Joe’s dilemma after Kabul attacks: Strike ISIS-K or pull out troops by August 31 as planned

Joe’s nightmare scenario on whether to strike ISIS-K or still pull troops by August 31: Does Biden risk more American lives staying to hunt terrorists already behind 250 attacks on the US or leave citizens and allies helpless in Kabul?

President Biden is due to address the nation at 5pm after bloody day in KabulAt least 12 U.S. military personnel died in two suicide attacks at airportHe must decide whether to extend evacuation or speed up return of troopsAnd he faced calls for air strikes against ISIS-K terrorists believed responsibleThat leaves him facing the biggest decision of his presidency so far 

The attacks that killed at least 12 U.S. troops outside Kabul airport on Thursday left President Joe Biden facing the decision of his presidency: Extend his August deadline and risk more deaths by going after the terrorists behind the killings, or bring the date forward and leave behind a growing security threat.

He spent the day hunkered down with his national security team preparing for a 5pm address to the nation.

The White House tore up his schedule, postponing a first in-person meeting with Israel’s new prime minister and canceling  a video conference with governors about Afghan refugees arriving in their states. 

Instead, people who knew the situation room well said he would have to decide on the future of the evacuation program and whether to launch strikes on the group behind the attacks.

Delaying his departure comes with risks, but leaving too seen could mean 1000 Americans abandoned. 

The Islamic State, which has an Afghan affiliate known as ISIS-Khorasan (referring to a historic name for the region), claimed responsibility for the attack. 

President Joe Biden during a meeting in the East Room of the White House now faces a pivotal decision about how he handles Afghanistan and his promise to be out by August 31

Two suicide bombings killed at least 60 people around Kabul airport on Thursday, as Afghans crowded around its gates seeking flights to safety

ISIS claimed responsibility for the attacks in Kabul that killed at least 6o people around the airport in Kabul on Thursday

ISIS-K is hostile to the Taliban, which cleared it out of its strongholds in Nangahar and Kunar provinces last year, but analysts said it would take any opportunity to attack foreigners and embarrass the new rulers of Afghanistan.

Some counts suggest the group carried out roughly 100 attacks against civilian targets and another 250 involving US, Afghan or Pakistani security services since they were founded in 2015.

They grew rapidly as local commanders ditched their allegiance to the Taliban in favor of a group that was conquering territory in the Middle East, ensuring they could enjoy prestige and financial support.

But terrorism experts said they had slipped from prominence in the past year as the Taliban captured swaths of the country. 

‘I haven’t heard of them having the capacity to launch an attack like this,’ said a former intelligence official after the Kabul attacks. 

‘It makes you wonder if they had support.’

The blasts sent shockwaves around the world, buffeting Washington, where an already embattled Biden must now decide his response.

Lisa Curtis, for senior director for South and Central Asia on President Trump’s National Security Council, said she expected the president to speed up the withdrawal.

‘We had growing indications that there were potential attacks being planned by ISIS-K so I don’t think this has come as a surprise.

‘This is why Biden has been so firm in sticking to the August 31 deadline. 

‘If anything they are going to speed up the withdrawal of U.S. troops from the airport.’

She said with U.S. troops due to be getting on planes on Saturday, it was unlikely the U.S. would reopen processing of refugees. 

Biden left his options open this week. In an address on Tuesday, he said every day spent in the country increased the risks.

He referenced the danger of ISIS-K. 

‘The sooner we can finish, the better. Each day of operations brings added risk to our troops,’ he said.

But he added that completion by August 31, ‘depends upon the Taliban continuing to cooperate and allow access to the airport for those who were transport- — we’re transporting out and no disruptions to our operations.

‘In addition, I’ve asked the Pentagon and the State Department for contingency plans to adjust the timetable should that become necessary.’

In this frame grab from video, people attend to a wounded man near the site of a deadly explosion outside the airport in Kabul, Afghanistan, Thursday, Aug. 26, 2021

Smoke rises over Kabul after two suicide attacks on Thursday, just as the U.S. was planning to wind up evacuation efforts from the city

But extending would likely bring blowback, said Richard Hoagland, a former deputy U.S. special envoy to Afghanistan and ambassador in southern and central Asia.

He said: ‘If Biden extends the date what does the Taliban do?

‘And apparently this attack was by ISIS-Khorasan and that means that ISIS is in Afghanistan and to say that the Taliban will not allow them to stay?

‘That’s just wishful thinking.’ 

Nathan Sales, the former ambassador at large for counterterrorism under Trump, said the attack meant the Taliban had let down their side of the deal.

‘Evacuations should continue as long as it takes to extract every American who’s in the country, and every Afghan, who is eligible to come to the United States because they provided support to our armed forces or served alongside our armed forces,’ he said.

To do it safely, he urged the administration to retake Bagram air base, which was vacated last month, but which would offer a more secure evacuation hub.

He also said Biden must immediately authorize air strikes against the perpetrators of the attack. 

‘You don’t get to kill American sailors and Marines with impunity,’ he said. 

‘The people who are responsible for this need to be found. And they need to be taken off the battlefield, not just to avenge our fallen, but because if they committed one attack, they’re going to commit others.’

Afghanistan’s chilling new face of terror: ‘ISIS-K’ slaughter patients in their hospital beds, bomb girls schools… and see the Taliban as far too liberal 

 by Guy Adams 

Dressed in white coats and carrying stethoscopes, three young men walked unchallenged into Kabul’s 400-bed Sardar Mohammad Daud Khan hospital and made their way to the upper floors.

Then, outside the building, situated opposite the heavily fortified US Embassy, there was a loud bang.

The noise, from the detonating suicide vest of a comrade, acted as a signal for the trio to pull a selection of hand grenades and AK-47 assault rifles from beneath their medical clothing, before opening fire.

By the time the chaos had died down, several hours later, more than 30 doctors and patients had been killed and roughly 50 more wounded.

Further casualties included the three attackers, who were shot by Afghan special forces, plus the original suicide bomber, and a fifth member of the terror gang who had detonated a car bomb inside the hospital complex.

A former Pakistani Taliban commander called Hafiz Saeed Khan (middle) led ISIS-K until he was killed by a drone strike in 2016

Their brazen and pitiless attack, which unfolded in broad daylight one afternoon in March 2017, was carried out in the name of ISIS-K, a local branch of the notorious global terror network.

Founded in 2015, its followers aim to establish an Islamic caliphate across Khorasan (hence the initial ‘K’) – a historic region covering Pakistan and Afghanistan along with parts of Central Asia.

The terror group is now such a threat that fear of an attack by Isis-K is being used to justify the US’s refusal to delay its withdrawal from Kabul Airport after the August 31 deadline set by Joe Biden.

In a statement released on Tuesday night, the US President claimed: ‘Every day we’re on the ground is another day we know that ISIS-K is seeking to target the airport and attack both US and allied forces and innocent civilians.’

The White House seems to believe ISIS-K (who regard the Taliban as dangerous liberals) is about to organise a wave of attacks in an effort to destabilise its efforts to form a government.

If so, then any foreign troops, including soldiers from Britain’s 16 Air Assault Brigade currently guarding Kabul airport, would represent very high-profile targets indeed.

The organisation has already carried out roughly 100 attacks against civilian targets and another 250 involving US, Afghan or Pakistani security services, most of them chronicled via macabre mobile phone videos then gleefully broadcast via the internet.

One particularly vile film, circulated in June 2017, celebrated the work of a group of child recruits to ISIS-K known as the ‘cubs of the caliphates’.

Founded in 2015, its followers aim to establish an Islamic caliphate across Khorasan (hence the initial ‘K’) – a historic region covering Pakistan and Afghanistan along with parts of Central Asia

The film showed two of them – both dressed in black and seemingly under 12 years of age – forcing terrified captives to kneel on the ground.

They proceeded to pull back the heads of the men (who were apparently accused of spying), rant at the camera and execute them via a single shot to the skull.

More recently, in May this year, ISIS-K killed at least 68 Afghans and injured another 165 when they detonated three car bombs outside the Syed Al-Shahda school for girls in Kabul. 

The vast majority of the victims were young pupils the Islamist group regard as legitimate targets for the sin of being educated while being female.

The attack, which came after a period in which Western air strikes had killed thousands of the terror network’s supporters and at least three of its leaders, served as a bloody reminder of its ongoing ability to bring carnage to the streets of Afghanistan. 

ISIS-K published this photo in an effort to project unity and strength just days before hundreds of fighters admitted defeat and surrendered

The very fact that a US President is admitting that his policy is being governed by a perceived threat from ISIS-K represents a major coup for a hitherto fairly low-profile organisation.

It first made headlines in January 2016, when the Pentagon announced that the group had been designated as a Foreign Terrorist organisation.

This made assisting them a criminal offence and allowed US troops on the ground to actively pursue members (under previous terms of engagement they usually had to wait until the group attacked them before responding).

The organisation’s chosen first Emir, or leader, was a former Pakistani Taliban commander called Hafiz Saeed Khan. 

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