Renewed safe haven means al-Qaida and others will have space, infrastructure, fighters and arms to plot a comeback

Following the withdrawal of US troops, the Taliban’s swift and summary takeover of Afghanistan territory and political leadership has left many wondering what their return to power means for international jihadism.

The last time the Taliban were in power, they ruled Afghanistan in a notoriously brutal manner and harboured al-Qaida – a transnational jihadist movement that conducted the largest terrorist attack in history against the United States – prompting the US invasion in 2001 and two decades of military involvement that came to its ignominious end just a few short days ago.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Israel confirms 126 people being held hostage by Hamas

Number revised down from about 150 after bodies from attack sites in…

After We Fell review – Harry Styles-inspired romance is stupendously wooden

Fans of the YA After series should find something amid the tangled…

Why do so many people hate Insulate Britain? Inside the controversial protest movement

Guardian reporter Damien Gayle spent two months with the environmental campaigners Insulate Britain…

Revealed: EU border agency involved in hundreds of refugee pushbacks

Investigation suggests Frontex’s database recorded incidents of illegal pushbacks in Aegean Sea…