MESOP NEWS : EU WILL MIT TALIBAN REDEN / BORRELL & VON DER LEYHEN

Die EU will in Afghanistan auf Realpolitik umschalten
Das ist passiert: Noch hält sich Ursula von der Leyen, die Präsidentin der Europäischen Kommission und ehemalige deutsche Verteidigungsministerin, mit Kommentaren zum Machtwechsel in Afghanistan zurück. Dafür äusserte sich der Hohe Vertreter der EU für Aussen- und Sicherheitspolitik, Josep Borrell, umso offener. «Die Taliban haben den Krieg gewonnen, also werden wir mit ihnen reden müssen.» Um die Frage einer offiziellen Anerkennung der radikalen Islamisten gehe es dabei keineswegs.

 

Darum ist es wichtig: Seit 2002 hat Brüssel mehr als vier Milliarden Euro Entwicklungshilfe in Afghanistan investiert. Man hatte sich darauf verlassen, dass die von der EU finanzierte zivile Aufbauarbeit von anderen militärisch abgesichert würde. Und allein für kurzfristige Hilfen im laufenden Jahr hatte die Kommission 57 Millionen Euro eingeplant. Während Gelder für Nothilfe wohl weiterhin fliessen werden, will die EU Gelder für die Entwicklungszusammenarbeit aussetzen, bis die Lage geklärt ist.

 

Das ist der Hintergrund: Wird Afghanistan nun zum Terrornest? Die Taliban kämpften Seite an Seite mit ausländischen Extremisten, sie sind eng mit der Kaida verknüpft. Und diese ist nicht die einzige internationale Terrorgruppe, die in Afghanistan aktiv ist.

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MESOP NEWS : Israel must be brought to account for its crimes against Palestinian children

August 20, 2021 –  Motasem A DalloulabujomaaGaza  MENA WATCH

More than 1.2 million Palestinian children in the occupied territories returned to their schools for the new academic year on 15 August. According to the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (UN OCHA), most of them have been counting down the days and looking forward to schools reopening. “Because for many young people in Palestine, 2021 has truly been a long, hot year to date.”

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MESOP NEW : DER SPD-FELDMANN AWO SKANDAL

AWO-Affäre in Frankfurt – Feldmanns Frau bekam als Teilzeit-Praktikantin volles Erzieherinnen-Gehalt

Als Kita-Leiterin der AWO ging es der Frau von Frankfurts OB Feldmann bekanntlich besser als anderen. Jetzt wirft ein Praktikum neue Fragen auf. Die AWO weist die Vorwürfe zurück, der Politiker reagiert in einem ungewöhnlichen Kurz-Statement.

Von Volker Siefert – FAZ – 20-8-2021 –

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MESOP NEWS : TALIBAN INSIDE ! / ECLUSIV

MESOP NEWS : TALIBAN INSIDE !

 

Interesting: remnants of the anti-Taliban forces in Baghlan had insider help. Given that much of the collapse came from side-switching because US pulled away logistics and air support that made the Afghan army function, does leave open the possibility they can switch right back.

 

Taliban fighter Umair Zazai was killed in Andarab last night. From what I am hearing, it sounds like the Taliban was decimated in an ambush as well as in insider attacks in Baghlan yesterday.  21-8-2021

 

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MESOP NEWS EXCLUSIV : Islamic State Editorial on Taliban Victory in Afghanistan

by Aymenn Jawad Al-Tamimi  •  Aug 19, 2021

Over the course of the past few days following the Taliban’s seizure of Kabul, there have been many douchebag takes- amid the scramble to get the most likes and retweets on Twitter- about why events occurred in the way they did and who on the American side has the greatest share of blame. The Islamic State editorial on the matter in this week’s issue of the al-Naba’ newsletter must also surely rank among the douchebag takes. That said, I imagine that if you were to overthink and overanalyse this editorial, you could come to the conclusion that this editorial is really a masterful piece of propaganda as so much Islamic State propaganda supposedly is, requiring more pointless grants and money to be wasted on devising effective ‘counter-narrative’ and ‘combating violent extremism’, whatever that means.

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MESOP NEWS : SPONSORED BY US & GERMANY FOR YEARS = PAKISTAN THE CRADLE OF TALIBAN

@KyleWOrton  21.8.2021

: “A coercive approach earlier on against Pakistan might have enabled a different outcome in Afghanistan…The least that can be done now, in the aftermath, is to treat Pakistan as the rogue regime it truly is”

Pakistan goes to the root of Taliban support. Time to stop treating it as an ally

Prime Minister Imran Khan was hardly subtle this week about his sense of triumph, greeting the fall of Kabul as an act of liberation

telegraph.co.uk

 

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MESOP NEWS : LASCHET – „Bidens Anküdigung hat mich enttäuscht“ / BUWE-Hauptmann kritisiert Merkel-Regierung

FAZ 21.08.2021-10:06

Zum Wahlkampfauftakt der Union kritisiert Armin Laschet die amerikanische Afghanistan-Politik im Gespräch mit der F.A.S. scharf. Ein Hauptmann der Bundeswehr erhebt Vorwürfe gegen die Bundesregierung.

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MESOP NEWS ANALYSIS : How the US disaster in giving Afghanistan to the Taliban happened

REGIONAL AFFAIRS: America’s debacle in Afghanistan is a complicated process, and the breakdown has many antecedents.

SETH J. FRANTZMAN   AUGUST 19, 2021 JERUSALEM POST

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MESOP NEWS ANALYSIS : THE PAST, PRESENT, AND FUTURE OF AL-QAEDA IN AFGHANISTAN AND PAKISTAN – SOUFAN CENTER  20-8-2021

Bottom Line Up Front:

 

  • Al-Qaeda has not been eliminated from the Afghanistan-Pakistan (AfPak) region, and the group still enjoys significant support in the broader regional jihadist landscape.
  • To counter the aggressive U.S. counterterrorism campaign, al-Qaeda altered its organizational structure and strategy in AfPak, strengthening its roots in the region to ensure its survival.
  • Through this localization strategy, al-Qaeda achieved its primary goal in the region—depriving the U.S. of military victory over the Taliban, leading to the re-establishment of the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan.
  • Despite U.S. pressure, the Taliban has refused to sever its relationship with al-Qaeda, which will create serious problems for the region now that the Taliban is back in power in Afghanistan.

 

In the last two decades, massive efforts of the so-called Global War on Terror (GWoT) in the Afghanistan-Pakistan (AfPak) region resulted in severe blows to al-Qaeda. However, the group maintains deep, covert roots in the AfPak’s jihadist landscape, ensuring its longevity in the region. Since the al-Qaeda attacks of September 11, 2001, the U.S. has intensely focused on neutralizing al-Qaeda leadership and destroying its external operations planning capabilities. The first severe blow to al-Qaeda was the killing of its military chief and Osama bin Laden’s deputy, Mohammed Atef, in a U.S. airstrike in November 2001. The most recent major blow was in July 2015, when a U.S. drone strike eliminated Shaikh Umar Khalil, who served as second in command to al-Qaeda’s current emir Ayman Al-Zawahiri. Yet, even with these and many other tactical successes, al-Qaeda has not been defeated in AfPak, and the group enjoys significant support in the regional jihadist landscape. Its goal of rebuilding will be easier with the Taliban in control of Afghanistan.

To survive the post-9/11 U.S. counterterrorism onslaught, al-Qaeda engineered a strategic transformation in AfPak, strengthening its roots throughout the region. By doing so, al-Qaeda turned the U.S. invasion of Afghanistan into a golden opportunity. This is evident by al-Qaeda’s political strategy in the region. Al-Qaeda shifted focus from global terrorist attacks and external operations to supporting local jihadist groups throughout South Asia, and fueling the narratives that underpin their objectives. This shift helped build resilience, allowing al-Qaeda to survive despite the massive blows inflicted by the United States and its allies. Although U.S. counterterrorism operations focused on eliminating al-Qaeda leadership and foiling its transnational terrorist plans, the group cemented its relations with the local AfPak jihadist scene by appealing to the principles on which the group was initially founded. Al-Qaeda was established in 1988 as an international organization dedicated to ultimately restoring Islamic governance and the imposition of their interpretation of Sharia and removing Western influence from the Arabian peninsula. To achieve this goal, the organization launched training camps to mobilize militants and strengthen jihadist uprisings, efforts that eventually led to the 9/11 attacks. Following the U.S. invasion in 2001, Afghanistan was no longer a viable al-Qaeda sanctuary, and the group dispersed its fighters throughout AfPak in an attempt to avoid further harm from U.S. counterterrorism operations. This structural reconfiguration caused al-Qaeda to increasingly rely on local allies to advance its regional goals, resulting in the growth of various franchise groups.

Al-Qaeda’s post-9/11 resilience in AfPak results from its three-pronged regionalization strategy. First, al-Qaeda helped the Afghan Taliban establish a solid resistance base against the U.S. and allied forces, leading to a Taliban resurgence in the years immediately following the invasion. For this purpose, al-Qaeda relied upon loyalists from its Pakistani jihadist allies, including battle-hardened Kashmiri jihadists and sectarian militants from the Sunni militant group Lashkar-e-Jhangvi (LeJ). These Pakistani jihadists were enraged by the U.S. invasion of Afghanistan and Islamabad’s support for the U.S. Their nexus grew inextricably linked, and Pashtun tribal militants provided crucial safe havens for al-Qaeda militants on the Pakistani side of the AfPak border. Through military, political, and economic support, and through relationships with Afghan and Pakistani jihadists, al-Qaeda helped reshape the Afghan battlefield. Al-Qaeda accepted a subsidiary role to the Afghan Taliban in the post-9/11 insurgency and helped the Taliban maintain its monopoly on power in longtime Afghan strongholds. This helped al-Qaeda prove its unconditional loyalty to the Afghan Taliban, a favor that was returned when al-Qaeda lost its sanctuaries in Waziristan in 2015 and the Afghan Taliban again provided them shelter inside Afghanistan.

Secondly, al-Qaeda organized its post-9/11 Pakistani loyalists into the deadliest jihadist threat against the Pakistani state known as the Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP). The TTP served as al-Qaeda’s first line of defense in the region and still publicly declares its loyalty to Osama Bin Laden and his jihadist ideology. Al-Qaeda maintains influence over the TTP, as evidenced by its covert role in the TTP’s reunification process last year. Although TTP has mostly limited its operations to Pakistani soil, it echoes the al-Qaeda global jihadist agenda from a local perspective, a narrative that continues to resonate among pockets of the Pakistani population.

The third significant al-Qaeda achievement in AfPak was establishing its regional franchise in 2014, al-Qaeda in the Indian Subcontinent (AQIS), comprised of its post-9/11 Pakistani cadres. The al-Qaeda senior leadership handpicked these Pakistani cadres from its thousands of post-9/11 loyalists and groomed them over the years for the group’s future leadership responsibilities. This further helped al-Qaeda camouflage itself in the region, as AQIS cadres are difficult to identify among the thousands of jihadists active in the Afghan battlefield.

Through this localization strategy, al-Qaeda gradually turned its economic and human resources from transnational attacks into strengthening the Taliban insurgency in Afghanistan. The Bin Laden documents also reveal that al-Qaeda channeled much-needed funds to the Afghan Taliban for its war in Afghanistan. The al-Qaeda media, military, and guerilla warfare experts from Waziristan imparted advanced training to the Afghan Taliban. Al-Qaeda deployed its Pakistani allies and affiliates to fighting alongside Taliban units operating inside Afghanistan. This strategy finally led to its primary goal in the region—to deprive the U.S. of military victory over the Taliban, leading to the re-establishment of Taliban rule in the country.

Despite U.S. pressure during last year’s peace talks in Doha, the Taliban avoided making any promise to deny space to al-Qaeda in the future. This stance was also echoed in an Afghan television network’s recent interview with Taliban senior leader Amir Khan Muttaqi. When asked about the group’s future policies regarding al-Qaeda, Muttaqi said that the Taliban will never create enmity with al-Qaeda on behalf of the U.S. The Afghan Taliban central spokesman, Zabihullah Mujahid, also stated in an interview with an Afghan news channel that the Doha deal does not put any obligations on the Taliban for cutting ties with al-Qaeda. According to Mujahid, the only Taliban promise is that it will not let anyone use the Afghan soil against the U.S. and its allies. However, two reasons leave few doubts about whether al-Qaeda will again use Afghanistan in the future for any such actions that might threaten the survival of the Taliban’s future Islamic government in Afghanistan. First, the United Nations Security Council claims that the Taliban kept al-Qaeda onboard regarding its peace deal with the U.S. Secondly, al-Qaeda’s military and media strategies in AfPak demonstrate that al-Qaeda is fully committed to backing the Taliban. Additionally, Usama Mahmood, the leader of AQIS since 2019, following the killing of its founding emir Shaikh Asim Umar, told his group members that they should prepare for important responsibilities after the U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan.

President Joe Biden, in his recent statement on the withdrawal of U.S. troops from Afghanistan, said that the United States’ main goal in Afghanistan was killing bin Laden and eliminating al-Qaeda’s capacity for attacking the U.S. Bin Laden has been dead for a decade, but al-Qaeda still maintains a strong presence in Afghanistan and Pakistan. Al-Qaeda does not need Afghanistan for any attack against the U.S. and its allies—it has strongholds throughout the region—but should the Taliban again provide a safe space, political cover, and training grounds, there is cause for concern that Al-Qaeda could once again plan attacks against the West. The group’s silence as U.S. troops withdraw and the Taliban rises to power should not be taken for granted. It might just mark the beginning of a new era for al-Qaeda.

 

Guest Author:

Abdul Sayed is an independent researcher on jihadism and the politics and security of the Afghanistan-Pakistan region. Sayed has a master’s degree in political science from Lund University, Sweden. He is currently working on projects related to violent extremist organizations and transnational jihadism in the Afghanistan-Pakistan region. Twitter: @abdsayedd

 

 

 

MESOP NEWS : FIRST NEW GERMAN MONEY FOR THE TALIBAN !

Peter Hornung @ph_reporterpool

20-8-2021

Das

@AuswaertigesAmt

bestätigte ARD-Studio gerade, was Talibansprecher Naeem heute Nacht getwittert hatte. Deutschland stellt 100 Millionen Euro an humanitärer Hilfe für Afghanistan zur Verfügung. Besprochen so in Doha/ Katar.

@tagesschau

 

Dr.M.Naeem@IeaOffice

  • 15h

1/2 انعقد عصر اليوم لقاء بين السید شير محمد عباس ستانيكزاي نائب رئيس المكتب السياسي لإمارة أفغانستان الإسلامية والوفد المرافق له وسفير ألمانيا لدى أفغانستان ماركس بويتزل. وركز الاجتماع على الأوضاع الحالية في اأفغانستان والتطورات الأخیرة والمستقبل.

 

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