Tuesday, August 24, 2021

TALIBAN INSISTS IT WILL NOT SHELTER AL-QAEDA IN AFGHANISTAN THIS TIME AROUND

 The Washington Post 23 August 2021 - by Ellen Francis

© Rahmat Gul/AP Taliban fighters patrol Kabul, Thursday, Aug. 19, 2021.

The Taliban is seeking to dismiss fears that it would provide al-Qaeda with a safe haven in Afghanistan, 20 years after the United States launched a war to crush the extremist network behind the 9/11 attacks.

“They are not present in Afghanistan in the first place,” a Taliban spokesman, Mohammed Naeem, said in an interview with Saudi’s al-Hadath TV that aired late Sunday. When pressed, he insisted that al-Qaeda now had no foothold in the country and no relationship with the Taliban — while noting there may be “family ties” between members of the two organizations.

This comes after back-and-forth comments from top U.S. officials in recent days about whether al-Qaeda remained in the country nearly two decades after American troops helped topple the Taliban for its role in sheltering al-Qaeda.

How the Taliban takeover of Afghanistan could affect al-Qaeda and the Islamic State

“What interest do we have in Afghanistan at this point, with al-Qaeda gone?” President Biden asked last week, justifying the pullout of U.S. troops from the country, which critics deemed a hasty abandonment of a country where America has waged its longest war.

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken later said Biden was pointing to al-Qaeda’s capacity to carry out another attack on the scale of the 9/11 strikes. But he acknowledged that “remnants” were still present there.

The withdrawal decision has come under fire after the Taliban swept into Kabul, the capital, earlier this month, seizing control of Afghanistan and ousting the government backed by Washington.

Thousands have since flocked to the Kabul airport, which is still under the control of Western forces, desperate for a spot on the packed evacuation flights. There has also been some worries of an al-Qaeda resurgence.

While al-Qaeda may be a shell of its former self in Afghanistan — and the Taliban has pledged to prevent attacks against the United States or its allies from its soil — expert say there are still links between the groups.

The two showed “no indication of breaking ties,” a United Nations report said in June. It added that al-Qaeda had a presence in at least 15 Afghan provinces, putting the number of fighters at anywhere between several dozen to 500.

Taliban leaders are promising peace, order and amnesty in Afghanistan. They promised that last time, too.

Naeem, spokesman for the Taliban’s political bureau, played down celebrations by al-Qaeda sympathizers over the Taliban’s assumption of power. “If someone, whoever it is, congratulates us and the Afghan people on this day,” he asked, “what’s the problem?”

He also denied that Kabul’s security was now in the hands of Khalil Haqqani, who is wanted by Washington for links to al-Qaeda and who, according to some reports, was greeted in Kabul with boisterous cheers in recent days.

In response to a question about the prospect of the Taliban protecting al-Qaeda fighters, including from neighbouring Pakistan, Naeem said: “How many times have I said that we will not allow anyone to use the lands of Afghanistan against the security of other nations? … Anyone, anyone, anyone from any country.”

At a news conference Tuesday, the Taliban spokesman said this was not the same Taliban that governed the country from 1996 until the 2001 U.S. intervention. Still, the group made many of the same professions of moderation when it came to power in 1996.