Pentagon Claims It Provided “Limited Support” to Taliban Crushing of ISIS

They're far better at it than either the US or the US-founded Kabul army

Related: US Intel Officers in Kabul: The Taliban Are Fighting the Real Terrorist Threat From Afghanistan, Islamic State


The overall commander of U.S. forces in Afghanistan and the Mideast made the stunning admission Tuesday that the U.S. had given limited support to the Taliban in its own fight against ISIS.

Marine Gen. Kenneth Frank McKenzie, head of U.S. Central Command, did not say what form of help the Taliban was given — whether it was airstrikes, intelligence or simply a temporary cessation of U.S. attacks.

“There was very limited support from us, and I would characterize that as very limited support,” he said.

In testimony before the House Armed Services Committee, McKenzie also did not say when or where the support was given to the insurgent group, whose stated goal for more than 18 years has been to drive the U.S. from Afghanistan.

However, McKenzie suggested that assistance to the Taliban may have come into play in remote areas of Afghanistan’s southeastern Nangarhar province against the ISIS offshoot called Islamic State-Khorasan Province, or ISIS-K.

“Over the last several months in eastern Afghanistan, we’ve watched the Taliban compress and crush ISIS presence on the ground in southern Nangarhar province, and they’ve been very effective doing that,” McKenzie said.

“It was a bloody mess, but they did it. In fact, ISIS really now no longer holds ground in Nangarhar province,” McKenzie said.”

At a later Pentagon briefing, Rear Adm. William Byrne, vice director of the Joint Staff, declined to comment on McKenzie’s statements but said a main goal of U.S. policy was to rid Afghanistan of both ISIS and al-Qaida.

“I don’t have any specifics to provide you [on McKenzie] but that’s the hope, in that every force there is countering ISIS. Every force there is countering al-Qaida,” Byrne said.

In his House testimony, McKenzie also expressed skepticism that the Taliban would keep their part of the bargain with the U.S. [the US military is already not] to allow for the reduction of U.S. forces in Afghanistan to 8,600 by this summer and a complete withdrawal over 14 months.

Under the deal between U.S. special envoy Zalmay Khalilzad and Taliban leaders in Doha, Qatar last month, a seven-day “reduction in violence” was agreed to and was to be followed by talks between the Taliban and the Kabul government on a final peace settlement.

However, McKenzie said that the Taliban were continuing attacks on Afghan forces in violation of the agreement with the U.S. [Nonsense, that’s not a violation.]

He said the U.S. troop reductions were conditions-based, and if the Taliban continue attacks, “my advice would be not to continue that reduction.”

Source: Military.com


Antiwar.com:

Though ISIS has been reported to have been defeated in Nangarhar several times only to return as strong as ever, the Taliban has shown itself unusually effective at fighting ISIS head on, whereas the Afghan military tends to just shell areas and assume the militants were wiped out.

6 Comments
  1. Jozo Magoc says

    ” great” U SAtan, when it was last time you told to the world the truth??? Your polician,generals and other speeches are to us,Europeans, a farth into the air!!!

  2. 14th Troll says

    Lies, Lies, Lies… how do I know? Uncle Zoos lips are moving.

  3. cechas vodobenikov says

    nearly everything heard from US officials is a lie, unless it is a “Freudian slip”…they have been lying about Afghanistan for 20 years–they have yet to find WMD’s in Iraq. and they can’t even locate Israel’s nuclear weapons

  4. Isaac says

    So that’s how it’s done

  5. thomas malthaus says

    General McKenzie was Director of Strategic Plans and Policy (J-5) on the Joint Staff.

    The emphasis was devising the Iran war strategy and likely other ongoing operations.

    If I’m cynical enough, I might be inclined to say it’s underway with the CV outbreak.

  6. Jihadi Colin says

    The Taliban are actually fighting ISIS unlike the puppet child sex slaver warlord regime in Afghanistan. One major reason is that the Taliban doesn’t like any armed foreign interloper. That they’re fellow Sunni Muslims is not relevant. Wahhabis aren’t even from the same school of Islamic jurisprudence as the Deobandi Taliban, and the Taliban have no plans to be ruled by a foreign caliph any more than by a foreign puppet.

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