Taliban escalates hostilities and controls border crossings in Afghanistan
It seems
that the Taliban has become more emboldened in recent weeks due to the
withdrawal of US forces and the recapture of many vital areas and cities from government
forces, as it has escalated hostilities, in addition to its refusal to share
power with the Afghan government after Kabul expressed its desire to do so if
the fate of the country was decided by the free expression of the will of the
Afghan people.
The
extremist movement is heading towards adopting a new strategy in its
hostilities by controlling the border crossings and provincial centers,
especially the border ones, as the total crossings controlled by the Taliban
amounted to seven border crossings, representing about two thirds of the
country’s crossings, since the escalation of its hostilities in June.
Failed
ceasefire
The Taliban
announced through the spokesman of its political office in Doha that there is
no agreement on a ceasefire with the Afghan government, explaining that the
Afghan government chose to declare war and that what the Taliban is doing is
only part of a reaction to the attacks.
Despite the
continued presence of international forces in the country and the spending of
billions of dollars on supporting and training Afghan forces, the Taliban was
able to regroup and gradually regain strength in remote areas.
On the
morning of Monday, August 9, the Taliban gained control of five of the capitals
of the 34 Afghan provinces after seizing three of them the previous day,
including the city of Kunduz, in a major attack that the Afghan army was unable
to stop. The movement also took control of Sar-e Pul and Taloqan, the capitals
of the two provinces located to the south and east of Kunduz.
Taliban
spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid confirmed the movement's control of Taloqan,
pointing to the return of security to it, as well as to Kunduz and Sar-e Pul.
Meanwhile,
AFP reported that the Taliban took control of all the main buildings in the
city of about 300,000 people, which was occupied by the Taliban twice in recent
years, in 2015 and 2016, and represents a strategic crossroads in northern
Afghanistan between Kabul and Tajikistan. AFP noted that the control of Kunduz
is the Taliban’s biggest military success since the start of its offensive in
May with the start of the withdrawal of international forces, which must end by
August 31.
Under the
headline “In Afghanistan: Irresistible progress for the Taliban”, the French
newspaper Liberation said that the attacks of the Taliban gained momentum with
the control of Kunduz after fighting escalated over the weekend against the
government army, noting that the movement is advancing at a high speed against
the Afghan government forces, which led to the fall of Kunduz after fierce but
short fighting with the regular Afghan army, constituting a worrying sign for
the army.
Liberation
considered that the Taliban's control of Kunduz constitutes a major military
and political success for the movement, noting that this city is the fourth
largest in the country and represents a strategic crossroads between Kabul and
Tajikistan for economic relations with Central Asia.
Control
of border crossings
Afghanistan
has more than ten border crossings with Pakistan, Iran, Tajikistan,
Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan, and the Taliban has taken control of seven of
them, most notably the Shir Khan Bandar border crossing with Tajikistan in the
northern province of Kunduz, which the movement took control of on June 22, as
well as the Islam Qala crossing in the province of Heart, one of the largest
trade gateways between Afghanistan and Iran, generating monthly revenues
estimated at $20 million for the Afghan government, which was taken over by the
movement on July 8.
The Taliban
also took control of the Abu Nasar Farahi crossing on July 8, as it is one of
the most important border crossings with Iran, and the Torghundi border
crossing, one of the commercial gates to Turkmenistan located in the western
province of Herat, which the movement took control of on July 9.
In addition,
the movement took control of the Spin Boldak crossing with Pakistan in Kandahar
on July 14, in addition to the Ai-Khanoum border crossing with Tajikistan and
the Dand-e Patan border crossing with Pakistan.
In addition
to the border crossings, the Taliban was able to take control of four
provincial capitals, including the city of Zaranj, the capital of Nimruz on the
border with Iran, the city of Sherberghan, the capital of Jowzjan on the border
with Turkmenistan, and the cities of Sar-e Pul and Kunduz, the capitals of the
two northern provinces bearing the same name. Zaranj was the first capital
controlled by the movement since the administration of US President Joe Biden
announced the complete withdrawal of his country's forces from Afghanistan.
Afghan
Foreign Minister Mohammad Hanif Atmar announced the government’s readiness for
peace with the Taliban and the sharing of power with it, stressing that his
country does not have many conditions for establishing peace between the Afghan
parties, noting that the only condition for the Afghan government to establish
peace with the movement is that the fate of Afghanistan be decided by the free
expression of the will of the Afghan people.