PoliticsNewsSecurity

Taliban Cannot Subdue Afghanistan Through Barrel of Gun: VP Saleh

Kabul (BNA) First Vice President of Islamic Republic of Afghanistan Amrullah Saleh told CBS News that Taliban cannot subdue Afghanistan through the barrel of a gun. First Vice President Saleh believes that was always self-evident. “Taliban are terrorists. Simple,” he told CBS News.

He said he didn’t trust the insurgents at all, and believes it was a mistake for the United States to negotiate with the Taliban in the first place.

President Joe Biden’s justification for going ahead with the withdrawal initiated by his predecessor was, in part, that the U.S. and its partners had “degraded the terrorist threat of al Qaeda” in Afghanistan. But VP Saleh said that, too, was misguided thinking.

“The whole idea of coming to Afghanistan was to teach a lesson to terrorists and their allies: Don’t do it again. Have we taught them that lesson? No,” he said.

Afghan forces have killed or captured dozens of al Qaeda fighters in the last few days alone, the vice president said.   “If we say the Taliban have separated themselves, decoupled themselves from terrorism, that is absolutely baseless,” he told D’Agata. “The Taliban operate shoulder-to-shoulder with al Qaeda today.”

VP Saleh has survived several assassination attempts, including one in which a suicide bomber and gunmen killed 20 people in an attack on his office. Just last fall he was wounded in a roadside bombing in Kabul that killed 10 people. His young son was in the car, but also escaped unharmed.

With the withdrawal of U.S. forces and their NATO allies, VP Saleh knows Afghanistan is facing a dangerous few month, and that if there’s any hope of peace, the Taliban need to stop waging war.

“The Taliban cannot subdue Afghanistan through the barrel of a gun,” he told CBS News. “They can kill people. They are killing people every day. But if they are waiting for a moment of surrender from the Afghan people, it won’t come.”

The vice president said he was grateful to America, for the lives lost in his country and the vast amount of money spent, but he said Afghanistan needs the U.S. “to remain engaged diplomatically, economically, and strategically.”

Show More

Related Articles

Back to top button