IS(K), an affiliate of
ISIS, was formed in early 2015 when ISIS was at its heyday controlling large
areas of Iraq and Syria. It was set up by
disaffected ex-members of the Pakistani and Afghan Taliban, who
pledged their allegiance to the self-proclaimed caliph, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi. A 2015 video caught the group's leader at the
time, Hafiz Saeed Khan, and other top commanders, swearing their loyalty to
Baghdadi, and declaring themselves administrators of a new ISIS territory in
Afghanistan. Khan was killed in
2016 during a US drone attack. Baghdadi died in 2019 after he set off an
explosive vest to avoid being captured by US forces.
Currently estimated to number some 4,000 fighters, including jihadist prisoners released when the Taliban captured Kabul on 15 August, IS(K) is bitterly opposed to the Taliban on the most intractable of all grounds – religion. It believes the Taliban does not subscribe to the central purpose of the Islamic creed – to spread the faith throughout the world. IS(K) is at one with the central aim and intention of its parent body, ISIS – to create a worldwide Islamic caliphate of which Afghanistan would be a part. IS(K) is a segment of the global IS network that, in pursuit of its fundamental objective, seeks to carry out attacks on Western and international targets wherever it can reach them. The Taliban has no such ambition. Its objective is to establish an emirate in Afghanistan.
This clash of basic
motivation also explains IS(K)’s bitter opposition to the Taliban sitting down
with US representatives in a series of peace negotiations, starting in February
2020. It accuses the Taliban of abandoning
jihad and the battlefield in favor of cozy conversations in "posh
hotels" in Qatar’s capital, Doha. Reports
suggest that, as the negotiations proceeded, a number of Taliban adherents opposed
to the talks switched over to the more extremist IS(K). One report has the IS(K),
increasingly incensed at the discussions, declaring that killing Taliban
members is a higher religious duty than targeting Americans.
IS(K) is a formidable
enemy. Unrelentingly savage, it has
staged dozens of attacks over the past few years, killing scores of Afghans. It has been accused of attacking a girls’
school, a hospital, a university, and even a maternity ward where the militants
reportedly shot dead pregnant women and nurses.
Nothing is simple in Afghanistan. Bitter enemies though they are,
IS(K) and the Taliban have recently been linked operationally. The connection exists through a third body,
the Haqqani network, which has strong ties with both. One expert on Afghanistan’s militant bodies
says that "several major attacks between 2019 and 2021 involved
collaboration between IS(K), the Taliban's Haqqani network and other terror
groups based in Pakistan."
The Haqqani network is a
jihad group incorporated in Pakistan.
The US has offered rewards of millions of dollars for the capture of two
of its members, Sirajuddin Haqqani and Khalil Haqqani. Both are senior members of the Taliban. Even so, the Biden administration has sought
to distinguish between the Taliban and the network. State Department spokesperson Ned Price has
called them separate entities.
“If this is the
understanding of the State Department,” said the Hindustani Times on
August 28, “then the war against terrorism globally is doomed.”
The newspaper considered the distinction false. “Everyone knows,” it wrote, “that Mullah Omar, the one-eyed founder of the Taliban, was radicalised in Darul Uloom Haqqania…from which the Haqqani network derives its name.” It believes the US tried to separate the two bodies in the public’s mind in order to justify liaising with the Taliban, while painting the Haqqani as the real terrorists.
However close the Taliban may be to the Haqqani network, and
whatever the connection between the network and IS(K), there is now no
community of interest between the Taliban and the IS(K). The two are at daggers drawn. Although IS(K) is vastly outnumbered at
present, it is said to be counting on a rapid expansion as foreign fighters already
in Afghanistan vie to join its ranks. In
a June report, the UN estimated that there are between 8,000 and
10,000 fighters in the country, emanating from Syria, Iraq and other conflict
zones. Many are still susceptible to the
enticing ISIS message of eventual world domination.
The Taliban’s faults are
manifold and egregious, but they have evinced no desire to dominate the
world. Their aim is to dominate their
native Afghanistan, and that objective they are on the verge of achieving. Only a succession of ruthless terrorist
attacks or savage guerilla warfare could rob the Taliban of complete victory
and plunge the country into a state of constant conflict. Is this what the Taliban face in the coming
months from their worst enemy?
https://www.eurasiareview.com/03092021-isk-the-talibans-worst-enemy-oped/
https://jewishbusinessnews.com/2021/09/03/isk-the-talibans-worst-enemy/
Published in the MPC Journal
https://mpc-journal.org/isk-the-talibans-worst-enemy/
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