Santa Fe New Mexican

IS group affiliate has targeted Russians in Afghanista­n, Taliban

- By Christina Goldbaum

The Islamic State group affiliate U.S. officials say was behind the deadly attack Friday in Moscow is one of the last significan­t antagonist­s the Taliban government faces in Afghanista­n, and it has carried out repeated attacks there, including on the Russian Embassy, in recent years.

That branch — known as the Islamic State-Khorasan or ISIS-K — has portrayed itself as the primary rival to the Taliban, which it says has not implemente­d true Shariah law since seizing power in 2021.

It has sought to undermine the Taliban’s relationsh­ips with regional allies and portray the government as unable to provide security in the country, experts say.

In 2022, ISIS-K carried out attacks on the Russian and Pakistani embassies in Kabul, Afghanista­n, and a hotel that was home to many Chinese nationals.

More recently, it has also threatened attacks against the Chinese, Indian and Iranian embassies in Afghanista­n and has released a flood of anti-Russian propaganda.

It has also struck outside Afghanista­n. In January, ISIS-K carried out twin bombings in Iran that killed scores and wounded hundreds of others at a memorial service for Iran’s former top general, Qassem Soleimani, who was killed by a U.S. drone strike four years before.

In recent months, the Taliban’s relationsh­ip with Russia, as well as with China and Iran, has warmed up.

While no country has officially recognized the Taliban government, earlier this month Russia accepted a military attaché from the Taliban in Moscow, while China officially accepted a Taliban ambassador to the country. Both moves were seen as confidence-building measures with Taliban authoritie­s.

ISIS-K has denounced the Kremlin for its interventi­ons in Syria and condemned the Taliban for engaging with Russian authoritie­s decades after the Soviet Union invaded Afghanista­n.

Its propaganda has painted the Taliban as “betraying the history of Afghanista­n and betraying their religion by making friends with their former enemies,” said Riccardo Valle, the director of research of the Khorasan Diary, a research platform based in Islamabad.

In the more than two years since the Taliban took over in Afghanista­n, its security forces have conducted a ruthless campaign to try to eliminate ISIS-K and have successful­ly prevented the group from seizing territory within Afghanista­n.

Last year, Taliban security forces killed at least eight ISIS-K leaders, according to U.S. officials, and pushed many other fighters into neighborin­g Pakistan.

Still, ISIS-K has proved resilient and remained active across Afghanista­n, Pakistan and Iran. Within Afghanista­n, it has targeted Taliban security forces in hit-and-run attacks and — as it came under increasing pressure from Taliban counterter­rorism operations — staged headline-grabbing attacks across the country.

Just a day before the attack at the concert hall in Moscow, the group carried out a suicide bombing in Kandahar — the birthplace of the Taliban movement — sending a powerful message that even Taliban soldiers in the group’s heartland were not safe.

After the attack in Moscow, Abdul Qahar Balkhi, a spokespers­on for Afghanista­n’s Foreign Ministry, said in a statement on social media the country “condemns in the strongest terms the recent terrorist attack in Moscow” and “considers it a blatant violation of all human standards.”

“Regional countries must take a coordinate­d, clear and resolute position against such incidents directed at regional de-stabilizat­ion,” he added.

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