U.S. Must
End Its Occupation Of Afghanistan, Warns New Taliban
Leader
By Chris
Swanepoel
July 04,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "The
Inquisitor"-
The Taliban has a new leader, and his message is
clear. According to the Hindustan Times,
Haibatullah Akhundzada said on Saturday in his
first speech since being appointed leader after
his predecessor Akhtar Mansour was killed during
an American drone strike in Pakistan in May,
that the U.S. needs to end its occupation of
Afghanistan. “Admit the realities instead of
useless use of force and muscle… and put an end
to the occupation,” he said on the eve of
Eid-ul-Fitr, the Muslim celebration marking the
end of the fasting month of Ramadan. “Our
message to the American invaders and her allies
is this: the Afghan Muslim people neither fear…
your force nor your stratagem. They consider
martyrdom in confrontation with you as a
cherished goal of their life,” he continued. In
the same speech, he appealed to neighboring
countries to stand together with the Taliban and
assist in the fight against the U.S., stating
their presence would “harm our mutual interest”
and “destabilize the whole region.”
The
message came only 2 days after a convoy of buses
transporting Afghan police cadets in Kabul was
targeted by suicide bomb attacks for which the
Taliban claimed responsibility. The attacks left
more than 70 wounded and over 30 dead. U.S.
officials anticipate more violence in
Afghanistan as the new leader has increased
clashes on the battlefield and suicide bombings
against the U.S.-backed Afghan President Ashraf
Ghani’s security forces and officials, who he
condemns as “supporters of the occupiers.”
“You
will not be able to frustrate the determination
of our (the Afghans) Jihadic struggle, by your
resorting to extending the time of presence of
your soldiers or of increasing military rule of
engagement in Afghanistan,” he said, referring
to President Obama’s approval of increased U.S.
involvement in assisting Afghan soldiers on the
ground and airstrikes against the Taliban when
needed. “You [the United States] are facing up
not a group or faction but a nation. You are not
going to be a winner [God willing]. So it is
rational if you come with a reasonable policy
for solution [of the issue] instead of the use
of force,” he said.
The
conflict in Afghanistan has been raging since
2001, when the Taliban, the then official
government, was all but eliminated by massive
American bombing campaigns in response to the
9/11 attacks. Since then, the Taliban has waged
a guerrilla war in an attempt to return to
power. It was hoped that the more than 10,000
U.S. troops in Afghanistan could be reduced to
half of that by the end of the year, but with
the Taliban gaining large areas of territory in
the south of the country, this is uncertain.
According to Associated Press, the
Taliban fighters are now said to be better
organized and more daring than in the past, with
most of their opposition coming from the
ill-equipped, under-trained Afghan army.
Akhundzada claims the Taliban’s program is aimed
at creating an independent and united country
under their law.
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