WASHINGTON: Almost 70 per cent of the fighters of the
militant Islamic State (IS) group in Afghanistan are Pakistani Taliban
who joined IS after having been forced out of their country, says a top
US commander.
Gen John W. Nicholson, who commands the US
and Nato forces in Afghanistan, also said that although the United
States had been fighting in Afghanistan for 15 years, a dozen terrorist
groups were still operating in the country.
“In the case
of Islamic State Khorasan province, the majority of the members are
from the Tehreek-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP),” said the general while
briefing Washington-based journalists at the Pentagon earlier this week.
Many of these terrorists were forced out of Pakistan by the Zarb-i-Azb
military operation, he added.
Gen Nicholson said that
many IS fighters in Nangarhar province came from Pakistan’s Orakzai
tribal agency. “And they were former members of the TTP, complete with
their leadership, who wholesale joined Islamic State, pledged bayt
(allegiance) to Islamic State and joined them earlier this year,” he
said, adding that 70pc, roughly, of those fighters were from the banned
TTP and many of them were Pakhtuns from Orakzai.
Gen
Nicholson said the IS, also known by Arabic acronym Daesh, militants
were exporting their radical ideology from their bases in Iraq and Syria
to Afghanistan and other countries in the region.
“Daesh
is only one of nine US-designated terrorist organisations here in
Afghanistan,” he said. “Additionally, there are three other violent
extremist organisations.”
Alarmed by the increasing
influence of these militant groups, the United States recently resumed
its air strikes in Afghanistan. The Air Force Times reported on Friday
that since last month there had been a dramatic increase in the US air
strikes on militant targets in Afghanistan.
“Strikes
against Afghan targets hit a 2016 high this month, specifically between
July 19 and 25, when more than 70 munitions were employed,” Lt Col Chris
Karns, spokesman for the US Air Forces Central Command, told the
newspaper. F-16s, MQ-9s and B-52s conducted most of the operations.
“These
groups are the principal focus of our counterterrorism mission,” Gen
Nicholson said, adding that besides Daesh and the Afghan Taliban, the
Pakistani Taliban and the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan were also
operating. Some fighters from both groups have now migrated over to join
Daesh.
Gen Nicholson said Daesh was involved in last Saturday’s attack in Kabul that left more than 80 civilians dead.
He
said Daesh controlled around 10 districts in Nangarhar province in
December last year. But since January, when President Barack Obama
authorised US forces to participate in counterterrorism attacks, the
group has been forced to retreat from some of the areas.
Gen
Nicholson said the increasing influence of Daesh in Afghanistan had
also led to clashes between them and the Afghan Taliban, contributing to
Daesh’s retreat from some areas. “So, now since January, their area has
shrunk to...parts of three or four districts in southern Nangarhar.”
He
said the US forces were now working with Afghan security forces to
reclaim significant portions of the territory that was previously
controlled by Daesh. Many Daesh commanders and soldiers were killed in
these joint operations and their key infrastructure capabilities and
logistical nodes were destroyed, he added.
“Daesh
fighters are retreating south into the mountains of southern Nangarhar.
We will continue to stay after Daesh until they are defeated here in
Afghanistan,” Gen Nicholson said.
He explained that this
“critical fight” was part of a larger global strategy against the IS
and coincided with ongoing operations in Iraq and Syria. He said there
were an estimated 3,000 IS fighters in Afghanistan in January, many of
them members of other terrorist groups that changed allegiance.
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