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29 September 2021

Afghan Resistance Mulls Formation of Government in Exile

Lynne O’Donnell

The leaders of Afghanistan’s armed resistance against the Taliban have left the country and are regrouping with former senior figures of the toppled Ghani administration with the aim of forming a government in exile.

Politicians including ministers and parliamentary deputies of the deposed government, as well as senior military figures, are in neighboring Tajikistan, seeking financial and military support to bolster a formal opposition to the extremists who took control of Afghanistan on Aug. 15, former officials living abroad said. Ahmad Massoud, son of a famed resistance leader, and former Afghan Vice President Amrullah Saleh, who both led a short-lived resistance in the Panjshir Valley northeast of Kabul, fled across the border in recent weeks after their efforts to hold out against the Taliban were crushed.

A former senior Afghan security official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the resistance comprises three broad categories: supporters of Saleh and Massoud’s National Resistance Front; former officers, including generals of the Afghan National Defense and Security Forces, as well as senior officials of the former defense and interior ministries; and former ministers and deputy ministers. Discussions are in the early stages, and the groups are yet to unite ideologically.

They represent Afghanistan’s various ethnic and religious identities—Sunni, Shiite, Pashtun, Tajik, Uzbek, and Hazara—sources close to the movement said. Some major players, including warlords and ethnic power brokers, are cooperating from outside Tajikistan, with some expected to relocate there soon. Former President Ashraf Ghani, whose sudden departure on Aug. 15 cleared the way for the Taliban to enter Kabul and declare victory, is not apparently part of the government-in-exile discussions. He is in the United Arab Emirates with a coterie of supporters, including former National Security Advisor Hamdullah Mohib.

The prospect of a government in exile raises concerns that Afghanistan could again be consumed by civil war. The lack of a state or wealthy individual sponsor for armed insurrection, however, makes it unlikely that the opposition, if it does coalesce, could back its aspirations with military might, at least for the foreseeable future. U.S. Sen. Lindsey Graham and Rep. Michael Waltz appear to be the only cheerleaders so far for the Massoud-Saleh team, and there is no indication the resistance has found a financial sponsor like former Rep. Charlie Wilson, who famously backed the mujahideen after the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in 1979.

But if a government in exile really does take shape, there’s still the prospect of a regional proxy battle akin to what happened in Libya, said the former security official. Qatar was the Taliban’s base during its negotiations with former U.S. President Donald Trump, when they secured an open path to take over the whole country. Qatar’s rival, the United Arab Emirates, now shelters Ghani. The two countries are at loggerheads in Libya, among other places.

If the resistance is now trying to regroup in Tajikistan, that’s probably because efforts to mount a last stand in the Panjshir were premature and built on unsteady foundations.

“It [the resistance in Panjshir] was a bad idea. They sacrificed the lives of Panjshiris,” said a source who worked closely with Saleh in government. “The first rule of war is choose a battle you can win.” The province—which held out against the Soviets and the Taliban under the leadership of Massoud’s father a generation ago—fell to the Taliban in early September, after phone and internet communications were cut and the valley surrounded. Since then, the Taliban have been ruthless in crushing opposition, detaining and in some cases killing people associated with the Panjshir, not just the resistance. Saleh’s brother Rohullah Azizi was tortured and executed on Sept. 9.

Advisors to the nascent movement have suggested Saleh and Massoud follow the playbook of the Taliban after their regime was overthrown by U.S. invasion in late 2001: regroup, rearm, seek support, and expand. The Taliban had a sanctuary in Pakistan, where they were sheltered, funded, and armed by the state intelligence service there, before igniting their insurgency three years later.

“This resistance was formed very fast, it didn’t seem to have a solid agenda, there were many fragmentations within the movement, and they seemed to speak the language of the old mujahideen,” which doesn’t resonate with younger followers, said Weeda Mehran, a conflict specialist at the University of Exeter.

“Going away gives them time to regroup, to think, to sort out how to challenge the Taliban, consider what other figures to bring on board, and develop into a broader anti-Taliban movement,” she said.

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