The Taliban has retaken Afghanistan Heres what it wants
Washington: Two decades after it was ousted from power by the United States, the Taliban have seized control of Afghanistan.
The fundamentalist force that seeks to install Islamic law blitzed across the country, overrunning one city after another and finally taking the capital, Kabul, as the United States and its allies withdrew their troops.
A man sells Taliban flags in Herat province, west of Kabul, Afghanistan, on Saturday, August 14.Credit:AP
Hundreds of thousands of civilians are fleeing, setting off a humanitarian crisis that could ripple around the globe. Those whoâve stayed are reckoning with the return of extremist rule under the Talibanâs interpretation of Islam. Militants have shuttered girlsâ schools, banned smartphones in some places and forced young men to join their ranks.
What is the Taliban?The Taliban first rose to power in Afghanistan in the 1990s, formed by guerilla fighters who drove out Soviet forces in the previous decade with support from the CIA and Pakistani intelligence services. Most of their members are Pashtuns, the largest ethnic group in the country. The name means students in Pashto.
The founder, Mohammad Omar, a commander in the anti-Soviet resistance, launched the movement in 1994 to secure the south-eastern city of Kandahar, which was plagued by crime and violence. The Talibanâs vision of justice helped them amass power. âAt the time people really wanted law and order, and there was none,â said Kamran Bokhari of the Newlines Institute, a foreign policy think tank.
In the fall of 1996, the Taliban seized Kabul and declared the country an Islamic emirate. Taliban rule was brutal and repressive. Women had virtually no rights, were barred from education and forced to wear clothing that covered their entire body. Music and other forms of media were banned.
In late July 2015, the Afghan government confirmed that Omar had died in April 2013 in Karachi, Pakistan.
AdvertisementThe Talibanâs ideology was similar to that of its counterpart al-Qaeda, though its interests were limited to ruling Afghanistan. In exchange for help in fighting groups aligned with the nationâs government, Taliban leaders harboured Osama bin Laden and other al-Qaeda members involved in the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks. A US-led coalition ousted the regime later that year and spent the next 20 years fighting the Taliban and training Afghan forces to eventually keep control of the country along with the Western-backed democratic government.
How did the Taliban regain strength?After being ousted, the Taliban scattered. Some leaders found sanctuary in Pakistan, where they began to fortify themselves with help from the Pakistani security establishment. In Afghanistan, the presence of US forces helped provide the Taliban with an anti-colonialist rallying cry for recruits. So did corruption in the Afghan government.
âFor two decades now, the Taliban movement has been slowly chipping away, village by village,â said Robert Crews, an expert on Afghanistan at Stanford University. âItâs a very sophisticated kind of ground game of grass-roots mobilisation.â
Militants also replenished their ranks through a campaign of fear and violence. People who enlisted in police forces or the national army were assassinated. Public intellectuals, journalists, media figures and others who represent the young face of Afghanistanâs civil society were also targeted.
Afghan troops, their ranks dogged by incompetence and corruption, have withered in the face of the Taliban incursion.
âPeople are asking, âDo I want to die for an administration that has not sent my unit ammunition? Weâve not been paid in months, weâre out of food. Now the Americans are goneâ,â Crews said. âIt seems kind of hopeless.â
How is the Taliban funded and armed?The Taliban get funding from a variety of sources. Some money comes from the opium trade and drug dealing, or other crime such as smuggling. The group taxes and extorts farms and other businesses. Militants are sometimes involved in kidnapping for ransom.
The group also gets donations from a wide array of benefactors who support its cause or view it as a useful asset, experts said.
Passengers make their way to the Hamid Karzai international airport in Kabul on Saturday as Taliban forces advance towards the capital.Credit:AP
âItâs not really the case that they need a whole lot of money to operate,â Bokhari said. âThey donât live in big houses. They donât wear fancy clothes. The biggest expense is salary and weapons and training.â
Arms are easy to come by in a region awash in them. Some are donated, others purchased. Many are stolen.
âAs the Afghanistan national army has folded,â Crews said, âone of the first moves the Taliban has made in moving into new territory is to go to a government headquarters, arrest or kill those figures, open the prisons, and then go to the government bases and seize the weapons.â
In some tribal areas, including in Pakistan, a âcottage industryâ of foundries has sprung up where workers fashion assault-style rifles, according to Bokhari.
What is the Talibanâs goal?The Talibanâs aim is simple, experts said: to take back what the group lost in the early 2000s.
âThey want their Islamic emirate back in power,â Crews said. âThey want their vision of Islamic law.â
He continued: âThey donât want a parliament. They donât want electoral politics. They have an emir and they have a council of mullahs, and thatâs the vision they see as best for Islam.â
There does not seem to be a single leader of the Taliban, but the group seems to have several main leaders.
Whether life under Taliban rule will be the same as it was in the 1990s remains unclear. Thereâs little doubt that the group wants to confine women to their homes, end mixed-gender education and bring back a society with Islamic law at the centre.
But a civil society has burgeoned in the past two decades that didnât exist before. Women have assumed public positions not just in Kabul but also in smaller cities. Mobile phones and social media are common. Experts questioned whether the Taliban would be able to govern a population that has changed.
âThere are a lot of people who are better connected to the world through social media and say, âHey, why canât we have a life like that?â â said Crews. âWhat will they do with a society that believes in pluralism and doesnât believe in monopolisation of power? To what extent will Taliban violence silence those voices?â
The Washington Post, staff reporters
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