Taliban militants are gathering across Afghanistan in preparation for a possible takeover of the country by force as U.S. and NATO troops exit over the next few months, the United Nations has warned.
The insurgents continue to be тАЬclosely alignedтАЭ with al-Qaida and are massing тАЬforces around key provincial capitals and district centers, allowing them to remain poised to launch attacks,тАЭ the report released Wednesday said.
тАЬThe TalibanтАЩs intent appears to be to continue to strengthen its military position as leverage. It believes that it can achieve all of its objectives by negotiation, or if necessary, by force.тАЭ
As part of a peace deal with the U.S., the Taliban had promised to cut ties with al-Qaida and prevent any terror groups from using Afghan soil as a safe haven.
The groupтАЩs play for power could trigger a civil war in the already violence-wracked country тАФ an outcome Afghan President Ashraf Ghani has repeatedly voiced concerns over as the U.S. prepared its troop withdrawal, due to be completed by Sept. 11.
WashingtonтАЩs push for a peaceful settlement between the warring groups has so far been futile. ThereтАЩs been no breakthrough since talks began in September last year in Doha, Qatar, where the militant group has a political office.
The Taliban, which controls or contests 50% to 70% of Afghan territory, has increased attacks across the country, trying to use violence to push Ghani to accept its terms. At least two top leaders of the group are тАЬreported by member states to oppose peace talks and favor a military solution,тАЭ the report said.
Last year was the nationтАЩs most violent ever recorded by the U.N., exceeding 25,000 incidents, a 10% increase from 2019, the report said. Security incidents have risen more than 60% in the first quarter of 2021, compared to the same period last year. Targeted killings of government officials, human rights activists, journalists, women and religious leaders have also spiked.
The TalibanтАЩs recruitment has remained steady, with its numbers ranging from 58,000 to 100,000 members, the U.N. said. Afghan forces have continued to decline with some 308,000 personnel now, well below a target of 352,000.
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