Categories: India

Warlords Afghanistan struggled to fight the Taliban attack

Islamabad: Getting out of Western forces from Afghanistan has opened a Pandora box in a war-hit by a war, with armed supporters of government forces and guerrillas to be wild against sympathizers with each other in places controlled by them.
While the Talibar swayed in several rural districts in the country ahead of the announcement of the complete US troop pullout, the withdrawal of Western troops saw the rapid progress of rebel groups, capturing rural and border crossings with neighboring countries before neighboring countries.
The rapid advantage of the Taliban on the battlefield encouraged the Kabul government to a private militia SPM led by a former commander of war to fight on the side of the US-trained Afghan forces against militants.
This project, according to senior Afghan government officials, has been funded by the National Security Directorate (NDS), Afghan intelligence services.
Some Afghan warlords have been insulted for alleged violations of their human rights while fighting against Soviet forces in the 1980s and the Taliban regime in the 1990s.
They have also fought along West troops after the 2001 American invasion in Afghanistan to drive the Taliban from power.
In 2004, Kabul had started a disarmament process and dispersed all militias when appointing its leaders in high profile positions.
After serving as governor, the minister and security officials high ranking for almost two decades, many warlords, had high bets in a sustainable struggle for power, regulating their personal militias, with Kabul’s approval, in an effort to stop the progress of the rebel group.
Muhammad Ismail Khan, a Afghan politician and a veteran resistance to the Soviet Union, Civil War, and the post-9/1 anti-Taliban battle, currently leading against rebels in West Herat Province at that age from 75.
Khan, a Tajik with his origin , it has described the Herat defense as one of the most important campaigns in his life.
Khan, led 2,000 militias, recently managed to force militants from the center of Herat.
Abdul Rashid Dostum, an ethnic Uzbek, who has served as a former pro-Soviet fighters, anti-Taliban commander, and Afghan vice president, has returned to Kabul from Ankara last week, vowed to defeat the Taliban north of the country.
Towards one of the largest militias, rebel groups have been on Saturday confiscating Seberghan control, the capital of the North Jowzjan Province, from his fighters supported by government forces.
Dostum has collected a frightening reputation for allegedly slaughtering thousands of Taliban war prisoners in the past.
Ahmad Massoud, son of Ahmad Shah Massoud, an influential commander who was killed by Al-Qaeda, and Atta Mohammad Noor, a former governor and North Commander, is another leading warlord who rejected the progress of the Taliban in the north of the country, while Abdul Ghani Alipoor, a hazara .
The militia commander has raised weapons in the Wardak Province to protect the community.
However, the former strong person, Gulbaddin Hikmataar, however, has been involved in the battle with the Taliban in Badakhshan Province.
Reports of places captured by the Taliban described a terrible execution scene, the murder of revenge, and the search for Door-to Door for government and military employees by the rebels.
Many journalists, rights and women activists have escaped from Kabul or abroad.
The scenes were said to be equally terrible in the places arrested again by the militia.
At Herat, Ismail Khan’s fighters had arrested two men on August 2 because they were suspected of being a loyalist of the Taliban and beat them to death using their AK-47 stuffed butts.
Then they threw the body on the road and pumped them with bullets.
Some observers believe that the rise of private militias will have drastic consequences for the country hit by the long term.
If they defeated militants with the support of Afghan forces, it would be almost impossible for Kabul to disarm them again in the absence of Western troops.
If the Taliban overthrew the government of President of Ashraf Ghani, the presence of a private militia will lead to an endless civil war in this country.

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