Taliban gains drive Afghan government to recruit militias

25 June 2021, 08:14

North Afghanistan militias
Afghanistan Taliban Gains. Picture: PA

The Taliban’s recent wins in the north of the country are in the traditional stronghold of minority ethnic groups that drove them from power.

Taliban gains in northern Afghanistan have driven a worried government to recruit militias with a track record of fomenting chaos and widespread killing.

The region is the traditional stronghold of the country’s minority ethnic groups that drove the Taliban from power there nearly 20 years ago.

Analysts say the government move is “desperate” after the Taliban overran several districts in several provinces of in the country’s north.

Afghan militias
The mobilisation drive seen here comes after Taliban gains in the north (AP)

The gains have been strategic. One district on the border with Tajikistan is a key trade route. Another, in Doshi, in Baghlan province, is home to the single road linking northern Afghanistan to the capital, Kabul.

The Taliban have over-run multiple districts in the north, some of them reportedly with hardly a fight, even as the US and Nato press forward with their final withdrawal from Afghanistan.

By all accounts their departure will be complete long before the September 11 deadline set by US president Joe Biden when he announced in mid-April an end to America’s “forever war”.

The Taliban gains are significant because of the transportation routes they provide the insurgents. But equally significant is the fact that the north is the traditional stronghold of Afghanistan’s minority ethnic groups, who aided the US-led invasion that drove the Taliban from power nearly 20 years ago and have been part of the ruling leadership since.

The traditional stronghold of the Taliban, who are mostly ethnic Pashtuns, has been in the country’s south and east.

Afghan militias
Critics said the move was born of desperation on the part of the Afghan government (AP)

A worried government has launched what it called National Mobilisation, arming local volunteers.

Observers say the move only resurrects militias that will be loyal to local commanders or powerful Kabul-allied warlords, who wrecked the Afghan capital during the inter-factional fighting of the 1990s and killed thousands of civilians.

Bill Roggio, senior fellow at the US-based Foundation for Defence of Democracies, said: “The fact that the government has put out the call for the militias is a clear admission of the failure of the security forces … most certainly an act of desperation.

“The Afghan military and police have abandoned numerous outposts, bases, and district centres, and it is difficult to imagine that these hastily-organised militias can perform better than organised security forces.”

On Wednesday at Koh Daman on Kabul’s northern edge, dozens of armed villagers in one of the first National Mobilization militias gathered at a rally.

The National Mobilisation
The government launched National Mobilisation this week in response to the Taliban’s gains (AP)

“Death to criminals!” and “Death to Taliban!” they shouted, waving automatic rifles. Some had rocket propelled grenade launchers resting casually on their shoulders.

A handful of uniformed Afghan National Police officers watched. “We need them, we have no leadership, we have no help,” said one of the policemen.

He criticised the defence and interior ministries, saying they were stuffed with overpaid officials while the front-line troops receive little pay.

“I’m the one standing here for 24 hours like this with all this equipment to defend my country,” he said, indicating his weapons and vest jammed with ammunition.

“But in the ministries, officials earn thousands.”

Afghanistan recruitment drive
The move comes after several strategically important districts in the north of the country fell to the Taliban (AP)

The US and Nato have committed to paying four billion dollars (£2.8 billion) annually until 2024 to support the Afghanistan national security and defence forces.

However, even Washington’s official watchdog auditing spending says Afghan troops are disillusioned and demoralised, with corruption rife throughout the government.

As the districts fell, Afghan president Ashraf Ghani swept through his defence and interior ministries, appointing new senior leadership, including reinstating Bismillah Khan as defence minister.

Mr Khan was previously removed for corruption, and his militias have been criticised for summary killings. They were also deeply involved in the brutal civil war that led to the Taliban’s takeover in 1996.

Afghan and international observers fear a similar conflict could erupt once more. During the 1990s war, multiple warlords battled for power, nearly destroying Kabul and killing at least 50,000 people – mostly civilians – in the process.

Those warlords returned to power after the Taliban’s fall and have gained wealth and strength since.

They are jealous of their domains, deeply distrustful of each other, and their loyalties to Mr Ghani are fluid.

Ethnic Uzbek warlord Rashid Dostum Uzbek, for example, violently ousted the president’s choice for governor of his Uzbek-controlled province of Faryab earlier this year.

A former adviser to the Afghan government, Torek Farhadi, called the national mobilisation “a recipe for future generalised violence”.

Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid told The Associated Press on Thursday that the insurgents had captured 104 districts since May 1, including at least 29 in recent fighting.

That brought the total area of Taliban control to 165 of Afghanistan’s 471 districts nationwide.

By Press Association

Latest World News

See more Latest World News

Nicolas Sarkozy arrives at court

Ex-French president stands trial over alleged campaign funding by Gaddafi

Justin Trudeau before a Canadian flag

Canadian PM Trudeau to announce political future amid growing calls to resign

French President Emmanuel Macron

Macron declares Trump has ‘solid ally’ in France and urges realism over Ukraine

Policemen block a main road

Gun attack on bus carrying Israelis in occupied West Bank kills three

Protesters in their thousands

South Korean authorities debate tougher measures to detain impeached President

The Pope at the Vatican on the Feast of Epiphany

Pope names first woman as head of major Vatican office

Austria’s Freedom Party leader Herbert Kickl leaves the presidential office, in Vienna

Austrian far-right given mandate to lead government

Herbert Kickl shouts into a microphone

Austrian far right leader meets President amid new government speculation

Russian combat training in trench conditions

Russia claims it has captured another town in eastern Ukraine

Joe Biden at a lectern before the stars and stripes

Biden says Americans should not forget Capitol attack

Elon Musk has claimed Americans need to liberate the UK from its 'tyrannical government' in his latest attack in Keir Starmer.

Elon Musk says America should 'liberate Britain from tyrannical government' in latest attack on Starmer

Carol Acosta, 27, known online as Killadamente

Influencer and mum-of-two dies ‘after choking on her dinner’ in front of family in New York restaurant

Workers clean up at a beach

More than 30 dolphins dead since oil spill near southern Russia, experts say

Deise Moura has been arrested on suspicion of killing her relatives with a poisonous Christmas cake

Daughter-in-law of woman who baked Christmas cake that killed three people is arrested

People lay flowers in the cathedral square of Magdeburg

Death toll from German Christmas market attack rises to six

Vehicles drive along a highway during a winter storm

Snow, ice and bitter cold grips US from the Midwest to East Coast