Toronto Star

Taliban gloat over the fall of Afghan city

Siege of Kunduz seen as ‘symbolic victory’ by rebels

- MIRWAIS KHAN AND LYNNE O’DONNELL THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

KABUL— The new leader of the Afghan Taliban said on Friday that the capture of the northern city of Kunduz was a “symbolic victory” that showed the strength of the insurgency — even though the Taliban pulled out of the city after three days.

Still, the three-day occupation of Kunduz was “a historic event,” which was “celebrated by the ordinary people of the city,” claimed Mullah Akhtar Mansoor.

Mansoor, who spoke to The Associated Press by telephone from an unknown location, was appointed the Taliban leader in August, after revelation­s that the group’s founder, Mullah Muhammad Omar, had died more than two years ago.

The Taliban captured Kunduz in a blitz Monday and held it until Afghan government forces pushed them out of the city on Thursday.

The fall and three-day occupation of Kunduz, an important city of 300,000 residents that lies on a strategic road to the border with Tajikistan, was a huge boost for Mansoor whose leadership of the Taliban had been questioned from the start.

At the same time, it was a humbling defeat for Afghan President Ashraf Ghani and raised questions over whether the U.S.-trained military was capable of defending the country now that most coalition forces have withdrawn.

“The victory is a symbolic victory for us, and moreover, it is also a historical event which will be remembered,” Mansoor said. “People who said we were a small force with an unchosen leader can now see how wrong they were about the potential and strength my people have.”

The Taliban have been fighting to overthrow the Kabul government since their 1996-2001 regime was toppled in a U.S.-led invasion. Kunduz was the first provincial capital and urban area they have taken since then.

Ghani has launched an investigat­ion into how the Taliban, with only a few hundred gunmen, could have overwhelme­d the city, which was defended by a few thousand government troops.

In Kunduz, residents said sporadic firefights continued Friday as troops swept the city street-to-street to dislodge any militants still hiding in people’s homes.

Mansoor said the success of the movement in taking the city in a surprise attack had also allegedly countered Afghan government propaganda, “which said that the people of Afghanista­n are against the Taliban and want to rid them from their country.”

The capture of the city has also seriously tarnished Ghani’s reputation, according to political analyst Haroun Mir.

“We now have the very bad but distinct impression that victory is with the Taliban. It wouldn’t have mattered how long they held the city — even one hour would have been enough for them,” Mir said.

Meanwhile, in eastern Afghanista­n, at least 11 people, including six U.S. service members, died early Friday when a cargo plane crashed while taking off from the airfield in Jalalabad, the U.S. Air Forces Central Command said in a statement.

Five civilian contractor­s working with the U.S. and allied military mission in Afghanista­n were among the dead, the statement said. According to media reports, the crash killed two Afghans on the ground, but military officials could not immediatel­y confirm those reports.

First-responders were still conducting recovery operations, the Air Force said. The cause of the accident is under investigat­ion, but enemy fire is not suspected as a factor in the crash.

 ??  ?? The capture of Kunduz showed the strength of the insurgency, said the Taliban’s Mullah Akhtar Mansoor.
The capture of Kunduz showed the strength of the insurgency, said the Taliban’s Mullah Akhtar Mansoor.

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