24 Apr 2024
Monday 14 December 2015 - 12:19
Story Code : 192344

Daesh gaining ground in Afghanistan: Who benefits from extrimist advance?

The Western media report that Daesh (ISIL) is beefing up its military presence in Afghanistan in order to establish the 'province of Khorasan of the ISIS' with the prospect of grabbing of Pakistan and certain areas of Iran, India and China, Martin Berger notes, posing the question who benefits from the extrimist advance.

Western media outlets are banging the drums overDaesh's growing influence inAfghanistan; they insist that Daesh has overshadowed the Taliban and even seized swathes ofeastern Afghanistan.

Western experts suggest that the infamous jihadi group is intending tocreate an extrimist realm inAfghanistan and spread its influence overneighboring countries. They insist that the root ofall evil is the departure ofUS and British troops fromAfghanistan.
"The West is using such reports topresent the situation inAfghanistan inthe grimmest colors one could imagine topersuade the general public tosupport the expansion ofthe US military presence inthe country. We are being told that Washington, which is allegedly the ardent fighter ofISIL [Daesh], won't be able todo anything once the US military forces leave the country. Western media sources argue that Afghan troops are not strong enough, so should the US get throughthe door, we are going towitness a sharp aggravation ofthe internal political situation," Czech-based freelance journalist and analyst Martin Berger emphasizes inhis article forNew Eastern Outlook.

The analyst recalls that in2015 Daesh spokesman Abu Muhammad Al Adnani released a video message declaring the creation ofthe ISIS's province ofKhorasan inAfghanistan. He specified that Daesh is planning toseize Pakistan and certain areas ofIndia, Iran and China.

Some experts suggest that the Taliban would be ousted fromthe region and replaced bymore radical Daesh group. In early November 2015 Jordan-based Albawaba media outlet reported offierce clashes betweenTaliban and Daesh fighters inthe southern Zabul province ofAfghanistan.

According toMartin Berger the situation is far more complicated.
"Experts argue that the Taliban project, which essentially is nothing more thanWashington's brainchild, just likeal-Qaeda, has outlived its days and will be brought down. It will be replaced bya new project the so-called ISIS [Daesh/ISIL], that is a US creation too. Taliban's ideology is pretty close tothe one pursued byISIL [Daesh], and those two groups have similar goals and methods they would use toachieve them," the journalist points out.
Commenting onthe possible confrontation betweenthe two extrimist entities, Berger calls attention tothe fact that the groups have close ties.

"It's not a coincidence that Afghan experts are calling the Taliban and ISIL [Daesh] 'two sides ofthe same coin'," he notes.

The journalist points outthat notorious Daesh leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi received training inthe Mujahedeen camps inAfghanistan back inthe 1980s.

"It's also noteworthy that Osama bin Laden, Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, and al-Baghdadi himself maintained close, friendly relations withthe leaders ofthe Mujahedeen, and worked closely withthem," Berger stresses.

Citing the Afghani media reports, the journalist reveals that atone time Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi was running a big Taliban training camp located nearthe town ofIslam Qala inthe western Herat province ofAfghanistan, onthe border withIran.
"Under these conditions, instead ofsaying that ISIL [Daesh] is expanding its influence inAfghanistan, asthe Western media tries toconvince us, we can speak aboutthe United States using its creation todestabilize Afghanistan once again," Berger suggests, adding that Daesh inAfghanistan would pose a serious threat toRussia and China, Washington's geopolitical competitors.


By Sputnik
https://theiranproject.com/vdcc0iqs02bqo18.-ya2.html
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