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Taliban

The Taliban is a militant Islamic theocratic political movement based in Afghanistan. At times it has been a revolutionary terrorist organization or the chief political force in Afghanistan.

The Taliban follow a fundamentalist and philosophically anti-imperialist stream of Sunni Islam called Deobandi. The aim of the Taliban is to impose, by means of force if need be, a political regime in which the tenets of Deobandi Islam and sharia (Islamic law) govern life in their territory. The theocratic totalitarian political prescriptions of the Taliban have been widely criticized by human rights groups and Western governments for its position on human rights, women's rights and minority religious rights. 

The Taliban has been accused of recruiting child soldiers, targeting civilians with violence, taking hostages and torturing them, and committing ethnic cleansing. In the civilian sphere, it has been accused of suppression of freedom of expression, especially that of journalists, and the banning of most recreational activity and modern education. Under Taliban rule, women are not allowed the right of free association, and must be accompanied by male relatives outside the home. Religious groups such as Christians and Hindus are oppressed under the Taliban, their institutions and artifacts being destroyed. Shiite Muslims in Afghanistan are also persecuted, despite being 10% of Afghanistan's population. Violations of Taliban law results in extreme punishment, including flogging, stoning, amputation, and death.

The origin of the Taliban lies in the 1979 Soviet invasion of Afghanistan. Several resistance factions arose to combat the Russian forces, including Sunni Mujahideen. Ultimately, the political and financial strain of the unending guerilla war in Afghanistan required a Soviet withdrawal in 1989.

Once the Soviet forces left Afghanistan, the Taliban fought with competing warlords and political movements. In 1994 the Taliban achieved dominance over much of the country. Afghanistan became a haven for Islamic terrorists seeking to continue Jihad against the non-Islamic world.

In 2020, then president Donald Trump sought to withdraw from Afghanistan, meeting with the Taliban in Doha to develop a deal and terms for the US leaving. In 2021 President Joe Biden continued the withdrawal process, and expressed confidence that the Western-backed Afghanistan government would be able to successfully combat the Taliban's aspirations of conquest. However, as US forces began the withdrawal process in May, the Taliban launched a military campaign to retake the country. US estimates put Taliban forces at 75,000 combatants, while the Afghan government possessed around 300,000 combatants. Within 3 months, the Taliban took most of Afghanistan and the Western-backed resistance crumbled. 

A crisis in Afghanistan developed as coalition countries attempted to evacuate their citizens from the country after it had already fallen to the Taliban. Interpreters, political leaders, and other Western-affiliated Afghans sought international aid in fleeing from the Taliban. Afghan president Ghani fled the country himself in early August 2021, taking refuge in the UAE. The Biden administration suffered a political and media backlash for the failed withdrawal, damaging the administration's approval ratings. 

The Taliban reestablished its political order in Afghanistan, with some local militia resistance. The Taliban claimed to Western audiences that they were a reformed order, and would allow for more rights for women, respect for journalists, and other human rights. 

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Members of a Taliban delegation leave after peace talks with Afghan senior politicians in Moscow, May 30, 2019

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 Taliban soldiers stand guard at a checkpoint in Kabul, Afghanistan, July 6, 2023.

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 An Afghan woman and a girl walk in a street in Kabul, Afghanistan, November 9, 2022.

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Members of the Taliban in Pakistan

Islamist militants kill Pakistan army officer

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 A woman wearing a niqab enters a beauty salon where the ads of women have been defaced by a shopkeeper in Kabul, Afghanistan October 6, 2021.

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US PRESIDENT Joe Biden has been riding a new wave of populism that will become the central theme in the next decade’s election campaigns across the Western world: disparaging big tech corporations.

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Afghan Institute for Strategic Studies (AISS) held a ceremony in London that honored IsraAID and the British Jewish NGO HIAS+JCORE

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A Taliban fighter stands on guard as displaced Afghan women walk into an UNHCR distribution center to receive aid supply on the outskirts of Kabul, Afghanistan, October 28, 2021.

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 An Afghan woman and a girl walk in a street in Kabul, Afghanistan, November 9, 2022.

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A Taliban fighter stands on guard as displaced Afghan women walk into an UNHCR distribution center to receive aid supply on the outskirts of Kabul, Afghanistan, October 28, 2021.

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 The Kajaki Dam is seen on the Helmand River in Afghanistan.

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 Taliban fighters celebrate the first anniversary of the fall of Kabul on a street in Kabul, Afghanistan, August 15, 2022.

Taliban attempts to impose strict ban on music in Kabul weddings

 Taliban fighters hold an Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan flag on the first anniversary of the fall of Kabul on a street in Kabul, Afghanistan, August 15, 2022.

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 TALIBAN LEADER Mullah Haibatullah Akhundzada is seen in an undated photograph posted on a Taliban Twitter feed and identified separately by several Taliban officials who declined be named.

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