Taliban seizes Afghan borders with Tajikistan, Uzbekistan: Russia

Authored by aljazeera.com and submitted by PanEuropeanism

Taliban leaders promise no attacks on neighbouring countries after taking control of frontiers, Russian defence minister says.

Taliban fighters have taken control of Afghanistan’s borders with Tajikistan and Uzbekistan as they continue their rapid offensive, Russia’s defence minister has said.

Sergei Shoigu told a youth conference in Moscow on Tuesday that the group’s leaders had promised not to attack neighbouring countries after making its territorial gains, Russia’s Tass news agency reported.

He added that Russia would continue holding joint drills with its allies in the region.

Russia operates a military base in Tajikistan and the former Soviet republic is a member of a Moscow-led military bloc, meaning that Moscow would be obliged to protect it in the event of invasion.

Uzbekistan also has close ties with Russia.

Russia held drills with Uzbekistan and Tajikistan near the Afghan border this month. Russia has also reinforced its military base in Tajikistan with new armoured vehicles and firearms.

The Soviet Union occupied Afghanistan from 1979 to 1989, leaving after 15,000 of its troops were killed and tens of thousands were wounded.

The Taliban is battling to defeat the US-backed government and reimpose strict Islamic law. The speed of the group’s advance in recent days has shocked the government and its allies.

The latest violence comes as United States-led foreign forces withdraw from the country.

The Taliban took control of another city in northern Afghanistan on Wednesday, an official said, the ninth provincial capital to fall to the group in six days.

The capture of Faizabad, capital of the northeastern Badakhshan province, came as President Ashraf Ghani landed in Mazar-i-Sharif to rally its defenders as Taliban forces closed in on the biggest city in the north.

Badakhshan borders Tajikistan, Pakistan and China.

The Taliban, which was removed from power in 2001, now controls many of Afghanistan’s northern provinces adjacent to ex-Soviet Central Asia.

During its 1996 to 2001 rule, the group was never completely in control of the north but this time, it seems intent on securing it before closing in on the capital, Kabul.

The group’s strongholds lie in southern and eastern Afghanistan.

DetlefKroeze on August 11st, 2021 at 17:35 UTC »

A couple days ago the Russian MFA said that they don't believe that the Taliban has the ability to take and hold cities and that their offensive is petering out. How things change...

https://twitter.com/RALee85/status/1424517898920419329?s=19

The entire above twitter thread is really interesting btw. It's about the exercises Russia, Tajikistan, and Uzbekistan have been holding near the Afghan border and other measures taken since the Taliban started their offensive.

PanEuropeanism on August 11st, 2021 at 16:38 UTC »

SS: The Taliban has taken complete control of Afghanistan’s borders with Uzbekistan and Tajikistan according to Russia’s defense minister. He claims Taliban promised not to move across either frontier and to prevent infiltration by other groups. Central Asia is a strategically important region for Moscow. Both Uzbekistan and Tajikistan were part of the Soviet Union. Nowadays Tajikistan is part of a Russian-led defense pact comprising six former Soviet republics, the CSTO. Trying to adapt to the current security situation, Shoygu noted that the Russian army will expand bases on the territories of two CSTO allies: Tajikistan and Kyrgyzstan. With the Taliban on the border, Russia has also been conducting war games in Central Asia alongside Uzbek and Tajik troops.

AutoModerator on August 11st, 2021 at 16:22 UTC »

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