أخبار المركز
  • أحمد عليبة يكتب: (هاجس الموصل: لماذا يخشى العراق من التصعيد الحالي في سوريا؟)
  • محمود قاسم يكتب: (الاستدارة السريعة: ملامح المشهد القادم من التحولات السياسية الدرامية في كوريا الجنوبية)
  • السيد صدقي عابدين يكتب: (الصدامات المقبلة: مستقبل العلاقة بين السلطتين التنفيذية والتشريعية في كوريا الجنوبية)
  • د. أمل عبدالله الهدابي تكتب: (اليوم الوطني الـ53 للإمارات.. الانطلاق للمستقبل بقوة الاتحاد)
  • معالي نبيل فهمي يكتب: (التحرك العربي ضد الفوضى في المنطقة.. ما العمل؟)

Is Taliban Shifting to New Terrorist Tactics?

30 يوليو، 2017


Instability in Afghanistan has increased and escalated in the recent period due to the rise of terrorist attacks, especially by the Taliban and ISIS against Afghan government forces. As a result, the Afghan government launched and continues to carry out counter-strikes against terrorists' positions and elements. Overall, the escalation has caused an increasing civilian casualties with 1662 killed and 3581 others injured during the first half of  this year, according to a recent report released by the United Nations on July 17, 2017.


The Taliban in particular appears to be seeking to ratchet up its terror attacks in the coming period, a development that was evidenced in its claim of responsibility for a July 24 suicide attack at the western part of Kabul that killed and injured 70 people. Moreover, the movement ensures to task militants belonging to the families of its commanders with such attacks.

This shows that the Taliban  does not only aim to respond to recent attacks- in which around 70 of its fighters were killed in mid July in the provinces of Nangarhar, Paktia and Badghis- but also to consolidate its internal cohesion after the recent phenomenon of defections threatened to weaken and divide the movement into small terrorist groups.


Significant Shifts
Within this context, a recent suicide attack was carried out by Abdur Rahman, also known as Hafiz Khalid, who is the son of Taliban leader Mullah Haibatullah Akhundzada, in province of Helmand in southern Afghanistan on July 20 targeting an Afghan military base in the town of Gereshk, north of the provincial capital Lashkar Gah. The attack represents a significant shift in the tactics of terrorist organizations because it was the first time a son of an existing leader of such an organization carried out a suicide attack. It is especially significant because, according to several views, that sons of the leaders take up only organizational and administrative responsibilities.

Some organizations even ensure to keep the families of its militants away from the scene of operations and battlefields. Several reports noted that confrontations broke out between elements of terror groups operating in Syria when they attempted to secure a safe exit from conflict zones such as Aleppo for their families.


This, perhaps, is one of the reasons why a number of al-Qaida commanders fled to Iran after the US launched a war on Afghanistan in 2001, despite sectarian/religious disagreements with Iran. Their aim was to protect their families. However, Iran later sought to use the families as leverage against the organization itself to prevent it from attacking Iranian interests inside and outside Iran, and even the interests of the home countries of its elements.

Hence, it can possibly be argued that a Taliban leader allowing his son to carry out a suicide attack indicates that the movement seeks to carry out changes in its tactics to escalate attacks against the Afghan government forces and perhaps other parties making diligent efforts to reduce its influence in some provinces. 


Potential Consequences
The increasing severity of attacks carried out by the Taliban, including the most recent one by Akhundzada, came at a critical timing for the movement. On the one hand, the armed confrontations with the US-backed government forces are increasing. On the other, the Taliban’s competition with its rival ISIS is heating up, especially after the latter could recently expand into new areas and seize control of more territory from its rival. For instance, ISIS captured the Tora Bora cave complex in the Pachir Aw Agam District of Nangarhar in mid June 2017 before the Afghan government forces expelled its militants inflicting massive casualties on the group. 

The significant escalation of Taliban’s terrorist attacks, and the expected shifts in its extremist approaches, can possibly impose potential consequences of which the following stand out:
 
1- Bolstering Leadership’s Position. 
Several views indicate that the Taliban leader Mullah Haibatullah Akhundzada,  has escalated the movement’s attacks and allowed his son to carry out a recent high-profile one, to bolster his position within the movement. His effort is driven in particular by a severe competition with some prominent leaders that continue to accuse him of opening communication channels with foreign parties which, in their view, pose threats to the movement itself.

2- Continued Approach. The recent attack might push other Taliban elements belonging to the families of key leaders to adopt the same approach; carrying out suicide attacks against the government forces in the coming period. This is driven in particular by the massive losses inflicted recently on the movement in strikes conducted by the government forces and US troops. Figures released by the United States Air Forces Central Command on July 18 show that the US-led international coalition had escalated its air campaign against the Taliban and ISIS-Khorasan forces dropping or expending  1,634 munitions, such as missiles and bombs, in Afghanistan in 2017, three times the amount it dropped there in 2016.

3- Curbing Defections. Since the days of its former leader Mullah Akhtar Mohammad Mansour, the Taliban has been suffering internal divisions that led to a mass defection of its elements to ISIS. The defectors justified their shift by a decline in the movement’s activity. This means that the Taliban’s escalation of attacks may contribute towards curbing internal defections in the coming period. 

 

However, overall, this development does not negate the fact that the Taliban continues to face no easy challenges inside Afghanistan. This is primarily due to two main factors. The first one is the Unites State’s increasing interest in the global war on terrorism in Afghanistan and other states. The second factor is the the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) plans to increase their role in this war. During the military alliance’s recent summit in May 2017 in Brussels, Belgium, NATO allies involved in the alliance’s Resolute Support Mission (RSM) agreed to send more troops to Afghanistan in the coming period.