Eastern Eye (UK)

AFGHANISTA­N ‘WILL BECOME TERROR BASE’

Counter-terrorism chief predicts lone-wolf attacks in two years

- By AMIT ROY

BRITAIN’S top counter-terrorism police officer has warned that Afghanista­n will again become a base for exporting terrorism, and predicted lone-wolf attacks “probably within two years”.

In an exclusive interview with Eastern Eye, assistant commission­er at the Metropolit­an Police, Neil Basu, said the Taliban take-over in Afghanista­n earlier this month will likely lead to terror attacks abroad.

Basu is head of specialist operations and the national lead for counter-terrorism policing in the UK. He is currently on secondment to lead the “Strategic Command Course” at the College of Policing.

Earlier this month, the Taliban ended two decades of war with an astonishin­gly swift rout of government forces after US president Joe Biden pulled out nearly all American troops from Afghanista­n, following through on a deal struck with the movement by then president Donald Trump in February 2020.

Asked how the Taliban’s take-over of Afghanista­n will affect the UK’s security, Basu said, “It’s impossible to predict. I don’t care how good an intelligen­ce analyst you are, you won’t know the long-term ramificati­ons of this.

“But this is a classic case

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of societies not learning from history. We know what happened 20 years ago. We know what happens with failed states. We know the climate it creates.

“We know the extremism and radicalisa­tion it creates in the younger generation. We know that’s a breeding ground for terrorism. And we know they don’t want to keep that within their borders, they want to expand. Now we know all of these things.

“Why would it not be obvious that we are going to see exactly the same thing happen again?”

The Taliban have repeatedly claimed to be different from their 1990s incarnatio­n, and have declared an amnesty for Afghanista­n government forces and officials. However, an intelligen­ce assessment conducted for the United Nations said militants were going door-to-door hunting former government officials and those who worked with US and Nato forces.

Basu set out a best and worst-case scenario. He said, “The best case scenario is unrealisti­c. But if you want me to be highly optimistic, it would be the Taliban allowing some power-sharing within a Taliban-controlled government.

“It would be allowing some of the progress of the last 20 years to remain – education of women and girls, freedom of speech and free media.

“I don’t believe any of this is going to happen, by the way, but that would be the best-case scenario with the Taliban being interested in an internatio­nal relationsh­ip.

“It would have to partner with China, Russia and Pakistan. Those countries are rational actors. They don’t want to create a world war. They are not North Korea.

“The best-case scenario is the four of them having an uneasy alliance, but keeping stability and peace in that part of the world so it doesn’t export terrorism wider. And of course, that’s in their interest because Afghanista­n is on their border. People will be moving through their borders – those that they would not want in their own society.

“So it is in their interest to keep peace and that is the best-case scenario.”

On Tuesday (24), it emerged that Russian president Vladimir Putin discussed the situation in Afghanista­n in a phone call with India’s prime minister Narendra Modi. In a statement, the Kremlin said both leaders agreed to establish a permanent channel for bilateral consultati­ons on Afghan developmen­ts.

Russian foreign minister Sergei Lavrov said on Tuesday that Russia, China, the United States and Pakistan are interested in serving as mediators in resolving the crisis in Afghanista­n.

“We remain committed to the task of establishi­ng peace and stability on Afghanista­n’s territory so that it poses no threats to the region,” Lavrov said.

Meanwhile, leaders of the Group of Seven (G7) countries – Britain, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan and the US – met virtually on Tuesday to discuss the crisis. The UK prime minister Boris Johnson pushed president Joe Biden unsuccessf­ully for a extension to the August 31 evacuation deadline.

The Taliban have said they will stop Afghan nationals from going to the airport, but the G7 leaders are insisting on safe passage for them beyond next Tuesday’s (31) deadline, as well as “no lurch back” on girls’ education.

Biden faces growing pressure to negotiate more time for the airlift of thousands trying to flee the country.

According to Basu, “The worst-case scenario is a collapsed state, a civil war, a Northern Alliance part two, and another implosion like Syria. And the result of that will be the expansion and exporting of terrorism worldwide.”

If the Taliban reverted to its 1990 version, “which was a despotic and horrific, medieval regime, clearly we shouldn’t recognise them in those circumstan­ces”.

Basu outlined how the Taliban’s takeover could influence those already inclined to terrorism: “My worries haven’t changed from six weeks ago when I was still in the chair. My concern is still the inspiratio­n of terrorism worldwide.

“And, of course, those individual­s who have already crossed the Rubicon, having decided that they are effectivel­y violent people willing to commit violent acts, acting individual­ly, because they have been inspired by what’s happened.

“The Taliban victory – because that’s what it looks like from where I’m sitting – is a massive inspiratio­n and source of comfort for people who might want to commit atrocities.”

Next month marks 20 years since the September 11 atrocity in the US.

Basu voiced his concern about individual­s, rather than groups, planning another elaborate 9/11 attack.

“That’s not my immediate concern,” he said. “My immediate concern is self-initiating terrorists, as they now call those lone actors who will be looking at this and saying, ‘Yeah, I want to support that. So let’s have another go.’

“My colleagues are watching a lot of those people as we speak. But my concern is always the ones you can’t see.”

Such attacks could take place in the UK, Basu said, adding, “but particular­ly some European countries like France and Belgium have been hit very hard.

“Europe has suffered from this kind of inspired rather than directed attack for years. There’s no doubt whatsoever that the original military action in Afghanista­n and, to a lesser extent, in Iraq – whatever we think about the start of the war – definitely suppressed the ability to plot, plan and travel across borders to carry out operations.

“But what happened in 2017 in this country has largely been inspiratio­nal rather than directed. That will carry on. And I do think there are untold problems that have come from two years of the global pandemic and what that’s done to the stability of certain individual­s.”

Basu’s counter-terrorism duties are being looked after for the time being by a colleague. Asked if Afghanista­n required his personal attention, he said: “There’s a very experience­d assistant commission­er called Matt Jukes, who has stepped in to cover my role while I’m away.

“My successors will be going through this (what is happening in Afghanista­n) for years to come.”

Basu also referred to “a very good paper” on Afghanista­n written by an academic at the London School of Economics, Dr Sajjan Gohel, who is considered a leading authority on internatio­nal terrorism.

He described Gohel’s analysis as “incredibly insightful” and said: “It does talk about the timeline leading to what will inevitably become a base where terrorist attacks can once again be plotted against the West. And I predict probably within two years, that’s exactly what will happen.”(With

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 ?? © Wakil Kohsar/AFP via Getty Images ?? SECURITY SCENARIOS: Neil Basu; and (right) armed Taliban fighters in Kabul last Thursday (19)
© Wakil Kohsar/AFP via Getty Images SECURITY SCENARIOS: Neil Basu; and (right) armed Taliban fighters in Kabul last Thursday (19)
 ??  ?? SECURITY WORRIES: Armed Taliban fighters stand next to an Imam during the Friday noon prayer in the Abdul Rahman Mosque in Kabul last week; and (below) Afghan security forces are joined by tribesmen in fighting the Taliban in Bazarak, Panjshir province
SECURITY WORRIES: Armed Taliban fighters stand next to an Imam during the Friday noon prayer in the Abdul Rahman Mosque in Kabul last week; and (below) Afghan security forces are joined by tribesmen in fighting the Taliban in Bazarak, Panjshir province

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