Fall of Kunduz signals Taliban resurgence

The fall of Afghanistan's northern city of Kunduz to the Taliban is making headlines—the first major city to be taken by the insurgents since the US invasion of 2001, and well outside their traditional stronghold in the country's south. A pitched battle to retake the city is now raging, and the US has launched air-strikes, causing God knows what carnage among the civilian inhabitants. But while the world media have been paying little attention, this didn't come out of nowhere. Kunduz city had been under siege for a month, and the Taliban have taken control of nearly all of Kunduz province, as well as much of the neighboring province of Takhar. This resurgence comes as the Taliban have broken off talks with the government under the new more hardline leadership of Mullah Akhtar Mansour. On the same day as the fall of Kunduiz, a suicide blast amid spectators at a volleyball match in Paktika province left nine dead and many more wounded. And hundreds of fighters claiming loyalty to ISIS attacked military checkpoints in Nangarhar province, in a coordinated assault that has left at least two soliders dead (probably many more).

The fall of Kunduz also comes as US officials debate what kind of military presence to leave in Afghanistan following the impending "withdrawal." Gen. John Campbell, top commander of US and NATO forces in Afghanistan, is due to testify before a Senate committee on the situation next week. Campbell has sent five different proposals to the Pentagon and NATO officials on what to do with the roughly 10,000 US troops currently in the country, most of whom are supposedly there to train and assist Afghan security forces. The recommendations range from keeping US forces at their current level or sticking to the plan to cut them back to a small force by the end of next year. The taking of Kunduz is of course providing propaganda ammo to opponents of "withdrawal." "President Obama's calendar-based drawdown of US forces in Afghanistan despite conditions on the ground has created an opening for the Taliban and placed at risk the hard-earned gains of the past decade," Sen. John McCain said in a statement. "The Taliban's capture of the key city of Kunduz in northern Afghanistan is the latest manifestation of this dangerous reversal." (BBC News, BBC NewsFox News, Khaama Press, NYT, CNN, Long War Journal)

The Taliban's new hardline stance is doubtless motivated in large part by the fear that ISIS is stealing their fire. Last month, in their inimitable style, ISIS released an atrocity porn video showing villagers in Nangarhar province being forced to kneel over explosives which were then detonated, blowing them to bits. Their crime was apparently being Taliban supporters. "A horrific video was released yesterday showing kidnappers who associate themselves with Daesh [ISIS] brutally martyring several white-bearded tribal elders and villagers with explosives," said a statement on the Taliban website. (The Guardian, Aug. 11)

You know you're in trouble when the Taliban are the moderates. And so much for the nonsense about how Obama "ended the war" in Afghanistan and Iraq. Such constructions, all too common when he announced the supposed "withdrawal," are an exercise in imperial narcissism—the notion that it's all about "us."

  1. Taliban retreat from Kunduz, take Warduj

    Taliban forces have been mostly driven from Kunduz following a battle that involved US Special Forces troops. But the Taliban have taken over the Warduj district of Badakhshan, east of Kunduz province, according to Fawzia Koofi, one of the first women to be elected to the Afghan parliament after the US invasion of the country. (Air Force Times, CNN)

  2. US air-strike wipes out Afghanistan field hospital

    US air-strikes in Kunduz are causing God knows what carnage among the civilian inhabitants, we asked? Doctors Without Borders (MSF by its French acronym) reports that 12 staff members and at least seven patients, including three children, were killed in an apparent US air-strike in Kunduz. The report says 37 people were injured including 19 staff members. "This attack constitutes a grave violation of International Humanitarian Law,"the statement says. The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) also says it is "deeply shocked" by the bombing of the MSF hospital. 

    The US military said it conducted an air strike "in the vicinity" of the hospital as it targeted Taliban insurgents who were "directly firing" on US military personnel. It said an investigation had begun, while the White House said in a statement that it expects "a full accounting of the facts and circumstances" of the incident. (Reuters)

  3. Obama cancels Afghanistan withdrawal

    What a surprise.

    President Obama announced Oct. 15 that the USy will keep thousands of troops in Afghanistan through at least the end of his term in 2017. "While America’s combat mission in Afghanistan may be over, our commitment to Afghanistan and its people endures. As commander in chief, I will not allow Afghanistan to be used as a safe haven for terrorists to attack our nation again," he said in a White House press conference. The 9,800 US troops currently in the will remain throughout most of 2016 before dropping to 5,500 toward the end the year or in early 2017. Obama said the troops' mission will not include direct combat. The Afghan people are "fully responsible for securing their country," he said. (Yahoo)

    Uh-huh.