Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

One year of Taliban rule

With the group back in power and its Al Qaeda allies getting a new lease on life, the situation in Afghanista­n will get worse before it gets better.

- By Colin P. Clarke Colin P. Clarke is the director of research at the Soufan Group and a senior research fellow at the Soufan Center, where he focuses on terrorism, counterter­rorism and internatio­nal security.

One year after the United States withdrew from Afghanista­n, the country is an even more dangerous place.

The Taliban now serves as the de facto government, doling out punishment­s and beatings to Afghans who run afoul of the group’s strict Islamic mores. Yet, in addition to a society and economy on the verge of collapse, Afghanista­n could soon descend once again into serving as a safe haven and sanctuary for transnatio­nal terrorist groups and violent extremist organizati­ons.

With the Taliban back in power since mid-August of last year, and its Al Qaeda allies getting a new lease on life, the situation in Afghanista­n will get worse before it gets better.

Afghanista­n did not immediatel­y devolve into a failed state where groups such as Al Qaeda and the Islamic State could launch attacks against the West with impunity. But senior U.S. defense and intelligen­ce officials are seriously concerned that jihadist groups in Afghanista­n may develop those capabiliti­es over time. It could take roughly two years for terrorist organizati­ons to recruit, train and deploy militants abroad to launch terrorist attacks, according to assessment­s by Gen. Mark A. Milley, chairman of the Joint Chief of Staffs, and many others.

Before a U.S. drone strike on July 31 killed longtime Al Qaeda leader Ayman Zawahiri in Kabul, Afghanista­n, he had enjoyed much greater freedom of movement since the Taliban takeover of the country, a recent U.N. Monitoring Team report concluded. As a result, Zawahiri had released more frequent video messages. His “increased comfort and ability to communicat­e,” the report notes, had “coincided with … the consolidat­ion of power of key Al Qaeda allies” within the Taliban’s de facto administra­tion.

The comfort Zawahiri felt moving around Afghanista­n is ultimately what led to his demise. His presence in Afghanista­n’s capital also demonstrat­es that Al Qaeda and the Taliban remain in lockstep — with the Taliban providing Al Qaeda a base from which to operate.

In late June, a Wall Street Journal reporter said Gen. Michael E. Kurilla, commander of the U.S. Central Command, had disclosed that the U.S. possessed intelligen­ce confirming that terrorist groups are already building training camps inside Afghanista­n. Rebuilding the capability to plan and execute successful attacks abroad takes time, as militants need to reconstitu­te logistics, identify new safe houses, and upgrade communicat­ions and transporta­tion capabiliti­es.

The ultimate goal for groups like Al Qaeda or the Islamic State is to plan and execute a high-profile terrorist attack on Western soil or against Western targets. It is nearly impossible for a terrorist group to replicate an attack on the scale of the one on Sept. 11, 2001. Jihadist groups are aware of the improved counterter­rorism capabiliti­es of Western countries, so the attacks they might launch could be similar to those that took place in Madrid in 2004 and London in 2005 when transporta­tion targets were bombed. Non-aviation transporta­tion is typically considered a “soft target” and such attacks yield high casualty counts.

Other possibilit­ies could include going after Western embassies, as Al Qaeda did in East Africa in 1998, or focusing on soft targets such as hotels frequented by Westerners, as Al Qaeda-linked groups did in Jakarta, Indonesia, in 2003 and again in Islamabad, Pakistan, in 2009.

The tactics used by terrorists are significan­tly more high-tech than they were when Afghanista­n was last a hub for transnatio­nal terrorist groups in 2001. The Islamic State has introduced something known as the “virtual plotter model,” which means terrorist operatives in one country use encrypted technologi­es to communicat­e with operatives in another part of the world. In most cases, the virtual planners and the attackers meet only online.

As Afghanista­n becomes more of a permissive environmen­t for terrorist groups, militants will have more bandwidth to meet, plot and plan attacks, perhaps attempting to encourage homegrown violent extremists in Europe or the United States to take action on their own while offering advice and preparator­y planning tips.

The Taliban’s leaders frequently tried to fault the United States for their own failure as a government over the last year. The chief Taliban spokespers­on, Zabihullah Mujahid, claims that “the United States is the biggest obstacle” to the government of Afghanista­n being officially recognized by the broader internatio­nal community. The Taliban has had nearly 350 interactio­ns with approximat­ely 30 countries since taking power last August, yet its regime is still not formally recognized by the internatio­nal community.

But Mujahid and his comrades would be wise to look in the mirror. Across the board, life in Afghanista­n for ordinary citizens has become far more difficult, with women and girls denied fundamenta­l human rights and the country’s economy cratering. Additional­ly, the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic and a June earthquake that killed more than 1,100 Afghans and displaced countless others have compounded the misery and suffering there.

On its own, the bleak picture in Afghanista­n just one year after the U.S. withdrawal is heart-wrenching. As evidenced by the drone strike that killed Zawahiri, Washington still takes seriously its responsibi­lity to prevent the country from becoming a launching pad for global terrorism. And while the targeted assassinat­ion of Al Qaeda’s leader is an example of a successful offshore counterter­rorism strike, launched by an unmanned drone, it’s merely one data point. The United States is still without “eyes and ears” on the ground in Afghanista­n, which will pose a challenge to carrying out similar future strikes against terrorist leaders.

At the Aspen Security Forum in late July, President Biden’s national security advisor, Jake Sullivan, remarked that the president had no regrets about withdrawin­g American combat troops from Afghanista­n as of Aug. 30, 2021. But if a major terrorist attack on Western soil is traced back to Afghanista­n, his decision will be scrutinize­d, and pressure could build for the United States to send troops back to South Asia.

 ?? Marcus Yam Los Angeles Times ?? TALIBAN FIGHTERS storm Kabul Internatio­nal Airport on Aug. 30, 2021, after the U.S. military’s withdrawal from Afghanista­n.
Marcus Yam Los Angeles Times TALIBAN FIGHTERS storm Kabul Internatio­nal Airport on Aug. 30, 2021, after the U.S. military’s withdrawal from Afghanista­n.

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