Gulf News

Taliban says it doesn’t want to fight inside cities

Militant group also warns Turkey against extending its troop presence

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Now that the fighting from mountains and deserts has reached the doors of the cities, Mujahiddin don’t want fighting inside the city.”

The Taliban do not want to battle government forces inside Afghanista­n’s cities, a senior insurgent leader said yesterday, as the militants also warned Turkey against extending its troop presence.

The insurgents have swept through much of northern Afghanista­n in recent weeks, and the government now holds little more than a constellat­ion of provincial capitals that must largely be reinforced and resupplied by air.

Yesterday, the head of a Taliban commission that oversees government forces who surrender to the insurgents urged the residents of cities to reach out to them. “Now that the fighting from mountains and deserts has reached the doors of the cities, Mujahiddin don’t want fighting inside the city,” Amir Khan Muttaqi said in a message tweeted by a Taliban spokesman, using another term for the group.

“It is better... to use any possible channel to get in touch with our invitation and guidance commission,” he said, adding this would “prevent their cities from getting damaged.”

Old strategy

The strategy is one wellworn by the Taliban cutting off towns and district centres and getting elders to negotiate a surrender. In a separate statement yesterday, the Taliban said Turkey’s decision to provide security to Kabul airport when US-led forces leave was reprehensi­ble. “We consider stay of foreign forces in our homeland by any country under whatever pretext as occupation,” the group said, days after Ankara agreed with Washington to provide security for Kabul airport.

Rapid changes

As foreign forces wind up their withdrawal — due to be completed by August 31 — the situation on the ground is changing rapidly.

The top US general in Afghanista­n relinquish­ed his command Monday at a ceremony in the capital, the latest symbolic gesture bringing America’s longest war nearer to an end. The pace of the pullout have raised fears that Afghanista­n’s security forces could be swiftly overwhelme­d.

Around 650 American service members are expected to remain in Kabul, guarding Washington’s sprawling diplomatic compound. But Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said on Friday he had agreed with the United States on the “scope” of how to secure Kabul airport.

Amir Khan Muttaqi | Taliban leader

 ?? AP ?? Internally displaced Afghan children collect water from a public water tap at a camp in Mazar-e-Sharif.
AP Internally displaced Afghan children collect water from a public water tap at a camp in Mazar-e-Sharif.

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