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"Resistance 2.0." - Battle for Panjshir begins - Taliban claims victory

Couple of days ago, he was demanding half share in government and now it comes to guarantee for his head. Pity as few of Panjshiris believed in him and as usual, Indians bet on a troll.

Sad. Very, very sad! Hundreds would be dead by the time this conflict ends in Panjshir. And end it will the way it was supposed to end as any military planner would have predicted as recent as 1 week ago: Panjshir was going to fall to the Taliban. The only REMOTE chance the Panjshir Pappu had was massive America-led bombardment and air-drop supplies shortly after the Americans left before the 31 August deadline. But even that remote chance was a remote chance! And now, even with the snow coming, the Taliban are not going to rest. This is not Stalingrad--it is Afghanistan. The Panjshris hopes to now hide behind the snow against a foe who is not a mechanized German Army but is very much like the Panjshiris themselves is a desperate hope.

I don't think the Taliban should spare Massoud Jr. I think if that Pappu is still in the region then his escaping helicopter should be shot down as the deluded dude tries to escape to Tajikistan. Massoud Jr has too much blood on his hand to allow to live! And I am not even sad writing this!
 
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By certain people, hate for Pakistan Army is obvious. Get back to topic.
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Panjshir battle: US warns of civil war in Afghanistan

US General Mark Milley questions whether Taliban can consolidate power as they seek to shift from a guerrilla force to government

AFP
Sunday, Sep 05, 2021



Taliban fighters. Photo: file


Taliban fighters. Photo: file


KABUL: As the Taliban fighters advanced deep into Panjshir valley, the last province of Afghanistan holding out against it, the top US general warned of civil war in the country.


US General Mark Milley was of the view that the battle for Panjshir would lead to a wider civil war that would offer fertile ground for a resurgence of terrorism in the country.

Following their lightning fast rout of Afghanistan´s army last month -- and celebrations when the last US troops flew out after 20 years of war on Monday -- the Taliban are seeking to crush resistance forces defending the mountainous Panjshir Valley.
 
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The Taliban, who rolled into Kabul three weeks ago at a speed that analysts say likely surprised even themselves, are yet to finalise their new regime.

But US General Mark Milley questioned whether they can consolidate power as they seek to shift from a guerrilla force to government.

"I think there's at least a very good probability of a broader civil war," said Milley, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, in a bleak assessment.

"That will then in turn lead to conditions that could, in fact, lead to a reconstitution of Al-Qaeda or a growth of Daesh," he told Fox News Saturday.

Afghanistan's new rulers have pledged to be more accommodating than during their first stint in power, which also came after years of conflict -- first the Soviet invasion of 1979, and then a bloody civil war.

They have promised a more "inclusive" government that represents Afghanistan's complex ethnic makeup -- though women are unlikely to be included at the top levels.

But few in Panjshir, a rugged valley north of Kabul which held out for nearly a decade against the Soviet Union´s occupation and also the Taliban's first rule from 1996-2001, seem to trust their promises.

Humanitarian crisis looming in Afghanistan

Taliban official Bilal Karimi on Sunday reported heavy clashes in Panjshir, and while resistance fighters insist they have the group at bay, analysts warned they are struggling.

The Italian aid agency Emergency said Taliban forces had reached the Panjshir village of Anabah, where they run a surgical centre.

"Many people have fled from local villages in recent days," Emergency said in a statement Saturday, adding it was continuing to provide medical services and treating a "small number of wounded".

Anabah lies some 25 kilometres (15 miles) north inside the 115-kilometre-long valley, but unconfirmed reports suggested the Taliban had seized other areas too.

Bill Roggio, managing editor of the US-based Long War Journal, said Sunday that while there was still a "fog of war" -- with unconfirmed reports the Taliban had captured multiple districts -- "it looks bad".

Both sides claim to have inflicted heavy losses on the other.

"The Taliban army has been hardened with 20 years of war, and make no mistake, the Taliban trained an army," Roggio tweeted Sunday, adding that "the odds were long" for the Panjshir resistance.

"The Taliban army was injected with a massive amount of weapons and munitions after the US withdrawal and collapse of the ANA" (Afghan National Army), he added.

Former vice-president Amrullah Saleh, who is holed out in Panjshir alongside Ahmad Massoud -- the son of legendary anti-Taliban commander Ahmad Shah Massoud -- warned of a grim situation.

Saleh in a statement spoke of a "large-scale humanitarian crisis", with thousands "displaced by the Taliban onslaught".

The Panjshir Valley, surrounded by jagged snow-capped peaks, offers a natural defensive advantage, with fighters melting away in the face of advancing forces, then launching ambushes firing from the high tops down into the valley.

Western countries fear Afghanistan could again become a haven for extremists

The United States invaded Afghanistan and toppled the first Taliban regime in 2001 in the wake of the 9/11 attacks by Al-Qaeda, which had taken sanctuary in the country.

Western governments now fear Afghanistan could again become a haven for extremists bent on attacking them.

Washington has said it will maintain an "over-the-horizon" capability to strike against any threats to its security in Afghanistan.

The international community is coming to terms with having to deal with the new Taliban regime with a flurry of diplomacy.

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken is due Monday in Qatar, a key player in the Afghan saga and the location of the Taliban's political office, though he is not expected to meet with the militants.

He will then travel to Germany to lead a virtual 20-nation ministerial meeting on Afghanistan alongside German Foreign Minister Heiko Maas.

United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres is also set to convene a high-level meeting on Afghanistan in Geneva on September 13, to focus on humanitarian assistance for the country.
 
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It's laughable that Western 'experts' are talking about a new 'civil war' in Afghanistan. As DW's Franz Marty says in this video, Afghanistan has been in a Civil War for the past 40+ years--and I would go even beyond that and say at least since 1978; fact is that the expulsion of King Zahir Shah from power by his cousin Daoud in 1973 put Afghanistan on a path of instability of about 50 years after about 50 years of stability under kingdoms. Makes me think that it's better to have kingdoms, communism, martial laws for some countries than to have 'democracy' and its consequences for such countries. But I digress.

Anyway, here is the DW video. Franz Marty is a true journalist!

 
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Makes me think that it's better to have kingdoms, communism, martial laws for some countries than to have 'democracy' and its consequences for such countries.

You are perfectly right. This "Sham Democracy" has destructed many a developing countries. In real sense, democracy is for those states, where societies are democratic, in their collective deeper psyche.

"Danda peer ae bighrhayaan tigrhayaan da ......"
(Syed Waris Shah)
 
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It's laughable that Western 'experts' are talking about a new 'civil war' in Afghanistan. As DW's Franz Marty says in this video, Afghanistan has been in a Civil War for the past 40+ years--and I would go even beyond that and say at least since 1978; fact is that the expulsion of King Zahir Shah from power by his cousin Daoud in 1973 put Afghanistan on a path of instability of about 50 years after about 50 years of stability under kingdoms. Makes me think that it's better to have kingdoms, communism, martial laws for some countries than to have 'democracy' and its consequences for such countries. But I digress.

Anyway, here is the DW video. Franz Marty is a true journalist!


Take what these western analysts say with a pinch of salt, they don’t understand the mindset of South Asians and they never will. You can study the culture and language but the evolving mindset can never be studied. I’ll be honest they westerners look at British India when they think of this region not realizing the average Hindu will submit to submission of his self but the Muslims are far from it. Any revolts and independence movements had a heavy Muslim hand the Hindus just rode along without much blood shed and sacrifice.
 
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Taliban say they have entered capital of holdout Afghan region


Reuters
05 Sep 2021


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The Taliban said on Sunday their forces had fought their way into the provincial capital of the Panjshir valley, their latest claim of progress in fighting against opposition forces holding out in the area north of Kabul.

There was no immediate response from the National Resistance Front of Afghanistan (NRFA), which groups opposition forces. It had said earlier the Taliban "propaganda machine" was trying to spread distracting messages and that it had pushed Taliban forces back from another part of the valley.

Taliban spokesman Bilal Karimi said on Twitter the police headquarters and district centre of Rukhah, adjacent to the provincial capital Bazarak, had fallen, and opposition forces had suffered numerous casualties, with large numbers of prisoners and captured vehicles, weapons and ammunition.

Fighting was underway in Bazarak, he said. It was not possible to confirm the report, which was echoed on other Taliban Twitter accounts.

Earlier on Sunday NRFA spokesman Fahim Dashti said Parian district, at the northeastern end of Panjshir, which the Taliban have previously said they had taken, had been cleared and up to 1,000 Taliban, including Pakistanis and other foreigners had been blocked off and captured. It was not possible to confirm that independently.

"The resistance forces are ready to continue their defence against any form of aggression," Dashti said.
On Saturday, Italian aid group Emergency said Taliban fighters had reached the trauma hospital it operates in Anabah district, within the Panjshir valley.

Taliban officials have said previously their forces had secured full control of Panjshir but fighting has been continuing for days, with each side saying it had inflicted large numbers of casualties.

Ahmad Massoud, leader of the NRFA, has pledged to continue resisting the offensive and has called for international support.

Panjshir, a rugged mountainous valley north of Kabul still littered with the wreckage of destroyed Soviet tanks, has proved very difficult to overcome in the past. Under Massoud's late father, Ahmad Shah Massoud, it resisted both the invading Soviet army and the previous Taliban government.

On Sunday, Massoud said hundreds of Taliban fighters had surrendered to NRFA forces, which included remnants of regular Afghan army and special forces units as well as local militia fighters. It was not clear if that was a separate claim.

The Panjshir fighting has been the most prominent example of resistance to the Taliban, whose forces swept into Kabul on Aug. 15 as the Western-backed government collapsed and President Ashraf Ghani fled the country.

But small individual protests for women's rights or in defence of the green, red and black tricolour flag of Afghanistan have also been held in different cities.

Massoud originally called for a negotiated settlement with the Taliban and several attempts at talks were held but they eventually broke down, with each side blaming the other for their failure.
 
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