Taliban’s fate and Afghanistan’s future: Tyranny and terrorism hasten the end of the movement's rule
An unknown fate awaits the Taliban in the coming days due to
the internal divisions and failures caused by the movement by not fulfilling
the promises it made upon coming to power in Afghanistan, as its rule has
become even more tyrannical and strict than before, in addition to the
intransigence that it has used frequently towards the Afghan people, which
confirms the international community’s delay in recognizing the movement as the
actual authority of Afghanistan, since the movement cannot fulfill its promises
and has become incapable of managing the state and getting out of the
collapsing economic situation, which makes it fail to dismantle the complex
impasse in the country.
Uncertain fate
The Taliban has returned to how it was in the 1990s,
becoming more stern, authoritarian, and strict than it was when it first seized
the reins of power, as it continues to harden its stance against women with
strict rules, against the wishes of the local masses and the provinces that
supported the movement’s return to power, in addition to the inability of the
movement’s government to control the increasing bombings or curb the increasing
terrorist attacks at home and on the borders by ISIS Khorasan, which continues
to increase its presence in some remote areas of Afghanistan.
According to a report, Taliban leader Haibatullah
Akhundzada, who still maintains his firm grip on all decision-making processes
in Afghanistan as well as the Taliban, continues with his team in the
continuous escalation of differences with the movement's moderate leaders such
as Abdul Ghani Baradar Sultan Shaheen, stressing that the Taliban will lose
control of power in Afghanistan because it is now trapped between ISIS Khorasan
and the United States and its allies, according to Afghan political analysts.
According to the report, the numerous visits of US and UN
officials to Kabul and Doha play a role in this file, as it is seen as a bridge
between the ruling Afghan regime and the United States, so there is an urgent
need to achieve more fundamental changes.
Administrative incapacity
Hesham El-Naggar, a researcher in the affairs of Islamist
groups, pointed out that the Afghan Taliban movement is living in a major and
complex dilemma, as it cannot fulfill its promises that it previously made when
it came to rule Afghanistan under the American administration at the time of
the conclusion of the peace agreement regarding various files, not only related
to women's rights, freedoms, and the rights of minorities, but also the
movement's relations with terrorist organizations such as al-Qaeda.
Regarding the fate of the movement and its resolution during
the coming days, Naggar confirmed in exclusive statements to the Reference that
the ruling movement of Afghanistan is incapable of managing the state and
getting out of the collapsing economic situation that put Afghanistan in the
most severe humanitarian crisis in the world, where hunger, poverty and
homelessness prevail, in addition to the fact that the Taliban is facing armed
threats to its authority, as ISIS Khorasan is growing its influence, in
addition to the presence of the National Resistance Front led by Ahmad Shah
Massoud in the north, which is making remarkable progress, as it carried out an
operation during which it captured 13 members of the Taliban.
Complicated predicament
With regard to dismantling the
complex impasse inside Afghanistan, Naggar noted that it is unlikely that the
movement will succeed in dismantling this impasse for several considerations,
the most important of which is the internal divisions, as the movement is not
one wing and is not unified. There is the influential and extremist Haqqani
faction in the movement, which controls important ministries and institutions,
including security, intelligence and passports, as well as a large part of the
wealth, and it is the faction that maintains the movement's relations with
al-Qaeda and adopts a hard line on most files. This is in addition to the
inability of the movement's diplomacy to make any tangible progress in ending
its international isolation.
Terrorist activity
This coincides with a time when another terrorist faction
lurking on the Afghan border seeks to strengthen its position in Afghanistan
and the surrounding countries. Farzad Ramezani Bonesh, an Iranian expert and
researcher on Afghan affairs, confirmed in an article entitled “Why Taliban
Rule in Afghanistan Could Strengthen the Islamic State” that the current
Taliban moves in the security, political, diplomatic and economic fields play a
pivotal role in the defeat or rise of the ISIS Khorasan Province in
Afghanistan.