Afghan warlords rejoin the fight to defeat the Taliban
The thunder of rocket-propelled grenades ricocheted down the streets of Herat. Gunfire ripped through the air as Afghan troops and local fighters screamed at residents to get inside.
A wrecked government Humvee,
billowing smoke, marked one of several front lines inside Afghanistan’s
third-largest city, which has faced a ferocious Taliban assault over the past
ten days. Stationed near the ruined vehicle, 20-year-old Mohammadullah watched
the street, a rocket-propelled grenade launcher on his shoulder.
“The Taliban are not able to take
the city — we are united with government forces and we are armed,” he said.
Dressed in the traditional salwar
khameez, a patterned scarf around his head, the young man is part of a militia
loyal to the local warlord Ismail Khan that has joined Afghan troops in a
last-ditch defence of Herat. Close to the western border with Iran, the ancient
Silk Road city of some 570,000 people had been unthreatened by the Taliban for
20 years, until the insurgents launched a offensive across the country in
recent weeks in the wake of the final US withdrawal.
Scores of
districts throughout Afghanistan have been overrun by the Islamists as
government forces buckle. More than a dozen cities are under siege, with bitter
fighting on the outskirts of provincial capitals to the north, south and west.
One of them, Zarranj, fell yesterday.
In an attempt to
stave off total collapse, President Ghani has turned to the warlords and their
militias. Local fighters who register with the government are paid a salary and
supplied with weapons to defend their homes against the Taliban.
The move has drawn
some infamous characters back to the fray, with ominous echoes of the Afghan
civil war of the 1990s that spawned the Taliban. Many of the warlords who
emerged after the Soviet withdrawal in 1989 also have brutal reputations and
their return has raised fears that Afghanistan could once again implode as
local powerbrokers vie for dominance.
In return for
lending their military support to undermanned and demoralised government
forces, some warlords are already dictating terms with the beleaguered Ghani.
The pact between Kabul and the warlords risks splintering Afghanistan into
local fiefdoms and fuelling another civil war.
Khan was a
former comrade of many Taliban commanders in the mujahideen that fought the
Soviet Union during the 1980s. He gained notoriety for supporting US forces as
the Taliban were routed in 2001. Now aged 75, he has made a point of appearing
on the battlefield with his men as the battle for Herat has raged from street
to street.
Speaking
to The Times on the front line, Khan vowed that Herat would
“never fall”. Hundreds of Afghan commandos were airlifted into the city last
week, but it is Khan’s militia that has spearheaded the defence.
“We are here to
support the Afghan security forces. I have more than 3,000 men fighting the Taliban,”
Khan said, claiming his militia had only suffered a handful of casualties.
He criticised
the deal struck between Washington and the Taliban in the Gulf state of Qatar
last year, which paved the way for the US withdrawal. “War with the Taliban is
different now compared to the 1990s. The US has legitimised the Taliban through
the Doha agreement and many other countries are now supporting the group,” Khan
said.
Another
notorious warlord from the civil war era, Abdul Rashid Dostum, also announced
his return to Afghanistan to join the battle against the Taliban this week.
While the
politicians manoeuvre, however, many on the front lines in Afghanistan’s
war-torn cities are fighting for survival. Word of Taliban atrocities has
spread throughout the country as tens of thousands flee the Islamist advance.
“I’m not doing
this to make money, or to take advantage. The Taliban have foreign support and
are fighting against our government,” said Sultan Mohammad a young militiaman
in southern Helmand province.
“I accepted
everything, dead or alive and I will fight until my last breath. We are ready
to pay any price to stop this war.”