Kabul ‘could be overrun within months’ as Taliban pushes closer to Afghanistan’s capital
The capital of Afghanistan could be cut off
by the Taliban within a month and overrun in three, according to a US
intelligence assessment, after a string of militant gains dramatically cut the
odds of the Afghan government's survival.
A Taliban blitz across northern Afghanistan
in which nine provincial capitals have fallen has prompted American officials
to lower their already bleak predictions.
Earlier forecasts that Ashraf Ghani's
government in Kabul could potentially be overrun in six to 12 months have now
been slashed to three months, a defence official told Reuters. One official
told the Washington Post it could be as little as 30 days.
Mr Ghani, the Afghan president, on
Wednesday flew to the northern city of Mazar-i-Sharif to rally forces after the
fall of neighbouring provinces left the city as the only anti-Taliban bastion
remaining in the north of the country.
“Everything is moving in the wrong direction,” one
person familiar with the US military’s new intelligence assessment said.
The loss of Mazar would be a heavy blow to
the Kabul government and represent the complete collapse of its control over
the north, which has long been a bastion of anti-Taliban feeling.
Mr Ghani held talks with long-time local
strongman Atta Mohammad Noor and warlord Abdul Rashid Dostum about the defence
of the city, as Taliban fighters inched closer to its outskirts.
Marshal Dostum, whose militia forces helped
US special forces sweep the Taliban from power in 2001, vowed to kill the
insurgents and said they "never learn from the past".
"The Taliban have come to the north several
times but they were always trapped. It is not easy for them to get out,"
he said.
He was also criticised for appearing to
suggest Taliban prisoners could be killed in a repeat of atrocities from
November 2001, when up to 2,000 people were shot or suffocated to death in
shipping containers.
As the military crisis grew, the Afghan
president replaced Gen Wali Ahmadzai, the Afghan army chief of staff, with Gen
Hibatullah Alizai, former commander of the army’s special operations corps.
It also emerged that Afghanistan’s acting
finance minister, Khalid Payenda, had quit and fled the country after the
Taliban captured key customs posts.
Mr Payenda had “left the country because
Afghanistan is grappling with declining revenues after the takeover of the
custom posts,” a finance ministry spokesman told Bloomberg.
The Taliban's gains mean the Islamist
insurgents have taken a quarter of the country's 34 provinces in less than a
week.
While the capital, Kabul, has not yet been
directly threatened, the scale and speed of the government losses have raised
questions over how long Mr Ghani's government can hold out. Army morale has
plummeted and several provincial capitals have fallen almost unopposed.
The collapses of the capitals of Badakhshan
and Baghlan provinces to the northeast and Farah province to the west have put
increasing pressure on the country's central government to stem the tide of the
advance.
The Taliban also sealed its takeover of
Kunduz with the capture of an airbase to the south of the city. Social media
footage appeared to show the militants had captured an Afghan helicopter
gunship at the base, though it was without rotor blades.
As the Taliban continued to seize
territory, both Germany and the Netherlands said they would stop the forced
repatriation of Afghans who had failed to be gain asylum in their countries.
Their moved marked a sharp U-turn. As late
as Tuesday, officials had rejected Afghan requests to halt the deportations,
despite campaigners saying people were being deported back to a war zone.
“Due to current developments in the security
situation, the interior minister has decided to suspend deportations to
Afghanistan for the time being," said Steve Alter, Germany's interior
ministry spokesman.
Separately in The Hague, Ankie
Broekers-Knol, the Dutch state secretary for justice and security, announced a
"moratorium on (deportation) decisions and departures".
The halt "will apply for six months
and will apply to foreign nationals of Afghan nationality," she wrote in a
letter to the Dutch parliament.
Joe Biden, the US President, has said he
has no regrets deciding to withdraw American troops from Afghanistan and has
urged the country's leaders to unite and "fight for their nation".
Staying in Afghanistan without US forces
was a “bridge too far” for Nato and showed the limitations of the alliance,
security experts have said.
It was “very telling” that a mission
involving only 12,000 Nato troops at the beginning of 2021, “couldn’t be done
without the United States”.
Michael O’Hanlon, director of research in
the Foreign Policy Programme at the Brookings Institution, said Europe had been
attacked more often than the US by violent extremism in the years after 9/11
and, arguably, had a greater interest in remaining in Afghanistan.
“The mission was not just about loyalty to the United
States,” he told the Telegraph.
“If everybody wanted to make Afghanistan
priority number one, they probably still could have mustered those 12,000
troops. But in the absence of it being such a top priority, it seemed as just a
bridge too far.
“It’s puzzling that a group of Nato countries could not
have considered continuing this mission without us. Militarily speaking they
should be able to do so.
“That's an indication that Nato needs more
capacity.”