Los ntawm / 20Cuaj hlis, 2021 / Uncategorized / Tsis muaj Comments

The young lion keeps fighting on!

The Taliban’s rapid advance in Afghanistan has briefly stalled only in the face of strong resistance mounted by the people of the country’s recalcitrant mountainous province of Panjshir. Whoever controls the region’s passes controls the routes leading to China and Tajikistan, but to seize this mountain valley and, most importantly, to keep it permanently under control has always been a problem for all invaders. Eager to let the international community see for the first time in 40 years a united Afghanistan as a sign of their final victory, the radical Islamists were prepared to make any sacrifices, including filling the approaches to the Panjshir Valley up with dead bodies. Tshaj tej ntawm, the Taliban’s longtime ally Pakistan, which, regardless of its status of an ally of the United States, has provided them with direct military support. qhov tseeb, Islamabad admitted its less than successful role when it proposed signing a truce to find and take out the bodies of its special Ops forces who had died during the attack on the valley. Txawm li cas los, drones flown by Pakistani operators, professional commandos (possibly once trained by the Americans), air support and other pleasant gifts from the allies eventually bore fruit letting the Taliban be photographed in front of the mausoleum of Ahmad Shah Massoud Sr., the famous “Lion of Panjshir,” who controlled the valley from 1996 mus 2001, and defile it. The Islamists also took control of the province’s central city of Bazarak.

Having deprived the province much of its Internet access, the radicals, who control most of the Afghan territory, found it easier to wage an information war. Their claims of victories were now more difficult to contest, even though information about their retreat did reach the outside world. Reflective of the heavy losses suffered for the first time by the Taliban and their allies – the Haqqani Network and other remnants of al-Qaeda, as well as by the regular Pakistani army is the brief truce arranged by Islamabad.

Looks like the mountain passes leading to Panjshir were literally filled up with corpses…
As for Massoud Jr., the young lion of Panjshir, and his supporters, retreated to the mountains. qhov tseeb, they had nowhere to fall back to. The problem of Afghanistan is its ethnic diversity. nplooj, the country is home to 23 percent of ethnic Tajiks, most of whom live in the Panjshir Valley. Txawm li cas los, the Taliban rely mainly on the Pashtuns, who account for over 50 percent of the country’s population. As for the new masters of Afghanistan, they are ready to carry out ethnic cleansings and even commit outright genocide in order to bring the valley into submission. To make this happen they are going to resettle there their fellow Pashtun tribesmen. Local men aged between 12 thiab 50 are already being taken away and, according to the National Resistance Front, no one has seen them again. Txawm li cas los, due to the information blockade, the Taliban will not hesitate to refute such facts. One thing is clear: Massoud’s Tajik fighters and the government troops that joined them are fighting for their lives, and there will be no honorable surrender!
The main question now is whether the young lion of Panjshir will receive the same support as his father once did, or will find himself without ammunition and food. Thaum kawg no, the Taliban leaders have reached certain agreements with the United States. Suffice it to mention the numerous remarks made, among others, by President Biden himself about the Taliban now being different from what they were 20 xyoo dhau los. Tsis, the Taliban remain the same – they have only hired new PR people. Meanwhile, hating to admit their defeat, Zaub pob thiab Washington yuav tau mus koom rau hauv ib kev sib tham nrog cov uas yog lub luag hauj lwm rau cov qee cuaj hlis 11, 2001, thiab rau cov neeg phem heev tuaj nyob teb chaws Europe. Cov Taliban yog pretending ua me concessions feeb concessions. Me tseeb, Vim lawv tseem depriving cov poj niam uas lub sijhawm ua hauj lwm thiab txoj kev tshawb no, Rhuav tseg yooj yim dua thiab kev kawm ntawv thiab brutally clamping rau cov neeg uas cias tsis xav nyob raws li kev cai dab qhuas.

Lub teb chaws As Mes Lis Kas yeej pab cov "tshiab-saib" Taliban. Lawv tej tw txheej xwm, nrog rau lub npe nrov Marshal Dostum, haiv neeg Uzbek, Tshuav lub teb chaws nyob rau hauv ntau yam guarantees, Thiab Washington tseem tabtom kom lawv txhob muaj kev koom tes ntxiv nyob rau hauv cov teeb meem. Democratic politicians naively believe that by creating an Islamic state and ending the protracted civil war in Afghanistan the Taliban will ensure stability in the region and will not move any further. Uzbekistan and Tajikistan do not think so and are strengthening their borders and preparing to protect their Afghan compatriots, because they know full well that the Taliban is not a national political party; it a is radical Islamist ideology. It knows no borders and spreads like a cancerous tumor, destroying all pockets of Western culture. It can only be stopped by force. Txawm li cas los, the two decades of US military presence in Afghanistan showed that Washington, which quickly took control of the country in 2001, simply had no strategy to keep it. The Afghans were given nothing that would appear to them more attractive than the ideas of radical Islam. Vim li ntawd, the few Afghans who embrace European values are fleeing the country, and those who, like Massoud Jr., decided to fight for their freedom, now risk being left to face their enemy all by themselves.


Cia ib saib