliban militants who’ve recently advanced in Ghazni, Kandahar, and other Afghan provinces have been detaining and summarily executing soldiers, police, and civilians with suspected ties to the Afghan government.

Such reports raise doubt about how much clout, if any, the political office in Doha has over battlefield commanders and the shadow governors that Taliban military leaders have installed in the territories they control.

“The most important question about Taliban command and control is the one we know the least about right now,” Afghan security analyst Ted Callahan said. “It centers on the Taliban in Doha right now who are negotiating with the Afghan government and to what degree they actually control the fighting on the ground.”

Command And Control

Questioned by RFE/RL, Taliban spokesman Zabiullah Mujahid described a leadership structure in which the Political Affairs Commission in Doha has no direct control over the fighters who’ve seized vast tracts of territory in recent months.

Mujahid explained in an e-mail to RFE/RL that the Doha political office is just one of nearly two dozen commissions and offices that serve as a kind of cabinet of ministers beneath Taliban Supreme Leader Malawi Hibatullah Akhundzada.

Mujahid said a separate branch in the Taliban’s leadership structure — the Military Affairs Commission — oversees the movement’s entire military chain of command down to the provincial and district levels.

He said Akhundzada is the Taliban’s “ultimate authority” on religious, political, and military issues — adding that Akhundzada has three deputies under his command.

Political Affairs Deputy Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar heads the Political Affairs Commission and leads the Taliban negotiating team in Doha.

The deputy leader for southern provinces, Mullah Mohammad Yaqoob, is the son of the late Taliban founder Mullah Mohammad Omar. He also heads the Taliban’s military operations.

Akundzada’s deputy for eastern provinces, Sirajuddin Haqqani, also is the head of the so-called Haqqani network.

Mujahid noted that the Taliban’s military chain of command falls under the Military Affairs Commission, which is dominated by Yaqoob and Haqqani.

Going up the chain of command from the district level, each Taliban battlefield commander answers to a provincial command.

Mujahid told RFE/RL there are seven regional “circles” that are each responsible for at least three provincial commands.

Finally, overseeing those regional “circles” are two deputy leaders of the Military Affairs Commission. One is in charge of 21 provinces in the Taliban’s so-called “western zone,” Mujahid said. The other oversees the command in 13 provinces in the “eastern zone.”

The Taliban’s Military Affairs Commission also is responsible for appointing and overseeing all of the provincial and district “governors” in the Taliban’s shadow government.

Necessary Evolution

Analysts say the Taliban’s current leadership structure has evolved out of necessity since 2001 from a loose-knit organization of local militia commanders into a more organized political and military movement.

The key leadership changes came in a response to a dispute that divided the Taliban into rival factions following the death of Taliban founder Mullah Omar in 2013.

In fact, those divisions are an extension of a long-running power struggle based on Pashtun tribal structures.

One side backed Omar’s son as the Taliban’s next supreme leader. It has followers in western and southern Afghanistan. It also dominated the Taliban’s highest advisory and decision-making leadership council — the Rahbari Shura — which is better known as the Quetta Shura.

On the other side are Taliban commanders in eastern Afghanistan and Pakistan linked to the Haqqani network. It has strong links to consultative leadership councils known as the Peshawar Shura in northwestern Pakistan and the Miran Shah Shura in Pakistan’s North Waziristan tribal region.

A 2019 study by the U.S. Institute for Peace (USIP) described how the Taliban refined its command structure after the death of Mullah Omar to smooth over the factional divisions.

It said that by creating a more unified military and political movement, the Taliban has been “able to capture and govern large stretches of territory.”

To do so, it created the system of shadow Taliban governance — a move that allowed military commanders from different factions to appoint shadow government “officials” in territory under their control.

Still, Taliban shadow governance has been “uneven and ad hoc,” the USIP study concluded. It produced different rules “shaped by individual commanders’ preferences, local traditions, and the Taliban’s strength in the community.”

“Multiple actors — from the Taliban leadership to local commanders — have played a key role in creating and shaping the movement’s policy in Afghanistan,” it said. “Taliban policymaking has been top-down as much as it has been bottom-up, with the leadership shaping the rules as much as fighters and commanders on the ground.”

Callahan said a key question impacting Afghanistan’s future is whether, going forward, the Taliban will be able to maintain its current command-and-control structure.

“Will it strengthen or will it decentralize so that we see Taliban fiefdoms which are much more regionally aligned than they are nationally?” asked Callahan.

Today’s Taliban

“If you had to put a very simple label on it, the Taliban are now basically disgruntled Afghans,” Callahan told RFE/RL. There also are thousands of non-Afghan Taliban fighters in the country, he added.

“It’s no longer a Pashtun ethno-nationalist movement,” Callahan explained. “It’s much more diverse than it was in the 1990s.”

Bill Roggio, a senior fellow at the U.S.-based Foundation for Defense of Democracies (FDD), doesn’t believe the Taliban’s promises in the 2020 Doha agreement to respect human rights and keep foreign fighters out of the territory it controls.

Roggio, a senior editor of the FDD’s Long War Journal, said today’s Taliban still appears to be trying to establish an Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan and impose their strict version of Islamic law on the Afghan people.

But Roggio also sees important differences between today’s Taliban and the Islamist regime that controlled most of Afghanistan during the late 1990s.

“The Taliban is largely made up of Afghans,” Roggio told RFE/RL. “It’s dominated by Afghans. But this question is a little tricky because of groups like the Haqqani network that are based in both Pakistan and Afghanistan.”

“There are a large number of ethnic Uzbeks and Tajiks, even Turkmen and, in some cases, even ethnic Hazara who are Afghans and are part of the Taliban today,” Roggio said. “The Taliban has made deep inroads into these communities in recent years. That’s a big different between the Taliban today and the Taliban before the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks against the United States.”

The thousands of foreign militants fighting for the Taliban in Afghanistan include fighters from the Middle East who are part of Al-Qaeda as well as militants from Pakistan and Central Asia, he said.

Indeed, a recent report by the UN Security Council’s Analytical Support and Sanctions Monitoring Team said that out of an estimated 85,000 active Taliban fighters in Afghanistan, about 10,000 are thought to be foreign militants.

It says about 6,500 of them are Pakistani citizens. It says others come from Central Asia, Chechnya, or the remnants of Al-Qaeda in the Middle East.

“The primary component of the Taliban in dealing with [Al-Qaeda] is the Haqqani network,” the UN monitoring team concluded. “Ties between the two groups remain close, based on ideological alignment, relationships forged through common struggle, and intermarriage.”

In northern Afghanistan, an exclusive report by RFE/RL’s Tajik Service documented how the Taliban has put the commander of militants from Tajikistan in charge of five districts recently seized by the Taliban along the border with Tajikistan.

The 25-year-old commander, who goes by the alias Mahdi Arsalon, was born in the village of Sherbegiyon in Tajikistan’s eastern Rasht Valley.

Arsalon and his militants are known in Afghanistan as the “Tajik Taliban.”

In reality, they are members of Jamaat Ansarullah, a group founded a decade ago by a rogue former Tajik opposition commander with the goal of overthrowing the government in Dushanbe.

Jamaat Ansarullah is banned in Tajikistan as a terrorist group.

RFE/RL correspondents in northwestern Afghanistan recently reported the presence of Uzbek militants affiliated with the banned Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan (IMU).

Badghis Province Governor Hossamuddin Shams told RFE/RL the Uzbek militants have been managing the Taliban war in parts of the north and west of the country.

Shams said the families of about 80 Uzbek militants arrived in Badghis Province from Pakistan in 2018 and are now stationed in the Bala Murghab district.

He said most of these Uzbek Taliban fighters are the children of IMU militants who fled to Pakistan in late 2001 after they helped the Taliban fight against the anti-Taliban Northern Alliance the previous year in Takhar Province.

Afghanistan’s northern neighbors say they are concerned that Central Asian Taliban fighters will eventually try to return to their homelands to launch insurgencies.

Callahan, a former adviser to U.S. Special Forces in northern Afghanistan, said the Taliban’s claim that it does not have foreign fighters in its ranks is “demonstrably untrue.”

“It does seem that they are using these fighters simply because they lack the manpower at the moment to administer all of the areas that they’ve taken over,” Callahan told RFE/RL. “That seems to be a consensus point right now.”

“In the Taliban blitzkrieg across the north in recent months, there are reports of foreign fighters actually being involved in the fighting because, in many cases, the Afghan and Pakistani fighters were insufficient in numbers,” he explained.

Callahan notes that reports of ethnic Uyghur militants from western China being used by the Taliban in the northeastern Afghan province of Badakhshan have unsettled Beijing.

He said the Taliban will continue to deny the presence of foreign fighters among its ranks.

“There is a potential future role in Afghanistan of China,” he said. “Beijing seems to be hedging its bets on whether the Afghan government or the Taliban will have power in the future. They seem poised to work with either group.”

“Having foreign fighters who work with the Taliban — particularly Uyghur militants — does threaten the Taliban-Chinese relationship in the future,” he concluded.

Taliban Vs. Afghan Security Forces

On paper, the Taliban is heavily outnumbered and technologically inferior to Afghanistan’s National Security Forces.

But analysts warn that, as with many things about Afghanistan, what appears on paper is not as it is on the ground.

Including troops under the command of the Defense Ministry and police in the Interior Ministry, there are at least three times as many Afghan security forces than the estimated number of active Taliban fighters in the country.

The U.S. Special Inspector General for Afghan Reconstruction (SIGAR) said in its latest report to Congress that the total strength of Afghan National Security Forces — including the army, special forces, the air force, police, and intelligence officers — is about 307,000 personnel.

Jonathan Schroden, a security expert at the CNA research organization in Arlington, Virginia, estimates that the Afghan government has about 180,000 available combat troops on any given day.

Afghanistan also has been well supplied by the United States, which has spent some $83 billion to help build, equip, train, and sustain the Afghan security forces since the previous Taliban regime was toppled in late 2001.

Afghanistan’s military has received armored vehicles, planes, and attack helicopters, artillery, assault rifles, night-vision goggles, and surveillance drones from the United States.

SIGAR said the Afghan military also has a fleet of 167 aircraft, including its attack helicopters.

But the weaponry delivered to Kabul over the past two decades and what is now available for combat are two different things.

Complete details about the current status of the Afghan arsenal are classified.

But anecdotal evidence suggests much of what has been delivered to the Afghan government and pro-government militias over the years is either no longer functioning or has fallen into the hands of the advancing Taliban.

Roggio and Callahan agree that the main source of Taliban weaponry appears be within Afghanistan itself.

They say that includes recently captured Western-made weapons and equipment that was supplied to the Afghan military such as assault rifles, vehicles, and night-vision goggles.

It also includes the small arms and light weapons that flooded the country since the Afghan-Soviet War in the 1980s, such as Soviet-designed AK-47 assault rifles, rocket-propelled grenade launchers, and mortars.

Taliban expert Antonio Giustozzi said the Taliban have tried to use some antiaircraft and antitank weapons with mixed success.

Small rockets, suicide bombers, and improvised explosive devices (IEDs) are among the deadliest weapons used by the Taliban.

Experts say the regional black market also is a rich source for Taliban weaponry.

Chemicals for fertilizer brought from Pakistan are known to have been widely used by the Taliban to make IEDs in southern and eastern Afghanistan.

But officials in Pakistan, Iran, and Russia deny accusations by Kabul and the U.S. military that they have covertly supplied Afghanistan’s Taliban with weapons and other support.

Written and reported by Ron Synovitz in Prague with reporting by RFE/RL Radio Azadi correspondents in Afghanistan whose names are being withheld for security reasons. Additional reporting by RFE/RL’s Tajik Service.

Copyright (c) 2021. RFE/RL, Inc. Reprinted with the permission of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, 1201 Connecticut Ave NW, Ste 400, Washington DC 20036.
Posted in Central Asia, Haqqani Network, History, Pakistan-Afghanistan Relations, Taliban | Tags: Destabilization of Central Asia, Fazlur Rahman Ansari, Hibatullah Akhundzada, Mullah Mohammad Yaqoob, Mullah Omar, Pakistan takeover of Afghanistan via Taliban, Sirajuddin Haqqani, Taliban - Pakistani asset |

Afghanistan: 218 New Cases of COVID-19, 10 Deaths Reported

7th August, 2021 · admin

Tolo News: The Ministry of Public Health on Saturday reported 218 new positive cases of COVID-19 out of 2,473 samples tested in the last 24 hours. The ministry also reported 10 deaths and 677 recoveries from COVID-19 in the same period. The figures show a significant decrease in the daily COVID-19 cases in the last week. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Health News | Tags: Coronavirus (COVID-19) in Afghanistan |

Tolo News in Dari – August 6, 2021

6th August, 2021 · admin

Posted in News in Dari (Persian/Farsi) |

Taliban Shuts Key Afghan Border Crossing with Pakistan Until Demands Are Met

6th August, 2021 · admin

Ayaz Gul
VOA News
August 6, 2021

ISLAMABAD – Afghanistan’s Taliban insurgents closed a major crossing point Friday for travel and trade with Pakistan, demanding the neighboring country end the alleged mistreatment of Afghan travelers and ease other restrictions.

The abrupt closure of the busy Spin Boldak crossing into the southwestern Pakistani town of Chaman has stranded hundreds of travelers and trucks carrying commercial goods in both directions, according to traders and witnesses.

The Taliban’s swift battlefield advances against Afghan government forces since early May have enabled them to seize control of dozens of districts across the conflict-hit country, including most of landlocked Afghanistan’s trade crossings with neighboring countries.

They include Iran, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan and Pakistan. The loss of these trade routes is estimated to have cost the Afghan government tens of millions of dollars in revenues.

Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid defended the move, alleging Afghan travelers are being mistreated by the Pakistani side.

“They [Pakistan] open the border gate only for two, three hours during the entire day for people traveling from Afghanistan, including patients, [Afghan] refugees, traders and others,” Mujahid told VOA.

He demanded that Pakistan open the border route for the entire day, as had been the case in the past, arguing it was not possible for such a large number of people to cross over in such a short period of time.

“Men and women are extensively frisked and traders are also harassed,” Mujahid said.

Since the Taliban captured the Spin Boldak crossing, he added, Pakistani authorities also have banned entry of Afghans who possess refugee status and national identification cards. “Until Pakistani authorities address these issues and remove the restrictions, the border gate will remain closed,” Mujahid said.

Pakistani officials have not commented on the closure of the border by the Taliban.

“Around 700 trucks and 2,000 people are stuck on both sides of the border,” Imran Khan Kakar, a senior member of the Pak-Afghan Chamber of Commerce in Chaman, told VOA.

Khan said Pakistani border officials told the traders they were in contact with the Taliban and the two sides were scheduled to meet later in the day to discuss the issue.

Pakistan had sealed the Chaman-Spin Boldak crossing after the Afghan insurgent group seized control of it in the second week of July, halting all trade and traffic through the usually bustling crossroads in the region.

Last week, Islamabad partially reopened the facility to allow travelers and truck convoys stranded on both sides of the border to resume their journey.

Pakistani officials argued the partial reopening of the crossing was a humanitarian gesture, noting Islamabad recognizes the Afghan government in Kabul as the legitimate entity and not the Taliban insurgency.

The Taliban’s capture of Spin Boldak and surrounding districts of the embattled Afghan province of Kandahar have fueled Pakistan’s tensions with the Afghan government, which has long accused Islamabad of backing the insurgents.

There are five crossings on the nearly 2,640-kilometer border between Pakistan and Afghanistan. Three of them are used for travel and bilateral and transit trade activities, while the rest are dedicated to travelers, including Afghan refugees.

Pakistan, which denies accusations of links with the Taliban, still hosts about 3 million Afghans as registered refugees and economic migrants.

Posted in Economic News, Pakistan-Afghanistan Relations, Security, Taliban | Tags: Pakistan takeover of Afghanistan via Taliban, Taliban - Pakistani asset |

Taliban Overrun Afghan City Near Iran Border As Senior Media Official Gunned Down In Kabul

6th August, 2021 · admin

RFE/RL’s Radio Azadi
August 6, 2021

Local officials in western Afghanistan say Taliban fighters have entered the provincial hub of Zaranj and its Kabul-backed governor and other senior officials have fled, leaving the militant group poised to capture its first major population center since an all-out offensive began four months ago.

A provincial administration official in a neighboring province said on August 6 that the capital of Nimroz Province is now largely under Taliban control although local police and other security forces are still resisting in some parts of the city.

Local officials describe panic among terrified residents that left many Afghan families scrambling to cross the border into Iran.

Zaranj has a recent population of around 50,000 people.

The push in Zaranj follows news earlier in the day of the assassination in Kabul by the Taliban of the head of the Afghan government’s Information and Media Center, Dawa Khan Menapal.

Menapal’s killing was the latest incident signaling Taliban militants’ increased focus on government targets as they also continue major offensives in other big cities including Herat, also in western Afghanistan, and Kandahar and Lashkar Gah in the south.

The intense fighting and reports of heavy civilian casualties are on the agenda as the UN Security Council prepares to discuss the security situation in Afghanistan later on August 6 at the request of the Afghan government, Norway, and Estonia.

A local elder in Nimroz, Haji Abdul Satar Noorzai, said that government officials fled as the Taliban advanced in Zaranj.

A Nimroz provincial administration official who did not want to be identified said residents were fleeing in panic, with some crossing the border into neighboring Iran.

He said Taliban fighters had posted photos of themselves taking over the nearby district of Kang and then approaching Zaranj itself.

“Residents of the city spent the night in fear and panic, and this morning 40 percent of Zaranj’s residents crossed the border into Iran via the Pul-e Abrisham, [an Iranian-built bridge] which borders the Islamic Republic of Iran,” the official said.

He said Iran had set up a refugee camp at the border “and took in anyone who entered the country, military or civilian.”

He estimated that there were only around 60 security troops left in Zaranj.

“The rest of the city is under Taliban control,” the official said.

Later, reports said Iran had closed its border with Afghanistan in Sistan-Baluchistan Province due to the situation across the border in Zaranj.

Fighting in Afghanistan has intensified since May 1, when the United States and other countries officially began withdrawing their forces in a pullout that is expected to be completed this month.

Taliban militants now control large portions of the country and are confronting Afghan forces in and near a handful of large cities.

A spokesman for the Taliban militant group, Zabiullah Mujahid, claimed responsibility for Menapal’s killing in a text message to Radio Azadi, saying it was a “targeted attack.”

“Unfortunately, the savage terrorists have committed a cowardly act once again and martyred a patriotic Afghan,” Interior Ministry spokesman Mirwais Stanikzai said.

Militant attacks in the capital earlier in the week targeted the residence of Afghanistan’s acting defense minister, as well as a building that houses the Afghan intelligence service.

Gunmen also shot dead a district governor in the Maidan Wardak Province on August 3.

Taliban commanders later vowed they would be targeting government officials in retaliation for Afghan and U.S. air strikes against militant fighters.

The United Nations and humanitarian groups have expressed alarm this week at revenge killings by the Taliban targeting civilians caught up in fighting that has increasingly moved to population centers including provincial capitals.

The chairwoman of the Afghanistan Human Rights Council, Shaharzad Akbar, expressed disbelief at Menapal’s death and added a “reminder” to the Taliban: “Targeting civilians is a war crime.”

“These murders are an affront to Afghans’ human rights & freedom of speech,” U.S. charge d’affaires to Afghanistan Ross Wilson said in a tweet.

Wilson said “we are saddened & disgusted” by Menapal’s killing.

He called him “a friend and colleague, whose career was focused on providing truthful information to all Afghans about #Afghanistan.”

Menapal worked for RFE/RL’s Radio Azadi as a Kandahar correspondent from February 2006 to May 2010.

Three Taliban commanders told the Reuters news agency this week that the militants were changing their strategy from capturing rural areas to focusing on cities.

Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Aleksandr Bikantov told a press conference in Moscow on August 4 that “the Taliban has no resources to capture and hold major cities, including the country’s capital, Kabul.”

“Their offensive is running out of steam,” Bikantov said, adding however that the security situation in the country “is degrading.”

On August 6, five Central Asian heads of state meeting in the Turkmen city of Avaza warned about the deteriorating security situation in Afghanistan, which shares borders with the post-Soviet republics of Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, and Tajikistan.

Tajikistan’s president, Emomali Rahmon, noted that militants control the entire border between Tajikistan and Afghanistan.

“A number of terrorist organizations are actively strengthening their positions in these areas,” Rahmon said.

Uzbek President Shavkat Mirziyoev called for a “full cease-fire” and “mutually accepted negotiated compromises” in Afghanistan.

With reporting by Reuters, AP, AFP, and TASS

Copyright (c) 2021. RFE/RL, Inc. Reprinted with the permission of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, 1201 Connecticut Ave NW, Ste 400, Washington DC 20036.

Related

  • UN Security Council To Discuss Afghanistan As Taliban Threatens Cities
Posted in Civilian Injuries and Deaths, Security, Taliban | Tags: Assassination, Nimroz |

Deutsche Bank, Standard Chartered Sued Over Afghanistan Dead

6th August, 2021 · admin

Bloomberg: Deutsche Bank AG, Standard Chartered Plc and Danske Bank A/S were sued by the families of Americans killed and wounded during the war in Afghanistan who claim they “knowingly facilitated transfers of millions” of dollars that provided aid to terrorists in the region. Click here to read more (external link).

Posted in Al-Qaeda, Haqqani Network, Other News, US-Afghanistan Relations |
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