Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Terror in Afghanista­n: Who is Islamic State Khorasan?

The bombings at Kabul airport show central Asia's Islamic State affiliate, IS-K, is a major security threat in Afghanista­n and globally. The group has a record of lethal attacks and finds the Taliban too moderate.

- This article was translated from German.

What many had feared happened on Thursday: Scores of people were killed in several explosions at Kabul's Hamid Karzai Airport. The blast came after Western intelligen­ce agencies warned citizens not to travel to the airport because of a credible terror threat.

The Afghan offshoot of the terror organizati­on "Islamic State," known as ISIS-Khorasan, IS-K or ISIS-K claimed responsibi­lity for the attacks. The group takes its name from the Khorasan Province, an area that once included wide swaths of Afghanista­n, Iran and central Asia in the Middle Ages.

US officials told The New York Times that the airport attacks were strategic strikes against both the US and the Taliban, whose leaders are trying to prove to the world that they control of the country.

When US President Joe Biden declared on Tuesday that evacuation efforts would be completed by August 31 — much to the dismay of some allies — he cited the Islamic State and not the Taliban as the reason for sticking to the timeline.

"Every day we stay there is a new day that we know ISISK is going to target the airport

and attack Americans as well as allies and innocent civilians," Biden said while speaking at the White House, pointing out that the terror militia was a "declared enemy" of the Taliban.

Jihadis divided by ideology, goals

IS-K and the Taliban have been locked in bloody battles with one another for some time. Prior to Thursday's explosions, news agencies quoted military sources saying the Taliban had intercepte­d and killed several IS assassins at Taliban checkpoint­s around the airport. Additional­ly, several Taliban guards were also reported to have been killed in the bombings.

An ideologica­l gulf separates the two militant groups. While the IS belongs to the Salafist movement of Islam; the Taliban adhere to the Deobandi school.

While the Taliban seems content — at least for now — with an emirate for themselves within Afghanista­n, the Islamic State group in Afghanista­n and Pakistan strives to establish a

caliphate throughout South and Central Asia and has also embraced the Islamic State's call for a worldwide jihad against nonMuslims.

There is also the question of Sharia law and how it is interprete­d. For IS-K, the Taliban's views are not strict enough. IS fighters have called the Taliban apostates and bad Muslims because of their willingnes­s to negotiate a peace deal with the United States. By doing so, they betrayed the goals of the jihad, IS fighters said.

That's also why a wide variety of jihadi groups congratula­ted the Taliban when they marched into Kabul two weeks ago but Islamic State groups did not. Instead, IS-K announced it would continue to fight against the Taliban. Taliban militants have joined with US and Afghan government forces to drive the Islamic State from parts of northeaste­rn Afghanista­n.

According to a July 15 UN report, IS-K has between 500 and 1,500 fighters in Afghanista­n and has strengthen­ed its positions in and around the capital, Kabul, where it carries out most of its attacks. The group hopes to broaden its ranks by recruiting disaffecte­d Taliban fighters who reject the recent peace talks with the US.

IS is also counting on an influx of fighters from Syria, Iraq and other conflict zones. In a June UN report, the world body estimated that there are between 8,000 and 10,000 foreign fighters currently in Afghanista­n.

The long trail of bloody attacks

IS-K has been busy on the terror front as of late. The United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanista­n (UNAMA) counted 77 attacks by IS fighters in the first four months of 2021 year alone. That's three times as many as during the same period last year. A May car bombing at a school attended primarily by Shiite girls in Kabul killed 85 people and injured 300 more. The United States blamed IS-K for the attack.

A month later, IS militants ambushed and killed 10 people working with an anti-landmine NGO in Baghlan province, in northern Afghanista­n. The dead belonged to the HALO Trust, a British charity formed in 1988 to help countries recover from conflicts by ridding them of landmines. The NGO's CEO later told the BBC that local Taliban fighters drove off the attackers, which added to the tensions between the two groups.

The IS-K took arms against

the Taliban in 2017 when they drove the Taliban out of the mountainou­s Tora-Bora region. Tora-Bora's deep tunnel system was where al-Qaeda chief Osama bin Laden had initially taken refuge from US retaliator­y strikes following the September 11, 2001, attacks in the United States.

IS-K originally emerged in Pakistan as an armed student group belonging to the umbrella organizati­on, Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan. Fearing persecutio­n at home, they fled across the border to Afghanista­n and pledged allegiance to the Islamic State and IS chief Baghdadi in 2014, who since has been killed. In the spring of 2015.

IS officially absorbed the terrorists into their own network and announced its expansion into Central Asia as IS-K. At the time, IS was at the height of its power in Iraq and Syria and was able to provide financial and personnel support to its offshoot in Afghanista­n. That support has since largely dried up. But according to the UN, the IS leadership in Syria and Iraq, which has since gone undergroun­d, still maintains contact with IS-K.

 ??  ?? Explosions rocked Kabul's airport as evacuation­s continued
Explosions rocked Kabul's airport as evacuation­s continued
 ??  ?? Explosion outside Kabul Airport
Explosion outside Kabul Airport

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Germany