The Daily Telegraph

Al-qaeda fighters flocking to help Taliban

Afghan general warns of threat to global security as militant groups team up to attack Helmand capital

- By Ben Farmer in Islamabad

‘A win for the militants will send goosebumps to other extremist elements across the globe’

‘A victory will increase lone wolf attacks and for small groups to mobilise in the cities of Europe and America’

AL-QAEDA militants are joining the Taliban front lines in increasing numbers as the insurgents make gains across Afghanista­n, the general leading the defence of Helmand’s capital has claimed.

Gen Sami Sadat warned a victory for the Taliban would have a “devastatin­g effect on global security” by emboldenin­g extremists across the world.

The Sandhurst-trained commander of the Afghan army’s 215 Corps made the comments hours before urging residents of Lashkar Gah to evacuate their homes amid heavy fighting. The city, which was home to the UK’S headquarte­rs during Britain’s eight-year Helmand campaign, has been under siege for months. In recent days it has been at risk of becoming the first significan­t Afghan city to fall to the militants’ latest offensive.

Gen Sadat said intelligen­ce reports suggested about 60 al-qaeda fighters had been killed in the latest conflict, alongside hundreds of Taliban forces. Both sides regularly exaggerate enemy losses.

He said the Taliban’s losses included foreign militants from Egypt, Syria, Iraq and Yemen.

“I have never seen so many al-qaeda members in the front lines and in the fight shoulder-to-shoulder with the Taliban before, than I have seen after the withdrawal of the US forces,” he told the BBC. Members of al-qaeda have been helping the Taliban to “refit and mobilise”, as well as lend specialist weapons expertise with mortars and snipers.

A win for the militants, who were ousted in 2001 by a Us-led invasion, would “send goosebumps across the globe to other extremist elements”, he predicted.

“This will increase lone wolf attacks, this will increase the hope for small groups to mobilise in the cities of Europe and America and will have a devastatin­g effect on global security.”

The Afghan government had been accused of regularly overplayin­g the threat from al-qaeda in order to try to stop the United States from withdrawin­g troops.

Yet just a week ago the latest United Nations monitoring report on al-qaeda said the group was active in 15 Afghan provinces.

Raffaello Pantucci, a terrorism expert with the Royal United Services Institute, said Gen Sadat’s comments echoed a concerted effort by Afghan leaders to “really hammer the point home that the fight they are fighting in Afghanista­n is directly linked to the threat the West is facing”.

He also questioned how easy it was to identify al-qaeda members from ordinary Taliban fighters on the battlefiel­d.

Donald Trump’s 2020 withdrawal deal with the Taliban saw them give assurances they would suppress the internatio­nal terrorist threat from Afghanista­n.

UN analysis released late last month said the terrorist network founded by Osama bin Laden was still present in the south and east of Afghanista­n and “operates under Taliban protection from Kandahar, Helmand and Nimruz provinces”.

Joe Biden the US President, decided to complete the withdrawal of American troops after concluding the internatio­nal threat from terrorists based in Afghanista­n had fallen sharply in the past 20 years.

Residents in Lashkar Gah reported a sixth day of heavy fighting as the Taliban continued to push into the city.

Gen Sadat said he was confident government forces would repel the attackers, but warned the fight was “not going to be nice”. He accused the Taliban of taking hostages and evicting residents to fortify their homes.

Local hospitals have reported scores of civilian dead and wounded.

In a message to residents, Gen Sadat said the army would “not leave a single Taliban alive”.

“I know it is very difficult for you to leave your houses – it is hard for us too – but if you are displaced for a few days please forgive us,” he added.

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