Afghanistan Again Peeping Into The Terrible Future

     After the return of the NATO forces from Afghanistan will be dominated by the Taliban. How they drive Afghanistan after the withdrawal of the NATO force? Really they committed to peace and prosperity. 
          

Twenty years later, the NATO army, led primarily by the United States, is withdrawing from Afghanistan on September 11th. After Donald Trump’s Republican government, Democratic Joe Biden also did not change this policy on Afghanistan. Although he extends the withdrawal date from May to September, the Taliban is not looking satisfied with the additional time of withdrawal. Perhaps Biden wants to give a marking a symbol between the army withdrawal date and the terrorist attack of 11th September 2001 in the name of managing security after the withdrawal of NATO forces. Australia, one of NATO's non-member supporters, will also close its embassy in Kabul in May. Other NATO allies have been feeling the burden of the unending problem of Afghanistan.

Two decades ago, in 2001, America sent the NATO Army to Afghanistan to overthrow the Taliban, an Islamic fundamentalist force backed by the power in Kabul, and to destroy Osama bin Laden's Al Qaida network, which was behind the attack on the Twin Towers in New York. Whether or not the months-long Afghan Peace Talks in Doha achieved the so-called Peace goal? The actual answer is still unknown.

America is in the process of leaving and is looking for an exit airbase in Pakistan where he can keep a force to monitor the region's strategic geopolitical importance. It seems that he likes to stay in this region at any cost to protect his interests. According to the sources, Islamabad denied the American proposal. It shows the necessity of American interest to be in the region. The anti-American triangle of Moscow, Beijing and Tehran is active in the region and is a risk for Washington.

The Taliban is a dogmatic Islamist power that forcefully captured Kabul and 90 per cent of the land of the country in 1996 against the Northern Alliance and declared it an Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan. Its autocratic rule ran until 2001. The people of Afghanistan have already faced the Islamic autocratic rule of the Taliban. People are still feeling that panic chapter of the past. They were breathing in some fresh air when the NATO Army ejected Pakistan and Al-Qaida backed Pashtun dominated Taliban from Kabul in 2001, but the recently changing atmosphere is shocking people for the near future. They are asking if the black days of the Taliban regime are really coming again. The Taliban still not practically committed to the democratic system during the Doha talks. America wants a commitment not to engage in violence, to accept a democratic political system, and to avoid any relationship with Taliban terrorist outfits, but its continued involvement in violence, barring a ceasefire, is questionable. That is why the hesitation of people is not baseless.

 The intention of the Taliban is suspicious because the violence continued during the Doha talks and after. Lethal violence is going after the commitment of a ceasefire in the country. The multilateral Istanbul talks also boycotted by the Taliban. Finally, America wants to leave Afghanistan's problems behind it as soon as possible, or it will be forced to withdraw from the frontlines of the upcoming battle in the country--which is still a mystery. America is loath to stand on the frontline in Afghanistan but wants to be a referee henceforth.

     

       

 

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