Taliban muster for mass attack on Kandahar city
The Taliban have massed on the outskirts of Kandahar in
preparation for an all-out assault to recapture a city that was once the
movement’s capital and spiritual home.
The militants have infiltrated the suburbs of
Afghanistan’s second city, with heavy fighting reported in southern and western
neighbourhoods.
“Fighting has intensified, the Taliban are so close and
the situation is so bad,” Abduljalil Amin, head of the local peace and
development committee, told The Times from inside Kandahar. “The Taliban front
line is strong. Last night there were seven airstrikes to push them back. There
is no Eid celebration here. People are fleeing to other provinces, but many are
trapped in their homes and lack access to food and water.”
Local reports suggest the militants have already sent a
wave of more than twenty suicide bombers into Kandahar that was repelled by
Afghan forces. With reinforcements said to be arriving on the outskirts, a
renewed assault is expected within days.
The US military confirmed it had launched several
airstrikes against the Taliban around Kandahar province, the first operations
it has carried out since General Scott Miller relinquished his command of
American forces and left last week. The Pentagon, which has withdrawn much of
its air power from the country, did not disclose what weapons it had used.
Afghan commandos have also arrived to shore up Kandahar’s
defences. Crucially, the government still holds the airport, allowing it to
target Taliban fighters on the ground. Once dug into built-up areas, however,
the insurgents will be tougher to dislodge without house-to-house fighting.
The encircling of Kandahar comes amid a lightning advance
by the Taliban that has enabled them to lay siege to at least ten cities across
Afghanistan over the past month as the US completes its withdrawal from the
country. As the birthplace of the Islamist movement, Kandahar is prized above
all except Kabul itself, and defeat there would deal a hammer blow to the
government of President Ghani.
The insurgents seized the border crossing into Pakistan
at Spin Boldak, southeast of Kandahar, last week, cutting off a vital supply
line to the city. Many of Kandahar’s 600,000 residents have already fled, with
services breaking down as the fighting edges closer.
Senior Afghan officials acknowledged that Kandahar would
represent a serious loss for the government. The insurgents are yet to capture
and hold a big city. The northern city of Kunduz was overrun in 2015 and again
the following year, but retaken both times by Afghan troops, backed by US and
British special forces.
“We’d see that as significant,” a senior source said of
the potential loss of Kandahar. “It would give the Taliban not just geography
in a territory but some legitimacy inside Afghanistan.”
Beyond its strategic importance, Kandahar holds deep
symbolic significance for the Taliban. Kandahar province was the birthplace of
the Islamist movement as it emerged from the Afghan civil war that followed the
Soviet withdrawal in 1989.
Led by the one-eyed cleric Mullah Muhammad Omar, the
group seized Kandahar in 1994, imposing its brand of swift and brutal Islamic
justice. In one infamous incident, a local warlord who had raped several women
was executed by Omar and his men, and his corpse hung in the city from the
barrel of a tank as a warning.
Underscoring his power, Omar was presented with
Kandahar’s most celebrated religious relic, a cloak believed to have been worn
by the Prophet Muhammad. He wore it at a gathering of clerics in the city in
1996, and was declared leader of the faithful, a title claimed by only the most
powerful figures in Islamic history.
Within months the Taliban had swept north and seized
Kabul. The same year, Omar offered Osama bin Laden shelter in Kandahar, and the
province remained a stronghold for al-Qaeda until the invasion in 2001.
Kandahar and the neighbouring province of Helmand proved
to be a hotbed of the Taliban insurgency in the 20-year conflict that followed.
When Nato forces ended combat operations in late 2014 the insurgents swept back
from these southern strongholds, capturing swathes of the countryside.
With the US now
dashing for the exit in Afghanistan, the Taliban advance has accelerated as
government forces buckle and retreat to the cities. The speed and scale of the
Afghan military’s collapse has prompted a recalibration on the battlefield:
instead of trying to defend remote districts, it is focusing its efforts on
securing strategic locations.
Commanders believe the Taliban are also planning an
assault on the eastern city of Ghazni, a place of Islamic cultural significance
and dominated by ethnic Pashtuns. As the last stop before Kabul on the road
northeast from Kandahar, it could provide a launchpad for attacks on the capital.
“We are trying to consolidate that and use that as a base
to strengthen resistance against the Taliban and then push them back,” the
senior Afghan source said. “The nature of the war will change because the
Taliban are coming out of hiding.”
The fact that Afghan forces will not be able to rely on
American air support after the withdrawal is completed next month remains a
cause for grave concern.
Washington has expressed its alarm at the deteriorating
security situation. General Mark Milley, chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of
Staff, conceded this week that the Taliban had “strategic momentum”.
The insurgents have, however, also suffered heavy losses
in the battles that have raged from north to south in recent weeks and
observers have noted that their checkpoints in Kandahar are now sparsely
manned.
Civilians in Kandahar are caught in the middle as the
battle for the city rages around them. One man, Yaar Mohammed, said he was
injured when a mortar bomb struck his house this week.
His wife and two daughters were killed. “What am I going
to do? I have lost my loved ones,” he said. “I’m just a poor man. I sell
handkerchiefs on a cart. Where can I seek justice?”