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How real is the threat of Taliban infighting?

- MICHAEL KUGELMAN This article was provided by Deutsche Welle

In recent days, reports have abounded of disputes within the Taliban, purportedl­y fuelled by the formation of a hard-line, non-inclusive interim government disdained by the group’s moderate factions because of its lack of non-Taliban leaders and ethnic minorities. Several accounts have provided striking details of a physical altercatio­n earlier this month between lead representa­tives of the moderate and hard-line camps: Mullah Baradar, the recently appointed deputy prime minister, and Khalil ul Rahman Haqqani, a leader of the Taliban’s brutal Haqqani Network faction and Afghanista­n’s new refugees minister. Haqqani reportedly rose from his chair and punched Baradar. Their bodyguards brawled, leading to several deaths. Combatants hurled “furniture and large thermos flasks full of hot green tea.” The scene, as described in these reports, resembles a mix between a militant melee and an episode of The Jerry Springer Show.

If reports of internal tensions are accurate, such strains could well intensify in the coming weeks, with the Taliban under great stress as it tries to consolidat­e power, gain domestic and internatio­nal legitimacy, tackle an ever-worsening economic crisis, and fend off a terrorist threat posed by its Islamic State Khorasan (IS-K) rival. Talk of Taliban fracturing, however, shouldn’t be overstated. We lack definitive proof about the alleged squabbling. Caution is also in order because, in the past, when the group confronted dissent within its ranks, it acted brutally to squelch it before it could become a serious threat.

Additional­ly, internal tensions haven’t prevented the Taliban from achieving just about everything that the group has set out to do over the past 20 years. Writing in 2019, Afghanista­n expert Andrew Watkins noted that “every instance of dissent and disunity in the last decade that the Taliban perceived as a threat was harshly, even brutally suppressed.” He also stated that internal rifts had declined since Mullah Akhundzada, the group’s current supreme leader, assumed power in 2016. Indeed, there are strong indication­s of unity within both the military and political ranks of the Taliban. Over the last few years, when the Taliban has announced several brief truces, fighters have laid down their arms, with no violators. Additional­ly, when the Taliban pledged to launch negotiatio­ns with the Trump administra­tion and then (for a shortlived period) with the Afghan government, there were no known expression­s of dissent from hardliners opposed to negotiatio­ns.

Even if one assumes that there has been some Taliban infighting, it certainly didn’t weaken the organisati­on. Over the years, the Taliban has ramped up offensives, turned a localised insurgency into a nationwide assault, seized unpreceden­ted amounts of territory, and secured a troop withdrawal deal with the United States that required it to do little in return. It then entered Kabul with not a single bullet fired, watched its arch-nemesis Ashraf Ghani flee the country, seized political power, said farewell to the last of the departing US troops, and announced an interim government that features the group’s most powerful and feared leaders.

New disagreeme­nts could emerge about how to respond to nonviolent protests against Taliban rule, over whether non-Taliban officials should be brought into the government, and over what is the best way to address the economic crisis. If past is precedent, such difference­s will be nipped in the bud before they can cause major cleavages in the organisati­on. But then again, the Taliban will face more complex challenges leading a government than waging an insurgency. This means internal disputes won’t be as easy to solve as they used to be.

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