Botswana Guardian

The Taliban celebrate victory, crisis looming

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The Taliban celebrated a complete victory Tuesday, achieving a goal they had nurtured for two decades: the exit of the last U. S. soldier from Afghanista­n. The Taliban had essentiall­y been in control for days, or even weeks, as whole cities fell to the insurgents one by one, and a U. S. military that once flexed its muscles across the entire country was reduced to overseeing a hasty evacuation from the airport in Kabul. But on Tuesday, the airport, too, was in the hands of the Taliban. It offered an irresistib­le stage, and they made full use of it. “We have been fighting for this day for the last 20 years: to end this war and attack of foreigners on us and bring our own Islamic government,” declared Taliban spokespers­on Zabihullah Mujahid, standing on the tarmac from which the last U. S. plane had departed only hours earlier. Mujahid, flanked by other Taliban officials and fighters from the group’s elite unit, led journalist­s on a tour of the abandoned airport, which until the day before had been divided into a civilian side and military one used by Western coalition forces. The detritus told the story of another superpower whose ambitions had been dashed in Afghanista­n. It ranged from suitcases and clothing scattered across a now- idle domestic terminal to military vehicles, armored SUVs and even helicopter­s, which U. S. officials say have been permanentl­y disabled. More broadly, extensive damage at the airport raised questions about how soon the facility could safely be used for flights. Nearly everything within the terminal had been looted or destroyed, down to the conveyor belts. Jetways, passenger walkways and fuel trucks were out of commission. It was not the limited withdrawal from the country some U. S. officials had envisioned. For the first time in two decades, there are no U. S. government boots on the ground in Afghanista­n. In recent days, there was no longer talk of a contingent of military members staying behind to guard the U. S. Embassy and diplomatic corps. Instead, the embassy has been shuttered, and Secretary of State Antony Blinken said this week that for now, the only formal U. S. diplomatic mission for Afghanista­n would be based in Qatar.

At the airport Tuesday, the group’s spokespers­on was careful to congratula­te all Afghans. “This victory belongs to us all,” Mujahid said. In a speech to Americans Tuesday afternoon, President Joe Biden was unable to declare victory, but he cast the evacuation campaign, at least, as an “extraordin­ary success” and defended his decision to pull the U. S. military out of Afghanista­n.

“I was not going to extend this forever war,” he said. For the Taliban, any celebratio­n is likely to be short- lived. It is up to the Taliban to govern now, and the country they have claimed is in desperate straits. Afghanista­n is deeply impoverish­ed, with a third of its citizens struggling to survive in the face of what the United Nations calls crisis levels of food insecurity, with the prospect that the country could functional­ly be out of food within a month. With many state employees no longer showing up for work, basic services like electricit­y are also under threat. Afghanista­n has long depended on infusions of foreign aid, but it is unclear how world leaders will regard a Taliban- run government. Washington has frozen Afghan government reserves, and the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund has blocked its access to emergency reserves. Mujahid appeared eager to change that Tuesday. “I invite you all to come and invest in Afghanista­n,” he said. “Your investment­s will be in good hands. The country will be stable and safe.” As the Taliban work to form a new government, their forces are still trying to put down armed resistance in some parts of the country, including Panjshir province. Fighting between the Taliban and government holdouts was reported on Tuesday, even as some Taliban officials said they were trying to reach a negotiated peace with the forces there, including some of the remnants of the Afghan Special Forces. Many Afghans simply want out of the country. However hard the Taliban have worked to rebrand themselves as more moderate than they were when they last ruled, two decades ago, there have already been ominous signs since they took control of the capital city on Aug. 15. Many Afghans well remember the 1990s, when the Taliban stripped away basic rights for women like education, and encouraged floggings, amputation­s and mass executions. After Kabul fell just over two weeks ago, more than 123,000 people were evacuated from the country, but with the withdrawal of U. S. forces, the flights have ended. On Tuesday, Taliban officials repeated earlier assurances that Afghans with passports and visas

would be allowed to leave, regardless of their role during the U. S. occupation. Some Americans — the figure has been put at under 300 — also remain in Afghanista­n, some by choice and others because they were unable to make it to the airport.

Many stranded Afghans — thousands, by some estimates — are permanent U. S. residents who were traveling in Afghanista­n when it fell with astonishin­g speed to the Taliban as U. S. forces began pulling out. That may help the Afghans who want to leave, or with bringing in badly needed

humanitari­an aid. But for the Taliban, the more immediate problem may be winning over the vast majority who are staying and who fear the weeks and months ahead.“People’s expectatio­ns have grown dramatical­ly after the past 20 years of freedom and liberation,” said Saad Mohseni, owner of Tolo, Afghanista­n’s largest broadcaste­r. “And the pain is yet to come. Will the Taliban engage the world with a more inclusive approach? Or will they return to the ways of the past?”

 ??  ?? Taliban officials, including Zabihullah Mujahid, third from right, announcing victory at the airport in Kabul, Afghanista­n, on Tuesday, Aug. 31, 2021
Taliban officials, including Zabihullah Mujahid, third from right, announcing victory at the airport in Kabul, Afghanista­n, on Tuesday, Aug. 31, 2021

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