Afghan Taliban reject pressure from US and other world powers: swearing in on September 11

Afghan Taliban reject pressure from US and other world powers: swearing in on September 11

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Afghan Taliban reject pressure from US and other world powers: swearing in on September 11
Afghan Taliban reject pressure from US and other world powers: swearing in on September 11

Want to tell the world that they had no hand in the 9/11 attacks and that Afghan territory was not used for it, so what was the justification for the US to impose war on the Afghans for 20 years? Answer on

KABUL - The Afghan Taliban has rejected pressure from the United States and other world powers, saying the interim government's swearing-in ceremony will take place on September 11, the day the United States celebrates the anniversary of the World Trade Center attacks.

Following the Taliban's announcement of the interim government's swearing-in ceremony on September 11, the United States directly and from several countries, including Pakistan, asked the Taliban to change the date of the swearing-in ceremony. If they want to show the world that they had no hand in the 9/11 attacks and that the land of Afghanistan was not used for it, then what was the justification for the US to impose war on the Afghans for 20 years?

 

It is also rumored in the international media that Russian diplomats will attend the inauguration ceremony of the new government of Afghanistan. Islamabad has not yet announced whether the Pakistani foreign minister or a senior government official will attend the event.

According to a Taliban spokesman, Mullah Mohammad Hassan Akhund will be the prime minister while Mullah Baradar and Mullah Abdul Salam Hanafi will be the deputy prime minister. Includes seven deputy ministers. The director of administration for the government, including the head of the army and the Afghan central bank, has also been appointed. All but three of the 34 posts are Pashtun-Afghan. The new Taliban government and cabinet includes 15 members from southern Afghanistan 10 are from the southeast, five from the east and three from the north of Afghanistan.

Prime Minister-designate Mullah Hassan Akhund has been a key member of the Taliban movement and a close associate of its founder, Mullah Mohammad Omar, which has earned him special respect in Taliban circles. He succeeded Rabbani as prime minister in early 2001, and was part of the Taliban's 10-member leadership council, which Mullah Omar opposed in May 2002 against the United States and its allies. Chosen to start, Mullah Hassan was also the head of the Taliban's top council, which is the Taliban's highest decision-making body and operates under the Taliban's supreme commander, Mullah Hebatullah Akhonzada. The Taliban have adopted an Iranian-style democratic model. The decision-making power will be vested in the Supreme Commander and the High Authority Council under him.

A key feature of the new cabinet is that it has elected two ministers from two key Taliban families, including Maulvi Yaqub Omari, son of Taliban founder Mullah Omar, as defense minister, and his half-brother, Mullah Abdul Manan Omari, as public welfare minister. Maulvi Yaqub has been the deputy head of the Taliban Military Commission since Sheikh Habibullah was elected Taliban chief in 2016 and is also known as the Taliban's shadow ministry of defense.

In addition to Mullah Omar's family, Sirajuddin Haqqani alias Khalifa, son of senior Taliban leader Maulvi Jalaluddin Haqqani, has been appointed interior minister and his brother Khalil Haqqani has been appointed refugee minister. Sirajuddin, like Mullah Yaqub, is the Taliban's deputy chief. Interestingly, both Mullah Siraj Haqqani and Khalil are on the US wanted list and have been awarded US دس 10 million and US انعام 5 million respectively.

Mullah Abdul Hai, a longtime aide to Mullah Omar, writes in his book on the Taliban movement about the Haqqani family that Jalaluddin Haqqani's sons established a strong Taliban battlefield in almost half of Afghanistan after 9/11, in which the family's children Many people, including women, were killed in US drone strikes, which made them very popular within the Taliban.

In addition, another key member of the Taliban movement, Dr. Amir Khan Mottaki, has been appointed Foreign Minister of the Taliban government. He was also the Taliban's Minister of Information and Culture in the 1980s and has been the head of the Taliban's post-9/11 commission for many years. The agency will operate in the style of a high-powered council under Iran's Ayatollah, which will be headed directly by Supreme Commander Mullah Habibullah Akhunzada.

The Taliban's occupation of the majority provinces and districts without a fight and the recognition of them by thousands of former Afghan government security forces are believed to be based on the same policy proposed by Muttaqi. Also included are four who spent several years in Guantanamo Bay, the notorious US prison in 2014, including Mullah Fazil Akhund, Mullah Abdul Haq Wasiq, Mullah Noorullah Noori, Mullah Khairkhwa and Maulvi Muhammad Nabi Umri. Included

The most interesting appointment in the Taliban government is the head of the army, for which Qari Fasihuddin, a key Tajik-born Taliban commander from Badakhshan Province, has been selected. Has been posted. It should be noted that Badakhshan was one of the two provinces that remained the stronghold of the Northern Alliance under Ahmad Shah Massoud in the 1990s and the Taliban did not fully capture it until the last years after 9/11. Fasihuddin and other Tajiks joined the Taliban, which gave the Taliban a foothold in the local population, which is why Qari Fasihuddin prepared a consignment of Uzbek and Tajik fighters for the Taliban in the north. Surprisingly, the north of Afghanistan became a stronghold of the Taliban.

It was Qari Fasihuddin who commanded the Taliban fighters in the north and under his leadership the Taliban conquered the northern provinces in Afghanistan, while it was thought that perhaps, as in the past, In the early months of this year, Qari Fasihuddin was appointed deputy head of the Taliban Military Commission for Northern Afghanistan under Mullah Yaqub.

In addition to Qari Fasihuddin, two other non-Pashtuns have been added to the government, including Deputy Prime Minister Maulvi Abdul Salam Hanafi and Economy Minister Qari Din Muhammad Hanif. The people have joined the government.

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