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The Taliban advance escalates in Afghanistan

Afghan security forces sit in a Humvee vehicle amid ongoing fighting between Taliban militants and Afghan security forces in Kunduz. Picture: AFP.
Afghan security forces sit in a Humvee vehicle amid ongoing fighting between Taliban militants and Afghan security forces in Kunduz. Picture: AFP.

Biden Administration officials continue to insist that diplomacy is the only solution in Afghanistan. The Taliban has other ideas as its military advance continues over ever more Afghan territory and targets government officials who worked with the US

The group’s “martyrdom battalion” launched an elaborate suicide attack on the Afghan defence minister’s home last week, killing eight and wounding 20. Gen. Bismillah Khan Mohammadi and his family weren’t harmed during the attack, which was followed by gunfights on the streets of downtown Kabul.

The Taliban said Wednesday that the latest bombing would be the first of many “retaliatory operations against key figures and leaders of the Kabul administration.” On Friday it assassinated Dawa Khan Menapal, the government’s chief media officer who helped local and foreign press. A Taliban spokesman took credit for what he called a “special attack” to punish Menapal “for his actions,” according to Reuters.

General Austin Miller (L), US top commander of coalition forces in Afghanistan with Chairman of Afghanistan's High Council for National Reconciliation, Abdullah Abdullah (C) and Defence Minister General Bismillah Khan Mohammadi (R) during an official handover ceremony at the Resolute Support headquarters in the Green Zone in Kabul last month. Picture: AFP.
General Austin Miller (L), US top commander of coalition forces in Afghanistan with Chairman of Afghanistan's High Council for National Reconciliation, Abdullah Abdullah (C) and Defence Minister General Bismillah Khan Mohammadi (R) during an official handover ceremony at the Resolute Support headquarters in the Green Zone in Kabul last month. Picture: AFP.

Kabul isn’t on the brink of collapse, but it will be increasingly dangerous for civilians, government officials and foreigners. Expect more violence in the capital as the US withdraws and only a few hundred American troops remain to guard facilities like the US Embassy. On Saturday the Embassy advised all Americans to leave the country on the first available commercial flight.

The Taliban now controls or contests more than 80 per cent of Afghanistan’s districts, according to the Long War Journal, and provincial capitals are under siege. The city of Zaranj in Nimroz, a southwest province bordering Iran, was overrun by the Taliban Friday. Kunduz, a city of some 300,000 in the northeast, fell on Sunday.

An Afghan soldier stands guard at the site of a car bomb explosion in Kabul. Picture: AFP.
An Afghan soldier stands guard at the site of a car bomb explosion in Kabul. Picture: AFP.

Taliban forces are also moving on one of the most important provincial capitals, Lashkar Gah in Helmand. The fighters are led by a former prisoner of the Afghan government who was freed last year as part of the Trump Administration’s misguided US withdrawal deal with the Taliban.

The gains come despite an escalation of US bombing from afar to help stop the Taliban advances. After Mr. Biden withdrew from bases in Afghanistan, the US is having to send B-52 bombers and other aircraft from the Persian Gulf region at greater expense and risk.

More cities will fall as America’s emergency air support ends at the end of August, and the bloodbath will escalate. The allied presence in Afghanistan failed to end the Taliban insurgency. But maintaining air support and a few thousand troops and contractors would have prevented the strategic and humanitarian nightmare that is unfolding now and is likely to have consequences far beyond Afghanistan.

Extremist groups don’t fight wars because they want a diplomatic solution. They fight because they want to win and impose their terms on the loser. That’s what the Taliban is now doing after President Biden ignored military advice and withdrew so recklessly and without a plan to prevent disaster.

The Wall St Journal

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Original URL: https://www.theaustralian.com.au/business/the-wall-street-journal/the-taliban-advance-escalates-in-afghanistan/news-story/00d5b2f5699f505cc751d2a09e7b75a5