Al-Qaeda has opened at least eight training camps and five madrassas — radical Islamic schools — in Afghanistan since Joe Biden’s botched withdrawal from the country, which left the Taliban in control of more territory than when the U.S. invaded in 2001.
The United Nations (UN) Security Council report detailing al-Qaeda’s reemergence in Afghanistan also notes the network now “maintains safe houses to facilitate the movement between Afghanistan and the Islamic Republic of Iran in the provinces of Herat, Farah, and Helmand, with additional safe house locations in Kabul.”
“The relationship between the Taliban and al-Qaeda remains close, and the latter maintains a holding pattern in Afghanistan under Taliban patronage,” the report states, adding that Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), responsible for multiple attacks in Pakistan, is also training suicide bombers at a site in Afghanistan.
Pakistan announced in November that all Afghan illegal aliens on its territory would be removed, resulting in around half a million deportations over just four months.
Joe Biden, meanwhile, is continuing to push Congress to import tens of thousands more Afghans to the United States as “refugees” on top of the almost 100,000 already imported.
The Taliban is “[a]ware of… ongoing relocation flights” to the U.S., and anyone traveling directly from Afghanistan, therefore, has tacit permission from the Taliban to do so – raising security concerns.
“The Taliban is not the… North Vietnamese army… There’s going to be no circumstance where you see people being lifted off the roof of a embassy… of the United States from Afghanistan" – President Joe Biden, July 8, 2021
Saigon, 1975 Kabul, 2021 pic.twitter.com/MKBymjduOM
— Nick Turse (@nickturse) August 15, 2021