KABUL: The wave of Taliban wins in North Afghanistan has caused several countries to close their North Afghan consulate, while across the border in Tajikistan, reserves were called to strengthen the southern border, according to officials and reports on Tuesday.
Nearly 1,000 Afghan soldiers have escaped the progress of the Taliban by crossing the border to Tajikistan, according to a report from Tajikistan.
A statement on Monday from the Tajik government said President Emomali Rakhmon had ordered a mobilization of 20,000 military reserves to strengthen its borders with Afghanistan.
Afghan military output came as the Taliban defeated most of the districts in the Northeast Badakhshan province.
Many districts collapse without fights but along the northern border of the province with Tajikistan, hundreds of national security forces and Afghan defense crossed the safety of borders.
The Turkish and Russian consulat was reported to have been closed at Mazar-e-Sharif, the capital of the North Balkh Province, and the fourth largest city of Afghanistan.
Iran said it had limited activities in its consulate in the city.
There has been a battle in the Balkh Province, but provincial capital has been relatively peaceful.
The Uzbekistan consulate, Tajikistan, India and Pakistan have reduced their services, spokesman for the Governor of Balkh Province Munir Farhad said Tuesday.
He said Turkey and Russia had closed their consulate and their diplomats had left the city.
The Tajik government said the Afghan forces were allowed to cross with humanitarian reasons but the border poles on the side of the Tajik controlled the Tajik troops and there was no battle with the Taliban from the side of the Tajik.
Taliban March gained momentum only a few days after the United States emptied Bagram’s airfield, only a few hours of the northern driving of the capital and the exact sign that the majority of his troops had left Afghanistan.
The US withdrew from what had been the center of a US coalition war in Afghanistan in Afghanistan by stuck electricity and sneaked away at night without telling the new Afghan commander of the base, which found American departure more than two hours after they left, according to the official said Afghan military.
Moskow while Moscow was also weighed on Monday with a spokesman for Kremlin Dmitry Peskov said there was a “high concern” for battle but Russia did not have a plan to send troops to the former Republic.
“We have repeatedly said many times after their American withdrawal and allies from Afghanistan, the development of the situation in this country is a matter of concern,” Peskov said.
“We monitor very closely and note that destabilization (situation) is taking place, unfortunately.” Meanwhile, the State News Agency Tajikistan Khovar counted 1,037 Afghan military personnel who entered Tajikistan while running away for their lives.
It was said Monday they used seven crossings along the 910 kilometers (565 miles) of the state.
Taliban have made a non-stop territorial victory since mid-April, when President Joe Biden announced 2,500-3,500 US soldiers and 7,000 Alliy NATO troops would leave Afghanistan.
Most have gone quietly, long before the deadline was announced in September.
Full withdrawals are not expected to be completed until the end of August while the agreement to protect Hamid Karzai International Airport Kabul is resolved.
Meanwhile, peace talks that were detained in Qatar between the Taliban and the Clear Afghan government had all but stopped even when both parties said they wanted a negotiated end to conflict for decades.
With their victory in North and South Afghanistan, the Taliban put pressure on provincial cities and get control over the main transportation routes.
The Afghan government has raised a militia mostly loyal to the warlords of Kabul-Allies but with the history of brutal violence which has caused the specter of civil wars similar to the battle that destroyed Kabul in the early 1990s.
The Taliban won in North Afghanistan was very significant because the part of the country was the traditional fortress of the US-Allied warlord and the scene of the initial widespread loss of the Taliban in 2001 when the US-led coalition launched his battle to encourage religious movements.