From Taliban to ISIS Khorasan: Afghanistan between jaws of terrorist pliers
After the emergence of ISIS
Khorasan, which recently carried out terrorist operations in Afghanistan, the
latest of which was a few days ago, the conflict has intensified between it and
the Taliban, which is now the dominant force in the country.
On Thursday, August 26, ISIS claimed
two attacks that targeted Kabul airport, which led to the killing and wounding
of hundreds of Afghan civilians and Taliban militants who were securing the
airport's perimeter. Thirteen US soldiers were also killed in the two attacks,
and 18 others were wounded, while US intelligence services warned that another
attack was imminent.
Crushing each
other
The Wall Street Journal (WSJ) published
a report on the causes, scenes and repercussions of the conflict between the
Taliban and ISIS Khorasan, its implications for the situation in Afghanistan
and neighboring countries, and the relationship of major countries with the
Taliban after its return to power in the country.
WSJ had interviewed Abu Omar
Khorasani, who was once the leader of ISIS in Afghanistan, two days before his
execution by Taliban fighters. During the interview, he said, “They will
release me if they are good Muslims.”
He recounted that he joined the
terrorist organization when its operations began in Afghanistan, then was
promoted and became emir of the province that includes the region of South Asia
and the Far East, noting that ISIS attacks often benefited the Taliban, despite
the hostility between the two organizations.
Khorasani was killed in one of the
prison smuggling operations that took place in the city of Jalalabad last year,
in which four suicide bombers and 11 militants affiliated with ISIS
participated. During the operation, hundreds of prisoners were released from
both the Taliban and ISIS.
It is clear that Khorasani built his
assessment on the basis of the two movements’ pledges, each separately, to rid
Afghanistan of Western occupation, but when Taliban fighters managed to enter
Kabul on August 15 and took control of the prison in which Khorasani was
staying, they freed hundreds of prisoners but chose to execute him and eight
other members of his organization.
Regarding the enmity between the two
groups, Khorasani said, “ISIS leadership is independent and the goals of ISIS
are independent. We have a global agenda, so when people ask who can truly
represent Islam and the entire Islamic nation, we are of course more attractive
and achieve these goals,” noting that “everyone supported the Taliban movement
in their confrontation with us in one way or another. It is no secret to anyone
why they began to defeat us.”
Military officials say the Taliban,
sometimes with the help of other countries and coalition forces, has been the
winning side in the war against ISIS, as ISIS Khorasan was expelled from its
strongholds in Afghanistan and its fighters scattered in search of hideouts.
There also seemed to be little resistance with the Taliban's invasion of the
country in early August ahead of the scheduled US withdrawal from the country.
Bloody
operations
In recent years, ISIS claimed
responsibility for bloody attacks inside Afghanistan and Pakistan, where it
carried out operations targeting civilians in mosques, hospitals and public
places, in addition to targeting Muslims it considers infidels, especially
Shiites.
In 2019, the Afghan army, after
joint operations with the United States, announced the defeat of ISIS in the
eastern province of Nangarhar. According to US estimates, the terrorist
organization has been operating since then through its sleeper cells in cities
in order to launch major attacks at a later time.
Regarding the Taliban’s return to
power, ISIS strongly criticized the agreement concluded in February 2020 in Doha
between Washington and the Taliban, which stipulated the withdrawal of US and
foreign forces from Afghanistan, accusing the movement of retreating from what
it described as the “jihadist cause.”
Regarding how ISIS has benefitted
from the situation in Afghanistan, Mr. Q, a Western specialist in the affairs
of the terrorist organization who publishes his research on Twitter under this
pseudonym, referred to 216 attacks carried out by the organization between
January 1 and August 11, 2021, compared to the 34 attacks it carried out during
the same period last year.
He said that this makes Afghanistan
one of the most active ISIS provinces, noting that not everything is directly
related to the American withdrawal, but the Taliban victory provides an outlet
for the terrorist organization.
Colin Clarke, director of the Soufan
Center in New York, acknowledged that the collapse of the Afghan army is a
strange reminder of what was witnessed in Iraq in 2011, saying, “I am afraid
that the situation will be repeated in Afghanistan with the development of ISIS
and the resurgence of al-Qaeda.”