Analysis-Afghan Taliban victory brings new challenge: governing a
country in crisis
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[September 03, 2021]
By Gibran Naiyyar Peshimam
(Reuters) - After a lightning military
triumph and the departure of the last U.S. flight on Monday, the Taliban
faces the challenge of forming a government that can unite different
factions and rebuild Afghanistan after 40 years of war.
The movement is expected to announce the makeup of its government
https://www.reuters.com/world/asia-pacific/taliban-co-founder-baradar-lead-new-afghanistan-govt-sources-2021-09-03
in the next few days.
At stake is its ability to govern a country facing deep economic crisis,
a humanitarian disaster caused by drought and hunger and threats to
security and stability from rival jihadist groups, including a local
offshoot of Islamic State.
Caught by surprise by the speed of the outgoing government's collapse,
the Taliban were left scrambling to keep order in Kabul after President
Ashraf Ghani fled and security forces melted away, and they have taken
weeks to form a new administration.
"A guerrilla war is one day here, one day there. This is different,"
said a senior Pakistani official with knowledge of the situation in
Afghanistan. "It will take time."While the Taliban's supreme leader
Mullah Haibatullah Akhundzada has remained silent, Mullah Abdul Ghani
Baradar, one of the group's founders who is now head of the political
commission in Doha, has been the public face of the leadership.
A government headed by Baradar under the spiritual guidance of
Akhundzada is expected but the Taliban are made up of different elements
whose interests and priorities must be reconciled, sources in the
movement say.
On Tuesday, Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid said the senior
leadership wrapped up a three-day meeting in Kandahar to discuss the
path ahead.
Mujahid did not respond to requests for further comment on the
discussions or on balancing the priorities of different elements of the
Taliban.
But he said separately that preparations were in their final stages and
the announcement of the government was expected "in a few days."
Zahid Hussain, a Pakistani specialist on the movement, said the Taliban
had changed from the monolithic group commanded by its founder Mullah
Omar in the 1990s.
"Mullah Omar had absolute power. Whatever he would say was basically
obligatory for everyone to follow," he said.
The movement now had distinct political and military operations that
must coordinate.
Leaders who have spent years in the political office in Doha negotiating
with international powers will now have to work with younger commanders
who fought the war and who could now expect a say in shaping the peace
will be one issue, Hussain said.
As Taliban fighters entered Kabul on Aug. 15 to find the presidential
palace abandoned and the city left to its fate, the jubilation of those
streaming into the capital hid differences that need to be dealt with
carefully, according to a senior Taliban commander.
Some of the group's core leaders, from regions near the Taliban's
birthplace in the southern city of Kandahar, were wary of the growing
political role assumed by the Haqqani group whose Badri313 special
forces unit spearheaded the seizure of Kabul.
Taliban sources said the unit captured a series of important buildings
including the presidential palace and the defence ministry, increasing
the influence of the Haqqanis, a powerful group from the borderlands
with Pakistan designated as a Foreign Terrorist Organization by the
United States.
"The Kandahar and Zabul faction was previously more powerful in the
decision making process, but now the Haqqani group is more dominant as
they seized control of Kabul," said the commander, who declined to be
named because of the sensitivity of the issue.
'NOT MONOLITHIC'
Even among the core southern leadership group, there are different
allegiances around senior figures like Baradar and others including
Mullah Omar's son Yaqoob, who has his own supporters in Kandahar.
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An Afghan man rides on his bicycle as he holds the Taliban flag in
Kabul, Afghanistan, September 2, 2021. REUTERS/Stringer
The fall of Kabul has now also seen newer figures
emerging like Anas Haqqani, youngest son of one of the founders of
the Haqqani network, which has been blamed for some of the worst
suicide bombing attacks of the war.
"They are not monolithic, and they are not monolithic
within their own divisions," said one Western diplomat with long
experience in the region.
In the days following the fall of Kabul, Anas Haqqani has taken an
increasingly visible political role, emerging from the shadow of his
brother Sirajuddin Haqqani, the deputy leader of the Taliban, who
has a $10 million U.S. bounty on his head and has not appeared in
public.
Boosted by the successes of Badri313 unit, Haqqani has been one of
the most prominent Taliban faces on social media since the fall of
Kabul, posing for photographs everywhere from the newly secured
airport to a meeting with members of Afghanistan's popular cricket
team.
Reuters was not able to contact Anas Haqqani directly but in an
interview with Turkish television station TRT World he said he would
like to be a soldier or to work and serve the people but added: "If
they tell me to stand aside, I will."
For years, the U.S. military and the Western-backed government in
Kabul tried to exploit divisions within the Taliban by appealing to
commanders perceived to be more open to negotiations, without
succeeding in fracturing the movement.
Outside Afghanistan, countries trying to understand the new Taliban
order say they are closely watching to see if different groups can
maintain a common purpose as the challenges of running a country
mount.
"For the Taliban, speed is of the essence," said a senior regional
diplomat, speaking on condition of anonymity. "Marshalling revenues
and breathing life into the economy will be their biggest
challenge."
The deep economic crisis, made worse by the loss of thousands of
trained and educated specialists in the flight from Kabul, and an
emerging security challenge posed by a local affiliate of Islamic
State are the most pressing challenges.
One of the poorest countries in the world, Afghanistan now faces
being cut off from the billions of dollars in foreign aid that kept
the economy afloat, just as severe drought threatens to create a
humanitarian catastrophe.
The group has promised an amnesty for former opponents and rights
for women compatible with Islamic law. It has pledged to allow
people to travel freely and asked for diplomatic relations with
foreign powers including the United States.
Overtures have also been made to former leaders like ex-President
Hamid Karzai, but whether figures associated with the former
administration will have more than a symbolic presence remains to be
seen.
Among the names that have surfaced as potential ministers, most
appear to be veteran commanders from the southern provinces, whose
presence in government would do little to suggest a more open
approach.
It is also unclear how they will treat ethnic groups like
Persian-speaking Tajiks or the mainly Shi'ite Hazara, many of whom
are deeply mistrustful of Pashtuns who dominate the Taliban and who
have traditionally provided Afghanistan's rulers.
(Additional reporting by James Mackenzie and Jonathan Landay;
Writing by James Mackenzie; Editing by Mike Collett-White)
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