Houston Chronicle Sunday

Taliban leaders may have left Pakistan

Possible return to Afghanista­n signals confidence

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KABUL, Afghanista­n — After operating out of Pakistan for more than a decade, the leaders of Afghanista­n’s Taliban movement may have moved back to their homeland to try to build on this year’s gains in the war and to establish a permanent presence.

If confirmed, the move would be a sign of the Taliban’s confidence in their fight against the U.S.backed government in Kabul. It could also be an attempt by the militants to distance themselves from Pakistan, which is accused of supporting the movement.

The Taliban’s leaders have been based in Pakistani cities, including Quetta, Karachi and Peshawar, since their rule in Afghanista­n was overthrown in the 2001 U.S. invasion after the 9/11 attacks.

Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid said the leadership shura, or council, relocated to Afghanista­n “some months ago,” although he would not say to where.

One Taliban official said the shura had moved to southern Helmand province, which the insurgents consider to be part of their heartland and where most of the opium that funds their operations is produced. The official refused to be identified because of security reasons.

Other Taliban sources said the justice, recruitmen­t and religious councils had also moved to southern Afghanista­n. The statements could not be independen­tly confirmed.

Afghan President Ashraf Ghani’s office said it had no confirmati­on that any such move had taken place.

“No intelligen­ce confirms that the Taliban has shifted its shura to Afghanista­n,” said Haroon Chakhansur­i, Ghani’s spokesman. “We still believe they are still operating in their safe havens outside Afghanista­n.”

Mujahid, however, said Kabul officials were aware of the moves, prompted by battlefiel­d gains that the insurgents believed would put them in a strong position once talks with the Afghan government aimed at ending the war were restarted. Dialogue broke down earlier this year.

The insurgents have spread their footprint across Afghanista­n since internatio­nal combat troops scaled down in 2014. They have maintained multiple offensives and threatened at least three provincial capitals in recent months: Kunduz, in northern Kunduz province; Lashkah Gar, in Helmand in the south; and Tirin Kot in Uruzgan.

The U.S. military has conceded the insurgents have gained ground, although definitive breakdowns are difficult to verify. This year, Afghan security forces are believed to have suffered their worst losses since 2001, with the military estimating 2016 fatalities at more than 5,000 so far

permanent Taliban presence in Afghanista­n would send a message to followers and fighters that the insurgents now control so much territory they can no longer be dislodged by government security forces, said Franz-Michael Mellbin, the European Union’s ambassador in Kabul.

He said he has not confirmed the reports, which have circulated for weeks. But such a move could also be part of “the Taliban’s attempt to try to create a more independen­t position,” he said, as “parts of the Taliban would like to be under less direct pressure from Pakistan.”

 ?? Associated Press file ?? Reports suggest Taliban leaders may have returned to their homeland of Afghanista­n, which would signal confidence in the group’s fight against the U.S.-backed government after more than a decade of operating out of Pakistan.
Associated Press file Reports suggest Taliban leaders may have returned to their homeland of Afghanista­n, which would signal confidence in the group’s fight against the U.S.-backed government after more than a decade of operating out of Pakistan.

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