Obama try to send troops too late, Kunduz fellen to Talibans

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http://www.cbc.ca/m/news/world/taliban-kunduz-afghanistan-1.3249268


Taliban seizure of Kunduz sends message to Kabul, Europe
New Taliban leader's victory shores up position in divided militant group
Sep 30, 2015 11:00 AM ET
Sean Davidson, CBC News
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Prior to Monday's Taliban*attack on Kunduz, the group*had*—*at least in some ways —*slipped from the West's mind.*

There have been so many headlines and*so much heated debate about the threat posed by ISIS and its offshoots*elsewhere in the world that*it was easy to forget about the militant group that ran Afghanistan for five years,*even though it continues to test the mettle of Kabul.*

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The Taliban is "a divided movement, but it's still very effective," says Tristan Reed, a security analyst at Stratfor, a geopolitical intelligence and advisory firm based in Austin, Texas.*

"Kabul is still very much challenged to maintain the necessary force to maintain authority and control."*

'Little attention was given to other areas of Afghanistan, including the northern provinces.' — Bill Roggio,*senior fellow,*Foundation for Defense of Democracies
The Taliban has reportedly suffered internal division since the death of long-time ruler Mullah Mohammad Omar in 2013.

"But we're really watching Kabul get tested by the Taliban this year," Reed says.*

Case in point:*Monday's sudden seizure of a provincial capital in the north of the country, far from the Taliban's usual haunts in the south.*

The fierce, multipronged assault took the Afghan military and intelligence agencies off guard. It*marks the first time an urban area has fallen to the Taliban since the U.S.-led invasion ousted their*regime 14 years ago.*

Canada's role in what became a nine-year mission in Afghanistan claimed the lives of 158 military personnel.

Kabul has vowed to retake the strategically important city, and on Wednesday special forces from the U.S.-led coalition were fighting a pitched battle alongside the Afghan military.*Several U.S. air strikes have also targeted Taliban positions in and around the city.

Sending a message

The fall of*Kunduz*was major blow to Afghanistan's fledgling President*Ashraf*Ghani. According to one expert, it was likely an effort by the*Taliban's*new leader, Mullah*Akhtar*Mohammed*Mansour, to shore up the legitimacy of his own rule.

Christian Leuprecht, an international security expert and professor at both Queen's University and the Royal Military College in Kingston, Ont., says adding to the stream of refugees already fleeing the region also sends an effective message to Ghani and his backers.*

"Mullah Mansour is indirectly signaling not only to the government in Kabul, but also to Europe, that he and his demands will need to be taken seriously," Leuprecht says.*

"Especially since negotiations between the government and the Taliban appear to have floundered."

The Afghanistan Taliban (not to be confused with the similar, but separate group in Pakistan) is*fighting to retake the country and oust*the post-invasion government set up by the West.*

The attack on Kunduz, Leuprecht notes, came one year to the day since Ghani took office. It was also*at the tail-end of a Muslim holiday, when security forces were likely understaffed.*


An Afghan policeman holds a gun on his shoulder on Tuesday, a day after Taliban insurgents overran the strategic northern city of Kunduz. (STR/AFP/Getty)
There were practical reasons for the attack, as well. The city and the surrounding province, also called Kunduz, have a total population of around 1 million — and are within one of the country's chief bread baskets, an area also rich with mining assets.

It lies on a strategic crossroads connecting Afghanistan to Pakistan, China and Central Asia,*close to smuggling routes for drugs, minerals and weapons.*

During the attack, the insurgents also reportedly captured the offices of the intelligence service and released hundreds of prisoners — each one a potential recruit — from jail.

"It essentially amounts to a raid on a major government base,"*Leuprecht*says.*

North neglected

The Taliban have had a strong presence in the province since launching their annual summer offensive with an assault on the city in April.*

That marked the start of a campaign across the north, but security forces had not done enough to protect the area, according to Bill Roggio, a senior fellow at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies.*

"Little attention was given to other areas of Afghanistan, including the northern provinces, where the Taliban have expended considerable effort in fighting the military and government," Roggio wrote in a recent report.*

"Today, the Taliban are gaining ground in northern, central, eastern and southern Afghanistan."*

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Afghan security forces have been sorely tested by the fighting, following the withdrawal late last year of international combat troops. The army and police have suffered huge casualties, and their resources have been spread thinly across the country as the Taliban have taken their fight to topple the Kabul government to every corner of Afghanistan.

There is now speculation*about*whether the fall of Kunduz, and the return of the Taliban to headlines in the West, will weaken the resolve of U.S. President Barack Obama to pull American troops out of Afghanistan by the end of next year.*

Former Swedish prime minister Carl Bildt said on Twitter it's now "nearly inconceivable" Obama will pull the troops. It's*a sentiment echoed by U.S. Senator John McCain, who said in a statement the White House must "abandon this dangerous and arbitrary course."*

But Leuprecht predicts the Taliban's success won't change the U.S. president's*mind.*

"Obama's 'leading from behind' doctrine and his war-weariness would suggest that the Americans will stay the course," and continue the troop pullout, he says.*

With files from Associated Press and Reuters
 
https://tw.mobi.yahoo.com/news/focus-阿富汗塔利班回魂-奪城-國際驚愕-130653877.html


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聯合國大會正在紐約舉行!超過100個國家領袖,今天參與最關鍵的「元首高峰會」。美國眾院的國土安全委員會提出:這4年半,全球至少有2萬5千人投奔ISIL,讓他們的兵力源源不絕,偏偏除了這個,中東阿富汗再次陷入危機,東北部一座重要大城「昆都茲」,恐怖組織塔利班攻陷了重要大城!這是2001年美國出兵 ,14年後,第一次又有城市落入塔利班手中。

你可以說,一方面率領聯軍轟炸ISIL,一方面又看者阿富汗重新貝塔利班陰霾籠罩,美國顏面無光,似乎要陷入兩面作戰,他們訓練扶植外國政權,這樣的策略,又受到質疑。

光天化日下,街道上槍聲大作,警察不見蹤影,整座城市宛如無政府狀態,市中心廣場,建築屋頂也被插旗佔領,阿富汗東北大城昆都茲,28日驚傳遭塔利班組織攻破。

阿富汗總統甘尼:「首先必須降低平民死傷,我們正在也會持續關注狀況。」

據傳除了多棟政府大樓、還有醫院,甚至連監獄也淪陷。600多名囚犯脫逃,其中不少是塔利班組織成員,他們揚言,要以昆都茲為基地,建立新的伊斯蘭國。

塔利班武裝份子:「真主保佑,這是我們的希望,建立宗教學校、橋樑、道路,一個以伊斯蘭律法為尊的政府,這就是為何我們挺身奮戰,要在這裡施行伊斯蘭律法。」

14年來,第一次有省會城市,再落入塔利班之手,阿富汗政府全力動員,立刻展開奪城大作戰。大批兵力在昆都茲的周遭集結,特種部隊、空軍,精銳盡出,美國也證實29日,已經在近郊發動空襲,要助當局一臂之力。

美國國防部發言人庫克:「很明顯,這是阿富汗軍隊一次挫敗,但我們已經看到他們做出反應,在最近幾週幾月之內,面對他們的挑戰。」

阿富汗陷入危機,美國也是臉上無光,因為2001年出兵之後,塔利班的勢力照理說,早已應該崩潰瓦解。

所以包括北約在內,美國從去年起,就啟動了撤軍計畫,同時協助訓練當地軍隊,希望扶植新的政權能獨當一面,只是如今,這個策略卻似乎已經面臨失敗。

CNN軍事專家:「我們看到美國空軍出動,阿富汗政府和安全部隊,顯然他們還是無法獨當一面,接下來還會看到美國的特種部隊,支援阿富汗突擊隊,以增強他們的戰力。」

2014年9月,阿富汗的政權,首度以民主的方式和平轉移,當時新總統甘尼就職,全國上下都充滿希望,只是如今一年過去了,不只塔利班重起爐灶,社會經濟依舊百廢待舉。

阿富汗掃帚商人:「到處都沒有工作也沒有生意,我得從學校把孩子帶出來賺錢,我希望他們能受教育,但現在更需要他們幫忙貼補家用。」

一支30分美元的掃把,不到台幣10塊錢,依舊賣不出去,失業率高漲,經濟每況愈下,安全同樣也沒有改善。

炸彈攻擊衝突不斷,逃離阿富汗的難民,人數屢創新高,據統計,光2015年前8個月,就已經有1.5萬名阿富汗士兵喪命,比前一年暴增30%。

政治分析家:「就安全來說,阿富汗軍隊陷入困境,死亡率居高不下,就長遠來說絕對不行,而在政治方面,阿富汗政府也沒有發揮作用。」

據了解,目前美國仍有約一萬大兵,駐守在阿富汗,原預計2016年底前,全數撤回,但現在計畫恐怕生變,美國反恐戰舊仇未解,新問題也持續惡化。

美國總統歐巴馬:「這不是簡單的任務,ISIL持續壯大紮根。」

激進伊斯蘭組織ISIL,持續在伊拉克和敘利亞攻城掠地,29日聯合國反恐會議,美國總統歐巴馬不得不承認,戰事至今幾乎沒有進展。原因一方面,美俄對敘利亞總統阿塞德,一個要走,一個要留,國際社會沒有共識,無法團結,另外最新出爐的美國眾議院,國土安全委員會報告更顯示,越來越多外國人投奔ISIL。

安全專家:「ISIL的成功,就是他們成功吸引聖戰士的原因,因為他們創造出類國家的選擇,而美國和聯軍無法剿滅他們,則成為策略上最大的弱點。」

根據這份報告,自2011年起,已經有2萬5千人,加入ISIL的麾下,光過去9個月,就佔7千人,其中包括250名美國公民,顯然美國忙著在境外大張旗鼓,卻忽略了本土的危機。

美國眾院國土安全委員會主席麥考:「我認為最重要的是我們沒有,一個國家的策略,來應對這個問題。」

然而犯下這種錯誤的不只美國,俄羅斯同樣越陷越深,根據最新情報,目前他們至少已有,28架戰機、24架戰鬥直升機,部署在敘利亞境內,強勢涉入他國內
 
http://tribune.com.pk/story/964484/the-fall-of-kunduz/


The fall of Kunduz
By Editorial
Published: September 30, 2015
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A picture shared by the Afghan Taliban spokesperson on Twitter purportedly shows insurgents carrying flags in Kunduz city on Monday.

A picture shared by the Afghan Taliban spokesperson on Twitter purportedly shows insurgents carrying flags in Kunduz city on Monday.

The taking — though possibly temporarily — of Kunduz by the Afghan Taliban was not unexpected. They had surrounded the northern Afghan city for months and made at least one previous attempt to take it. American aircraft are reportedly and somewhat belatedly said to have attacked the Taliban positions — necessary because Afghanistan does not possess an air force worthy of the name. For the first time since they were deposed, the Afghan Taliban are close to controlling a major urban centre outside their traditional operational areas in the south and east of the country. Kunduz is a major trading hub for the region and not only Afghanistan, and neighbouring countries will view this development with justified concern.

The assault was symbolic in that it marked the first anniversary of the accession to power of the government of Ashraf Ghani after a bitterly fought election, the outcome of which is still disputed by many. He has to lead a military that is poorly trained and equipped (by Nato, no less), suffers from significant command and leadership deficits and is losing men and materials to the Taliban daily. There are reports of preparations for a counterattack, of Afghan forces regrouping at Kunduz airport and special forces having been flown in — but none of this can disguise a painful reality. The Taliban as a fighting force are effective, well-resourced and disciplined and moreover have a developing capacity to take and hold urban centres, a gambit they have taken as an example from the Islamic State (IS). The operation will have bolstered the position of Mullah Mansoor, who is still far from consolidated as the leader of the Taliban in their entirety, and may be viewed as a harbinger of yet worse to come.

Since they were deposed in 2001, the Taliban have been very much a rural phenomenon in terms of a fighting force. The majority of the battles fought against the Taliban by American and Nato forces over the years have been in the countryside, not the cities, and always had massive air support. But Nato and the Americans are figures of the past, and the compass militarily has swung in the Taliban’s direction. Without the clout of Western might, Afghan forces are very much left to their own devices. The fragmented tapestry of loyalties and affiliations that are Afghan culture and society are not a good foundation for a unified army and thus it is proving to be. The Taliban are now in a position to exploit this fundamental weakness, and if they are able, however briefly, to claim to have taken and held Kunduz, then other cities are also vulnerable and the spectre of Domino Theory heaves itself over the horizon.

Military misadventures aside, President Ghani has some pressing foreign policy issues, not the least being relations with Pakistan. Once again, there is a churn, with the Afghan president seeking on September 28 to refine the semantics of our relationship saying that they were not “brotherly” but more like a relationship between two states — a description that itself is open to a variety of interpretations. Speaking to the BBC in a first-anniversary interview, he called for Islamabad to take the same stance in respect of all engaged in terrorism, and by inference saying that Pakistan needs to be less selective about the terrorists it chooses to strike.

Peace remains eternally elusive, and for the Taliban, currently on a roll, there is little incentive to come to the table. There is a chance to take the ascendancy, and the Taliban are nothing if not opportunistic. Afghan governmental entities have always been weak, with much devolved local power in the hands of tribal and ethnic groups. This provides any number of opportunities to exploit divisions and split loyalties. It is not beyond imagination that the Taliban could again find themselves at the gates of Kabul, beyond which is a vast cabinet full of unopened cans of worms.

Published in The Express Tribune, September 30th, 2015.

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