Gulf Today

Taliban are in control of half of Afghan districts, says US

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WASHINGTON: The Taliban appear to have the “strategic momentum” in their sweeping offensives across Afghanista­n, but their victory is far from assured, the chairman of the US joint chiefs of staff General Mark Milley said on Wednesday.

Nearly 20 years ater the US toppled the Taliban regime in the wake of the 9/11 atacks, and with the withdrawal of American-led foreign forces all but complete, the resurgent militants now control about half of Afghanista­n’s roughly 400 districts.

But they have none of the country’s densely populated main cities, Milley told a press conference.

With the militants puting pressure on around half of the country’s provincial capitals, Afghan troops are “consolidat­ing their forces” to protect those major urban centres, he added.

“They’re taking an approach to protect the population, and most of the population lives in the provincial capitals and capital city of Kabul,” Milley said.

“A Taliban automatic military takeover is not a foregone conclusion.”

The Taliban are surging across Afghanista­n, snapping up territory, seizing border crossings and encircling cities.

Their success has tested the morale of the Afghan army, already batered by years of shockingly high casualties and, more recently, the decision by internatio­nal troops to leave.

Though the Afghan army has been trained and equipped by internatio­nal forces, and estimates show it vastly outnumbers the Taliban’s ranks, Milley said numbers are not all it takes to win a war.

“The two most important combat multiplier­s actually are will and leadership. And this is going to be a test now of the will and leadership of the Afghan people, the Afghan security forces and the government of Afghanista­n,” he said.

US President Joe Biden has also said that a Taliban takeover is “not inevitable.”

Meanwhile, Tajikistan checked the combat readiness of its armed forces in the biggest such exercise in the country’s history as the Taliban make sweeping gains in neighbouri­ng Afghanista­n.

The 230,000 members of the Central Asian country’s security forces were alerted for the test at 4 am (0100 GMT on Wednesday) on the order of President Emomali Rakhmon.

Dushanbe also relocated 20,000 troops to strengthen its force on the border with Afghanista­n.

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 ?? Agence France-presse ?? A child checks his wallet as he sits at a roadside bookshop at a market in Kabul on Thursday.
Agence France-presse A child checks his wallet as he sits at a roadside bookshop at a market in Kabul on Thursday.

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