From the CBC:
“U.S.
killing of al-Qaeda leader in Afghanistan heightens scrutiny of Taliban”
(A Taliban
fighter stands guard near the site where al-Zawahri was killed in Kabul.)
The U.S. drone
strike that killed al-Qaeda leader Ayman al-Zawahri on the balcony of a Kabul
safe house on the weekend has intensified global scrutiny of Afghanistan's
Taliban rulers and further undermined their efforts to secure international
recognition and desperately needed aid. The Taliban had promised in the 2020
Doha Agreement on the terms of the U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan that they
would not harbour al-Qaeda members. Nearly a year after the U.S. military's
chaotic pullout from Afghanistan, al-Zawahri's killing raises questions about
the involvement of Taliban leaders in sheltering a mastermind of the 9/11
terror attacks and one of America's most-wanted fugitives.
The safe house
is in Kabul's upscale Shirpur neighbourhood, home to several Taliban leaders
who had moved into mansions of former top Afghan officials of the toppled
Western-backed government. The Taliban initially sought to describe the strike
as America violating the Doha deal, which also includes a Taliban pledge not to
shelter those seeking to attack the United States — something al-Zawahri had
done for years in internet videos and online screeds. The Taliban have yet to
say who was killed in the strike.
Meanwhile,
rumours persist of unease in the Taliban ranks — particularly between the
powerful group known as the Haqqani network, which apparently sheltered
al-Zawahri, and other Taliban figures. "The killing of Ayman al-Zawahri
has raised many questions," said one Pakistani intelligence official, who
spoke on condition of anonymity to The Associated Press as he wasn't authorized
to speak publicly to reporters. Al-Zawahri took over as al-Qaeda's leader after
Osama bin Laden was killed in Pakistan in 2011, in an operation by U.S. Navy
SEALs. "The Taliban were aware of his presence in Kabul, and if they were
not aware of it, they need to explain their position," the official said.
U.S. President
Joe Biden confirmed the killing of al-Qaeda leader Ayman al-Zawahri in a
precision mission. Javed Ali, a former senior director with the U.S. National
Security Council, shares his reaction and analysis with CBC News. The strike
early Sunday shook awake Shirpur, once home to historic buildings bulldozed in
2003 to make way for luxury homes for officials in Afghanistan's Western-backed
government and international aid organizations. After the U.S. withdrawal in
August 2021, the Taliban elite began taking some of the abandoned homes there. The
house where al-Zawahri stayed was the home of a top aide to senior Taliban
leader Sirajuddin Haqqani, according to a senior U.S. intelligence official.
Taliban officials blocked AP journalists in Kabul from reaching the damaged
house on Tuesday.
The United
Nations Security Council was informed by monitors of militant groups in July
that al-Qaeda enjoys greater freedom in Afghanistan under the Taliban, but
confines itself to advising and supporting the country's new rulers. A report
by the monitors said the two groups remain close and that al-Qaeda fighters,
estimated to number between 180 to 400, are represented "at the individual
level" among Taliban combat units. The monitors said it's unlikely
al-Qaeda will seek to mount direct attacks outside Afghanistan, "owing to
a lack of capability and restraint on the part of the Taliban, as well as an
unwillingness to jeopardize their recent gains," such as having a safe
haven and improved resources. During the first half of 2022, al-Zawahri
increasingly reached out to supporters with video and audio messages, including
assurances that al-Qaeda can compete with the Islamic State group for
leadership of a global movement, the report by the Analytical Support and
Sanctions Monitoring Team said. Islamic State militants have emerged as a major
threat to the Taliban over the past year, carrying out a series of deadly
attacks against Taliban targets and civilians.
'Power
struggle' The Haqqani network is an Afghan Islamic insurgent group built
around the family of the same name. In the 1980s, it fought Soviet forces and
over the past 20 years, it battled U.S.-led NATO troops and the former
Afghanistan government. Sirajuddin Haqqani has also served as the first
deputy leader of the Taliban movement since 2016. The U.S. government maintains
a $10 million bounty on him for "numerous significant kidnappings and
attacks against U.S. and coalition forces in Afghanistan, the Afghan government
and civilian targets."
But the
Haqqanis, from Afghanistan's eastern Khost province, have disagreed with others
in the Taliban leadership, mostly from the southern provinces of Helmand and
Kandahar. Some believe Sirajuddin Haqqani wants more power. Other Taliban
figures have opposed the Haqqanis' violent attacks against civilians in Kabul
and elsewhere. "It seems to me that the power struggle within the Taliban
is general. It's not necessarily about the U.S. or about the international
community. It's about the new regime, how to share power within the new regime,
who gets what position, who gets to control what ministries, to decide the
general policies and so on," said Jerome Drevon, the International Crisis
Group's senior analyst studying Islamist militant groups. "It's not that
surprising that the building [al-Zawahri lived in] would be owned by the
Haqqani family. ... That creates a tension [in] what the Taliban movement is,
especially in terms of how it's trying to reach out to the international
community, to normalize itself and so on."
^ It should surprise
no one that the Taliban have lied to the World and that they continue to help
Al-Qaida. The only good thing out of this – besides al-Zawahri’s Death) is
knowing that the Taliban have different factions that are fighting amongst
themselves. Hopefully, they will kill each other off. ^
https://www.cbc.ca/news/world/afghanistan-taliban-al-qaeda-ayman-al-zawahri-1.6538421
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