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Afghanistan
Afghan Warlords Give Up to the Taliban with Surprising Ease
2021-08-16
[An Nahar] Afghanistan's warlords vowed defiantly to defend their strongholds from the Taliban
...mindless ferocity in a turban...
and crush the bad boys. But, like the government's forces, they too gave up with surprising ease.

As the turbans swept through the north in a surprise offensive targeting Afghanistan's anti-Taliban bastion, President Ashraf Ghani
...former chancellor of Kabul University, now president of Afghanistan. Before returning to Afghanistan in 2002 he was a scholar of political science and anthropology. He worked at the World Bank working on international development assistance. As Finance Minister of Afghanistan between July 2002 and December 2004, he led Afghanistan's attempted economic recovery until the Karzais stole all the money...
called for a national mobilisation of militia forces.

Despite Ghani's chequered history with the country's warlords, the beleaguered president was hoping they could help turn the tide.

In the besieged northern city of Mazar-e-Sharif, Ghani was looking to longtime strongman Atta Mohammad Noor and ethnic Uzbek warlord Abdul Rashid Dostum
...ethnic Uzbek warlord who distinguished himself fighting the Soviets and the Taliban. The story that he had a bad guy run over with a tank is an exaggeration. It was an armored personnel carrier...
Both were known for their dogged defence against the Taliban in the 1990s, and had remained influential figures during the past two decades of war.

In the days leading up to their defeat, the greying commanders appeared to be the fearsome figures from their younger years.

"The Taliban never learn from the past," Dostum told news hounds last week after flying back to Mazar-e-Sharif, while offering a not-so-subtle reference to the alleged massacre of the turbans by his fighters in 2001.

"The Taliban have come to the north several times but they were always trapped. It is not easy for them to get out."

Noor took to social media to issue his own warnings, posting graphic pictures of Taliban killed by his troops while promising to fight to the death.

"I prefer dying in dignity than dying in despair," wrote Noor on Twitter, alongside other defiant posts vowing to "defend the nation".

In a video posted to Facebook on Saturday, Noor spoke calmly to camera dressed in military fatigues while rifle fire could be heard close by.

- 'COWARDLY PLOT' -
Ultimately, bravado did not beat back the bad boys.

Late Saturday, both men's militias were routed after the Afghan military units they were supporting surrendered to the Taliban.

Dostum and Noor fled across the nearby Uzbek border.

Noor claimed they had been the victims of deep-seated betrayal, saying on Twitter their resistance came to an end "as a result of a big organized & cowardly plot."

He offered no other details.

Video posted on pro-Taliban social media accounts, meanwhile, showed a group of young Taliban fighters combing through Dostum's gaudy residence, digging through cabinets and testing out overstuffed furniture.

Their rout came days after fellow strongman Ismail Khan was captured by Taliban fighters in the western city of Herat
...a venerable old Persian-speaking city in western Afghanistan, populated mostly by Tadjiks, which is why it's not as blood-soaked as areas controlled by Pashtuns...
Khan had in the lead-up to his defeat sounded like the same powerful figure who had ruled his fiefdom with such authority for decades that he earned the nickname "Lion of Herat".

"We demand all the remaining security forces resist with courage," Khan said last month.

But with a look of resignation, Khan was on Friday forced to pose for pictures with Taliban fighters and give an interview to an bad boy media outlet.

After all the hefty promises and chest thumping, it was a humiliating end.
Posted by:Fred

#5  Now they're grasping at other people's straws.
Posted by: ed in texas   2021-08-16 11:06  

#4  Smart enough to see a lost cause or weren't all they were cracked up to be in the first place. Oh, and maybe that "power of and" thing...
Posted by: M. Murcek   2021-08-16 08:56  

#3  The 'experts' in the Beltway ignored hundreds (or in the case of Alexander thousands) of years of the culture of the region.

"Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it." (George Santayana-1905).
Posted by: Procopius2k   2021-08-16 07:04  

#2  Wouldn't shock me if our military was sending all the equipment and support to "right thinking" Afghans rather than the northern tribes that helped us liberate the country. Then these right thinking leaders just surrender to the Taliban.
Posted by: Oldcat   2021-08-16 03:27  

#1  Noor claimed they had been the victims of deep-seated betrayal, saying on Twitter their resistance came to an end "as a result of a big organized & cowardly plot

"Their islamic kung foo was stronger!"
Posted by: Dron66046   2021-08-16 02:44  

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