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A Wave of Afghan Surrenders to the Taliban Picks Up Speed

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By David Zucchino and Najim Rahim

May 27, 2021Updated 1:33 p.m. ET

Source: https://www.nytimes.com/2021/05/27/world/asia/afghan-surrender-taliban.html

MEHTARLAM, Afghanistan — Ammunition was depleted inside the bedraggled outposts in Laghman Province. Food was scarce. Some police officers hadn’t been paid in five months.
Then, just as American troops began leaving the country in early May, Taliban fighters besieged seven rural Afghan military outposts across the wheat fields and onion patches of the province, in eastern Afghanistan.
The insurgents enlisted village elders to visit the outposts bearing a message: Surrender or die.
By mid-month, security forces had surrendered all seven outposts after extended negotiations, according to village elders. At least 120 soldiers and police were given safe passage to the government-held provincial center in return for handing over weapons and equipment.
“We told them, ‘Look, your situation is bad — reinforcements aren’t coming,’” said Nabi Sarwar Khadim, 53, one of several elders who negotiated the surrenders.



Since May 1, at least 26 outposts and bases in just four provinces — Laghman, Baghlan, Wardak and Ghazni — have surrendered after such negotiations, according to village elders and government officials. With morale diving as American troops leave, and the Taliban seizing on each surrender as a propaganda victory, each collapse feeds the next in the Afghan countryside.
U.S. Speeds Withdrawal
All troops are now expected to be out of Afghanistan in July.
Among the negotiated surrenders were four district centers, which house local governors, police and intelligence chiefs — effectively handing the government facilities to Taliban control and scattering the officials there, at least temporarily.


A handwritten note, signed by Taliban and Afghan government officials, outlining a cease-fire in Mehtarlam.

A handwritten note, signed by Taliban and Afghan government officials, outlining a cease-fire in Mehtarlam.Credit...Jim Huylebroek for The New York Times
The Taliban have negotiated Afghan troop surrenders in the past, but never at the scale and pace of the base collapses this month in the four provinces extending east, north and west of Kabul. The tactic has removed hundreds of government forces from the battlefield, secured strategic territory and reaped weapons, ammunition and vehicles for the Taliban — often without firing a shot.
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The base collapses are one measure of the rapidly deteriorating government war effort as one outpost after another falls, sometimes after battles, but often after wholesale surrenders.
The surrenders are part of a broader Taliban playbook of seizing and holding territory as security force morale plummets with the exit of international troops. Buyoffs of local police and militia. Local cease-fires that allow the Taliban to consolidate gains. A sustained military offensive despite pleas for peace talks and a nationwide cease-fire.
“The government is not able to save the security forces,” said Mohammed Jalal, a village elder in Baghlan Province. “If they fight, they will be killed, so they have to surrender.”
The surrenders are the work of Taliban Invitation and Guidance Committees, which intervene after insurgents cut off roads and supplies to surrounded outposts. Committee leaders or Taliban military leaders phone base commanders — and sometimes their families — and offer to spare troops’ lives if they surrender their outposts, weapons and ammunition.



Nabi Sarwar Khadim, one of the elders who negotiated the surrenders in Mehtarlam.

Nabi Sarwar Khadim, one of the elders who negotiated the surrenders in Mehtarlam.Credit...Jim Huylebroek for The New York Times
In several cases, the committees have given surrendering troops money — typically around $130 — and civilian clothes and sent them home unharmed. But first they videotape the men as they promise not to rejoin the security forces. They log their phone numbers and the names of family members — and vow to kill the men if they rejoin the military.
“The Taliban commander and the Invitation and Guidance Committee called me more than 10 times and asked me to surrender,” said Maj. Imam Shah Zafari, 34, a district police chief in Wardak Province who surrendered his command center and weapons on May 11 after negotiations mediated by local elders.
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After the Taliban provided a car ride home to Kabul, he said, a committee member phoned to assure him that the government would not imprison him for surrendering. “He said, ‘We have so much power in the government and we can release you,’” Major Zafari said.
The Taliban committees take advantage of a defining characteristic of Afghan wars: Fighters and commanders regularly switch sides, cut deals, negotiate surrenders and cultivate village elders for influence with local residents.
The current conflict is really dozens of local wars. These are intimate struggles, where brothers and cousins battle one another and commanders on each side cajole, threaten and negotiate by cellphone.
“A Taliban commander calls me all the time, trying to destroy my morale, so that I’ll surrender,” said Wahidullah Zindani, 36, a bearded, sunburned police commander who has rejected Taliban demands to surrender his nine-man, bullet-pocked outpost in Laghman Province.


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Commander Wahidullah Zindani, center, and Muhammad Agha Bambard, right, at their outpost.Credit...Jim Huylebroek for The New York Times
The negotiated surrenders are part of a broader offensive in which the Taliban have surrounded at least five provincial capitals this spring, according to a Pentagon inspector general report released May 18. The offensive has intensified since the American withdrawal began May 1. The Taliban have used their control of several major highways to cut off bases and garrisons, leaving them vulnerable.
The surrenders have a profound psychological effect.
“They call and say the Taliban are powerful enough to defeat the U.S. and they can easily take Laghman Province, so you should remember this before we kill you,” Rahmatullah Yarmal, Laghman’s 29-year-old governor, said of the Taliban committees during an interview inside his barricaded compound in Mehtarlam, the provincial capital.

It’s an effective propaganda tactic, the governor conceded — so effective that some outpost commanders now refuse to speak to elders or Taliban negotiators. He said many elders were not neutral peacemakers, but handpicked Taliban supporters.
Mr. Yarmal said 60 police officers who surrendered and took refuge in his government center are now primed to fight to retake the seven lost outposts. “I think we’ll have them back in a month,” he said.


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Rahmatullah Yarmal, governor of Laghman Province, looking at the destroyed armored Land Cruiser that he was riding in when he was attacked by a suicide car bomber last October.Credit...Jim Huylebroek for The New York Times
But just hours after the governor spoke on May 19, a nearby district center, Dawlat Shah, surrendered without any resistance after negotiations. By the next morning, five more outposts had surrendered the same way in the district of Alishing, also in Laghman, district officials said.
Those Taliban victories were facilitated, in part, by a 30-day cease-fire negotiated by elders on May 17 in the heavily contested district of Alingar, allowing the Taliban to shift resources to Alishing, where they forced the negotiated surrender of the five outposts just two days later. (On May 21, the Taliban violated the cease-fire with renewed attacks in Alingar, Mr. Khadim said.)
The series of base collapses represented the second wholesale surrender in a Laghman district in two weeks. On May 7, three outposts and a military base collapsed the same way without a fight, said Nasir Ahmad Himat, the Alingar district governor.
“The soldiers simply dropped their weapons, got in their vehicles and went to the district center or provincial capital,” said Faqirullah, a village elder who goes by one name.

As Taliban fighters advanced on the provincial capital Sunday, Governor Yarmal announced that 110 security force members who had surrendered, and several commanders who were supposed to supervise them, had been detained for negligence.
Also Sunday, the Afghan military announced that troop reinforcements and the military chief of staff had rushed to Laghman to try to repel the Taliban assault.
In Ghazni Province, Hasan Reza Yousofi, a provincial councilman, said he begged officials to send reinforcements to an outpost and a military base that ultimately fell to the Taliban this month. He played a recorded phone call from a police officer, Abdul Ahmad, who said his ammunition was gone and his men were drinking rainwater because the base water tower had been destroyed by a rocket.


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“The Taliban come here at night and shoot at us,” said Najibullah, a policeman at the outpost in Mehtarlam. “I can’t shoot back. My rifle magazine only has a few bullets. I brought a slingshot and a rock just in case. One of my friends got hit when a mortar landed where we sleep. His blood is still on the wall.” Credit...Jim Huylebroek for The New York Times
“We have been sold out — we make calls for reinforcements, but officials don’t help,” the recorded voice said. “The Taliban sent us tribal elders who said, ‘Surrender, you are sold out, no one will help you.’”
Mr. Yousofi said he did not know whether Mr. Ahmad survived after his outpost fell.
Negotiations have proven remarkably fruitful for the Taliban in Baghlan Province, where at least 100 soldiers surrendered, and in Wardak Province, where about 130 security force members surrendered following negotiations, officials said.
In Laghman Province, negotiations leading to the surrender of the seven outposts stretched over 10 days. Mr. Khadim, the village elder, said different elders negotiated with commanders of each outpost.

“We guaranteed they would not be killed,” he said. “There was nothing written, just our word.”
A few miles away, Commander Zindani refused to surrender his forlorn outpost near the front line. He said officers who had negotiated surrenders at three nearby outposts had betrayed their country.
One of his men, Muhammad Agha Bambard, said he would fight to avenge the deaths of two brothers he said were killed by the Taliban. He would never surrender, he said.
Commander Zindani’s nine men were down to a machine gun, a rocket-propelled grenade launcher and one AK-47 rifle each inside a ramshackle outpost with bloodstained walls. But he said he intended to fight on — as he told the Taliban commander who regularly phoned to demand his surrender.
“I told him, ‘I’m a soldier of my country,’” the commander said. “I am not here to surrender.”
Four days later, on Sunday, the outpost was overrun during a firefight with the Taliban, a member of the provincial council said. One police officer was shot dead and Commander Zindani and his outgunned men were taken prisoner.
A few hours later, the Taliban released a video showing Mr. Bambard being questioned by a Taliban commander as he lay on a mattress, his face and neck bandaged. In a mocking tone, the commander asked why Mr. Bambard had posted on his Facebook page that he would not let the enemy capture his outpost while he was alive.
The wounded officer responded, “This is Afghanistan.”
 
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In a mocking tone, the commander asked why Mr. Bambard had posted on his Facebook page that he would not let the enemy capture his outpost while he was alive.
The wounded officer responded, This is Afghanistan.


---- No shit, Lol.
 
. . . .
Two decades of nation-building .... one side had the watches, the other time and in the end, time wins.
It's time for the Indians to watch the watch.

What a treacherous lot these Afghans are, they have no loyalty to any side and jump from one side to another. No wonder the US got fed up and left them to implode into another round of civil war.
 
. .
A rapid US withdrawal will lead to a rapid Northern alliance collapse, there will be pocket of resistance here and there and the Northern Alliance will retreat to the North no doubt to continue their guerilla operations in the bosom of Hindu-Khush mountains. Pakistan should enforce a no fly zone to ensure no helis or planes can escape from Kabul to help ensure a long lasting peace.

It would be interesting to see if India will rush troops to prop up the tottering Northern alliance as this is NA's last hope to prevent a decisive defeat. Ashraf Ghani's must be contemplating his future and his escape route. He must have memories of what happened to President Najibullah , the torture and then public hanging after the fall of Kabul, a President who was unceremoniously strung up from a concrete traffic-control post at the gates of the presidential palace as thousands watched.

The Taliban are well practiced in the capture of Kabul as they have done it twice before. They will capture the Presidential Palace and the Ministries of Defense, Security and Foreign Affairs buildings and position their soldiers at key points. Taliban soldiers will search Kabul for the last remnants of the NA loyalists flushing them out for summary execution. The Afghan people will be resigned to forced jubilation and those who resist will be punished. Switching sides and loyalties has no price for them, they have endured so much , almost half century of civil wars and invasions.
 
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In a mocking tone, the commander asked why Mr. Bambard had posted on his Facebook page that he would not let the enemy capture his outpost while he was alive.
The wounded officer responded, This is Afghanistan.


---- No shit, Lol.
While Pajeet kumars of india still hoping ANA can survive without NATO help because they trained by indian amry :lol:
 
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While Pajeet kumars of india still hoping ANA can survive without NATO help because they trained by indian amry :lol:

We've seen how the Arab Air Forces did while they were trained by Indians, Lol.
This'll be a massacre. 😂
No shit, Lol, you mean sh!t hole?

Lol. I'll give it 1 year brother. This mayor of Kabul will run into the mountains and hopefully, Pakistan doesn't allow him to enter the country, need to set an example.
 
. .
A rapid US withdrawal will lead to a rapid Northern alliance collapse, there will be pocket of resistance here and there and the Northern Alliance will retreat to the North no doubt to continue their guerilla operations in the bosom of Hindu-Khush mountains. Pakistan should enforce a no fly zone to ensure no helis or planes can escape from Kabul to help ensure a long lasting peace.

It would be interesting to see if India will rush troops to prop up the tottering Northern alliance as this is NA's last hope to prevent a decisive defeat. Ashraf Ghani's must be contemplating his future and his escape route. He must have memories of what happened to President Najibullah , the torture and then public hanging after the fall of Kabul, a President who was unceremoniously strung up from a concrete traffic-control post at the gates of the presidential palace as thousands watched.

The Taliban are well practiced in the capture of Kabul as they have done it twice before. They will capture the Presidential Palace and the Ministries of Defense, Security and Foreign Affairs buildings and position their soldiers at key points. Taliban soldiers will search Kabul for the last remnants of the NA loyalists flushing them out for summary execution. The Afghan people will be resigned to forced jubilation and those who resist will be punished. Switching sides and loyalties has no price for them, they have endured so much , almost half century of civil wars and invasions.

isnt Northern Alliance supported by Turkey ? I have seen Abdul Rashid dostum pics with Turkey FM. Is Northern Alliance and Taliban ally ? if not then not good for Pak Turk relation.
When Indian troops are laaaaanding in Afghanistan ...

Jai shankar is currently in the states to meet Blinken Friday . let see. Its going to be awesome to see indian soldiers in aghanistan . :cheesy:
 
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To the Pakistanis cheering this, the taliban can and will turn their guns against Pakistan, once this is all over. Why do you think the afghan-taliban continue to support the ttp?
 
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