Wrong Way Joe Ignores Terror Threat in Afghanistan
Plenty of violent militants on the loose under Taliban.
President Joe Biden has dismissed the possibility of significant global terrorist threats emanating from Afghanistan. It’s not in the interest of Taliban movement that now runs the country to let terrorists operate there, he says.
But just in case, the US can always bomb them from afar.
Those are key pieces of Biden’s argument in favor of the August 31 withdrawal of all US troops from the country, instead, as some military observers have suggested, of leaving a skeleton force of perhaps 3,500 soldiers to provide intelligence and air cover for the Afghan army and to keep an eye on terrorists.
Biden’s rationales for pulling out in full were in line with his desire to reduce US global military commitments in order to focus sharply on Russia and China. And he certainly hopes that this justification, and a future quiescent Afghanistan, will let the American public forget the disorderly civilian evacuation from Kabul he oversaw.
But what to make of his assessment of Afghanistan-based global terrorism when his judgments about the recent past have been so erroneous?
Notably, he predicted a long interval between the withdrawal and a Taliban takeover. He pulled out all but a handful of US soldiers before the civilian evacuation only to have to return 6,000 to oversee flights out.
And he apparently underestimated the ability of other anti-US militias operating alongside the Taliban to attack US troops during the disengagement. That oversight led to an August 26 suicide bomb attack on Kabul airport that killed 13 US service members and 170 Afghan civilians.
In the wake of the exodus US expectations of the future are already looking faulty. Secretary of State Antony Blinken said that Taliban governance will fall in line with contemporary norms because “the world is looking.” He predicted the new cabinet would include opposition voices. It hasn’t. Instead it is dominated by hardline holy warriors. Popular dissent in the streets is being violently suppressed. Women are being driven to the sidelines of public life.
The US administration seems not to have grasped makeup of the forces arrayed on the ground and the danger they can pose.
Biden implied that threats to the United States and other countries ended with the long-ago killing of Osama bin-Laden, who once took refuge in Afghanistan. The president has all but ignored not only the continued presence in the country of al-Qaeda, the terror organization founded by bin Laden, but also an alphabet of other transnational terror groups operating in Afghanistan.
Does he not know about them or just not want to say?
Among them is the Islamic State of Afghanistan-Khorasan, a small spin-off of the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria. The Afghan branch was the group that sent the suicide bomber to blow up the American soldiers and Afghan civilians outside Kabul airport.
The anti-Pakistan Tehrik-i-Taliban and the East Turkistan Islamic Movement, which battles China in its northwestern province of Xinjiang, also work out of Afghanistan. Also do various underground groups from Tajikistan and Uzbekistan as well as India. All share aspirations to establish Islamic states like the emirate the Taliban has declared for Afghanistan.
Washington’s downplaying of terror threats posed drew a scathing critique from the US Department of Defense’s Combatting Terrorism Center, based at the US Military Academy. “Judgements by the Biden administration were flawed, and the Taliban’s return to power has exacerbated the terrorism threat beyond the level that existed when the decision to withdraw the U.S. forces was made.
“A close look at Afghanistan reveals that the United States has left the country with a dynamic terrorism landscape posing local, regional, and transnational threats.”
A possible revival of al-Qaeda is at the top of international concern. In January, the International Crisis Group research organization noted a key obstacle blocking normalized Taliban relations: “The Taliban have made no public demonstration or assertion that they have acted on commitments to prevent their membership from interacting with or hosting al-Qaeda figures.”
Qaeda’s top leader, Ayman al-Zawahiri, has lived underground in Afghanistan for many years. The Taliban set free of numerous al-Qaida prisoners from Afghan prisons following their takeover. In an August statement, al-Qaeda chieftains praised the Taliban for “breaking America’s back, tarnishing its global reputation and expelling it, disgraced and humiliated, from the Islamic land of Afghanistan.”
The so-called Haqqani Network, a clan-based terror organization, is also
intertwined with the Taliban. The clan-based network, which carried out some of the deadliest attacks of the past two decades in Afghanistan. Its array of weaponry included rockets, improvised explosive devices and suicide bombers.
Notorious among them were the 2011 assault on the Kabul Intercontinental Hotel, a pair of suicide bombings in 2008 and 2009 against the Indian Embassy in Kabul, and later ones against the US Embassy, international military headquarters, the Presidential Palace, and Directorate of Security headquarters.
The Taliban’s ties with the Haqqani Network appear firm. The new Minister of the Interior, effectively the internal police force in Afghanistan, heads the group.
The Islamic State in Afghanistan-Khorasan went largely unnoticed in the lead up to the US withdrawal until August airport suicide bombing. The Islamic State has long engaged in bloody feuds with the Taliban over strategy and interpretations of Islamic law. At the same time, the IS occasional cooperated with the Haqqani Network, making it hard to discount the Taliban’s continued tolerance of, if not alliance of convenience with, the organization.
The Islamic State presence was in any case no secret, nor was its ambition to make attacks outside Afghanistan. In 2018, the United Nations reported that, “recent plots detected and prevented” in Europe were ordered by Afghan IS.
The next year, the UN’s Afghanistan monitoring team warned of IS transnational plots issued from Afghanistan. In 2020, Germany arrested four Central Asian suspects who had communicated with at least one Islamic State leader in Afghanistan.
It’s likely that China and Pakistan, along with Russia, acting as a stand-in for former Soviet republics in Central Asian, have already pressured the Taliban to prohibit associated groups from using its territory to launch attacks against neighboring countries. It remains to be seen whether these neighbors care if the Taliban tolerates plots against the United States, Europe and India, or recruit foreign jihadists who might flock to Afghanistan, train and go off to create havoc in other countries.
In any event, the Biden Administration is depending on the Taliban changing its stripes—to become statesmen rather than terrorists so as to win international recognition, and much needed social and development aid. That implies a break with violent underground groups
Blinken places confidence in the pressure the Taliban will be under from the “international community” to perform suitably, even though many “community” members are less than patrons of liberty. Blinken’s hopes seem to be a watered-down version of the original reason for nation-building in Afghanistan: that a country dedicated to good governance in the liberal mold will not engender terrorism.
Having lost the war, Biden wants to impose the formula anyway.
Parts of that mythical community have already displayed lenient views on dealing with the Taliban. China and Pakistan, for instance, are already sending food and medicine to the Afghanistan, no human rights or good governance strings attached.
Russia and China abstained from a UN Security vote that called for safe passage of foreigners and refugees out of Afghanistan. China thinks that outside countries should not engage in “wantonly imposing sanctions or applying force,” declared Geng Shuang, China’s deputy representative to the UN.
According to Biden, the available US wild card for controlling terror groups if they pop up in Afghanistan is by the use of so-called “over the horizon” operations—drone bombings on targets identified by aerial and electronic surveillance.
US and European observers note that in places where such remote-control attacks have been used—Iraq, Syria, Somalia and Yemen—intelligence gathering is supplemented by allied people on the ground and launched from a nearby air base. Even under those conditions, surgical air attacks have been marred by numerous errant civilian killings.
In any case, none of the best-case conditions for drone warfare exist in post-pullout Afghanistan. If proof is needed, the effort to avenge the Kabul airport suicide bombing showed it: the Biden Administration announced that a drone attack had killed a would-be “imminent threat” suicide bomber and ten associates in the city. Instead, the main target turned out to be an aid worker who was delivering water to a neighborhood. The other dead were relatives at his home, including seven children.
It’s likely that Biden, who has declined to admit to any missteps in the withdrawal, is also not going to acknowledge the reality of existing global terrorist threats in Taliban-ruled Afghanistan.
Politically, it’s understandable, but not very comforting.