Hundreds of Afghan security forces flee as
districts fall to Taliban
Militants’ advance continues as Britain nears end of
its two-decade deployment to country
Emma
Graham-Harrison in Kabul and Dan Sabbagh
Sun 4 Jul
2021 18.01 BST
The
Taliban’s rapid advance through northern Afghanistan continued on Sunday with
more than a dozen districts falling to the militants, as Britain entered the
final days of its two-decade deployment to Afghanistan.
More than
300 members of the Afghan security forces fled across the border into
Tajikistan to escape the militants, and Badakhshan and Takhar provinces are now
largely under Taliban control, beyond the respective regional capitals.
There have
been no public announcements about when the last British troops will fly out.
Senior sources had recently said the US and British missions would end on 4
July, but after Joe Biden backed away from that date at a weekend press
conference, London appeared to follow suit.
On Friday
the US handed over Bagram airbase, the heart of its campaign in Afghanistan,
meaning it can no longer carry out significant operations in the country. The
few hundred soldiers left are in effect on guard duty for the embassy.
But at a
press conference soon afterwards, Biden brushed off questions about the end of
the US deployment, saying it was a holiday weekend and “I want to talk about
happy things, man”. Since then his press secretary, Jen Psaki, has reset
expectations, saying the last troops would probably be out by the end of
August.
On Sunday
Britain’s Ministry of Defence said a few British troops remained in
Afghanistan, blaming a fast-changing situation and “mixed messaging” for
earlier reports of a 4 July departure.
Britain’s
plans are expected to become clearer when Boris Johnson makes a statement to
parliament early this week, most likely on Tuesday, after a meeting of the
national security council (NSC) that will determine the shape of the UK’s
future diplomatic and any residual military presence in Afghanistan. But one
defence source cautioned that the NSC meeting had been postponed before and it
could happen again.
Most of
Britain’s 750-strong contribution to what is officially a “train and assist”
stabilisation mission in Afghanistan has already left. The NSC meeting is
expected to discuss whether any SAS or other special forces will remain in the
country – although that decision will not be made public – and whether some
troops might be required to guard the British embassy in Kabul, currently
protected by contractors. Defence sources said the current arrangement was
likely to be continued.
In common
with other Nato countries that have ended their missions in recent weeks, the
UK appears to be planning a very low-key military departure. Few politicians
want to highlight that a military project launched to destroy the Taliban is
ending with the group resurgent across the country.
In Kabul,
Biden’s holiday weekend remarks prompted outrage, as observers tracked the
rapid spread of Taliban control, including in areas such as Badakhshan that 20
years ago had been strongholds of resistance against the militant group.
“As an
Afghan woman, I don’t have that option ‘to talk about happy things’. I have to
worry about a looming gender apartheid,” Shaharzad Akbar, the head of the
Afghanistan International Human Rights Commission, said on Twitter.
The Taliban
now control about a third of Afghanistan’s nearly 400 districts and threaten
many more. Although they have not yet taken any provincial capitals, they now
surround several of them, from Ghazni City in the east to Maimana in northern
Faryab province.
In many
areas, security forces have surrendered without a fight, sometimes under deals
brokered by local elders. Videos showing Taliban embracing surrendering
soldiers and providing them with money to travel home may have given government
forces confidence that they could abandon their posts without losing their
lives.
In
Badakhshan, Mohib-ul Rahman, a provincial council member, blamed Taliban
successes on the poor morale of troops who are mostly outnumbered and have been
left without vital supplies or the possibility of reinforcement.
“Unfortunately,
the majority of the districts were left to Taliban without any fight,” Rahman
told the Associated Press.
The rapid
advance left Badakhshan’s capital at risk, and on Saturday television images
showed politicians and government officials crowding on to planes for an
evacuation to Kabul.
On Sunday
special forces arrived by helicopter to secure the city and potentially try to
reclaim some districts. But Afghan security forces have managed to push the
Taliban out of only a handful of the places they have seized over the last few
months.

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