Taliban test US, Afghan resolve
As negotiators remained for talks with the Afghan government, the group opened an offensive on LashkarG ah.
KABUL, Afghanistan — The Taliban have opened an offensive on the southern Afghan city of Lashkar Gah, overrunning some of its surrounding security checkpoints and largely cutting it off, even as their negotiators remained at the table for talks with the Afghan government that appear stalled.
While the insurgent attempt to cap the fighting season with high-profile attacks before winter sets in was not unusual for recent years of the two-decadewar, the run for a provincial capital amid peace talks suggested that the Taliban still see military bullying as their most effective negotiating tactic.
The attack also appeared to test the limits of how far the U.S. military — which is drawingdowntoabout4,500 troops and significantly cutting back air support to Afghan forces since it signed a deal with the Taliban in February — would go to defend its Afghan allies.
The United States has been critical of the Taliban’s intensified attacks across Afghanistan, but has stopped short of calling the group’s actions a breach of their agreement — even as the American troop withdrawal has continued.
In recent weeks, confusing signals fromWashington that President Donald Trump wanted the remaining American troops home beforenext spring, as laid out in the withdrawal timeline agreed with the Taliban, threatened to further undermine the shaky Afghan government.
In what appeared an attempt to send a clear message to the Taliban and reassure the Afghan forces of continued American support, the U.S. military said it had carried out “several targeted strikes” in defense of the Afghan forces under fire fromtheTaliban inHelmand province, of which Lashkar
Gah is the capital.
“The Taliban need to immediately stop their offensive actions in Helmand province and reduce their violencearoundthecountry,” Gen. Austin S. Miller, the commander of the U.S. and NATO forces in Afghanistan, said in a statement. “It is not consistent with the U.S.-Taliban agreement and undermines the ongoing Afghan PeaceTalks.”
TheTaliban’s socialmedia accountswere drumming up the offensive as an effort to takeLashkar Gah, with some accounts posting “minute by minute” updates ofwhatwas described as the group’s march on the city.
But late Monday, their officialspokesmanseemedto walk a tight-line that appeared to suggest they were holding back. Spokesman Zabiullah Mujahid said the insurgents were only recapturing areas that were once under their control but that were retaken by Afghan forces severalmonths ago.
The violencewas part of a wider uptick in deadly attacks across Afghanistan targeting districts and increasingly choking the highways. In the past 24 hours, the Taliban carried out attacks in 20ofthecountry’s34provinces, according to Rohullah Ahmadzai, the spokesman for the Afghan Defense Ministry.
The insurgents made a strong push for Lashkar Gah from several directions since Friday, following a couple of weeks of tightening the noose, officials said.
Ataullah Afghan, the head of the provincial council, said that the Taliban had overrun security checkpoints in the suburbs of Babaji and Chahanjir and closed one of the main roads leading into the city, blowing up parts of it. They also carried out attacks in Nawa, a district neighboring Lashkar Gah. The advances were slowed by airstrikes and fresh governmentforces that arrivedSunday night, he said.
“They have blocked most of the entrances and exits to the city,” said Bashir Ahmad Shakir, a former member of the provincial council inHelmand. “The officials were in deep slumber. The military officials only realized itwhen the Taliban were almost stepping in to the gates of Lashkar Gah.”
Afghan, the head of the provincial council, attributed the defense failures to a problem that has plagued Afghan forces in the south for years: the presence of a large number of “ghost soldiers” in their ranks.
“In Babaji and Chahanjir on paper thereare 150 police, the salary of 150 police is paid, but only 50 police are present in the whole area, with each outpost getting no more than five or six police,” he said.
Lashkar Gah has been one of the most badly affected cities of the long war, with the civilian population bearing the brunt. Families have been repeatedly forced to relocate. The most recent fighting has displaced at least 1,500 families, officials said.
The peace talks between the Taliban and a delegation representing the Afghan republic opened last month in Doha, Qatar, where the Taliban keep a political office. But progress has been slow, and a month later both sides are stuck on finalizing rules and regulations that will govern their meetings.