[Concerned by the Taliban’s
offensive, regional power brokers are again recruiting and arming volunteer
militias. But some fear the quick fix will lead to a wider breakdown.]
By Thomas
Gibbons-Neff and Najim Rahim
Mr. Wahidi, with his slight frame
and mop of brown hair, carries an assault rifle now — the metal and wood
Kalashnikov that over the past two generations of conflict in Afghanistan has
become a grim fixture. The weapon is likely twice his age, but he carries it as
if he knows it, even though the first time he pulled the trigger in battle was
only weeks ago.
“I didn’t think I’d have to fight,”
he said, his weight shifting under the morning’s rising temperature this month.
The rifle that erased the last
vestiges of Mr. Wahidi’s childhood is a byproduct of the past two months of
alarm as a Taliban offensive swept across the country. Mr. Wahidi is one of the
many Afghans who have been swept up in a militia recruitment drive as
government forces have struggled to keep the Taliban at bay. Hundreds of
volunteers have taken up arms around Mazar-i-Sharif, the northern economic hub
near where Mr. Wahidi lives, to protect their homes — and, knowingly or not,
the business interests of the warlords and power brokers who are organizing the
militia movement.
These militias are not new, and
have carried many names in the past two decades, often under the auspices of
government ownership: local police, territorial army, popular uprising forces,
pro-government militias and so on. But what has happened across the country in
these recent weeks — championed by Afghan leaders — is a new mutation that many
fear is an all-too-close echo of the way Afghanistan fell into civil war in the
1990s.
None of what has been happening
bodes well for the continuation of the empowered and centralized national
government that the United States and its allies tried to install here.
“I hope peace will come to
Afghanistan,” Mr. Wahidi said, quietly and as an afterthought, before slinging
his rifle and mounting his motorbike, decorated with an Afghan flag. He sped
off into the city to meet up with the rest of his militia, his white- and
blue-laced sneakers a strange contrast to his camouflage uniform.
The militias that have formed
around Mazar-i-Sharif and other places across the north over the past two
months are arrayed in a kind of loose, defensive belt, supplementing the
government forces that have not retreated or surrendered.
The Taliban have eased off some of
their attacks in recent days, and it is hard to tell whether the militias had
anything to do with that. The militias’ presence in the field is unmistakable,
and almost carnival-like. They move in a hodgepodge of vehicles — some private,
like a pickup truck that was once owned by a contracting company that installed
portable toilets on U.S. bases, others commandeered from Afghan units that
fled.
The militias’ outposts are
sometimes half-dug trenches or hollowed out homes. They are occupied by a
bedraggled gang donning a rainbow of different uniforms, civilian clothing and
the trademark bandoleers of sequined leather. The chatter of fighters’ testing
and learning their weapons is sometimes heard.
In Mazar’s northeast, Uzbek militia
members, loyalists of an infamous warlord — Marshal
Abdul Rashid Dostum — are equipped with new machine guns from who
knows where (the weapons’ markings seem to point to Chinese construction). They
have fortified their front lines by digging fox holes and slit trenches. The
dust-covered fortifications look like they are waiting for a frontal assault by
a mechanized army. And they may well be: The Taliban have seized hundreds of
armored vehicles, including tanks, in places where the security forces
crumbled.
A quarter-mile from the Uzbek front
line is a half-built house defended by a family of Hazaras, an ethnic and
predominantly Shiite minority that has been persecuted throughout Afghanistan’s
recent history.
Around Mazar-i-Sharif, especially,
local forces have preyed on the Hazara community by recruiting
young men for militias that operate without government approval. Sometimes
they are tricked into defending outposts with little hope of payment.
Musa Khan Shujayee, 34, is the
commander of this little outpost, and it is manned by a dozen or so of his
relatives — none with significant military training. One fighter there looked
to be around 15 years old.
Had the Taliban not attacked the
outskirts of Mazar-i-Sharif late last month, Mr. Shujayee would be tending his
small shop in the city.
“How can I be a shopkeeper with no
security?” Mr. Shujayee asked, explaining why he was now carrying a rifle and
his store was shuttered. He gestured to a few ditches in the sand, dug with a
rusted shovel, as a stand-in for a defensive trench.
Many of these residents, like Mr.
Shujayee and Mr. Wahidi, have been wrapped up in the ferocity of the war,
finding themselves on the front with noble ambitions: to defend their home and
their families — and maybe, one day, their neighbors — from the Taliban.
But while many of these militia
members are new to war, others are not. In Nahr-e Shahi, a district that
borders Mazar’s northern reaches, the militia front line there includes Afghan
Hazara militia members who had fought with Iran’s
Fatemiyoun brigades in Iraq and Syria. Other fighters and commanders had
fought the Soviets in the 1980s. Or the Taliban in the 1990s. Some militia
members joined the government security forces following the U.S. invasion in
2001 and had mustered out, only to later find themselves with guns in their
hands once again, a seemingly unstoppable cycle in Afghanistan.
Mohaydin Siddiqi, 37, was a police
officer six years ago before returning to his farm of wheat and cotton in
Dehdadi district, an important strip of rural territory to Mazar’s west.
On one day in mid-July he sat in
his district’s police station, waiting to register as a newfound militia
member.
“I didn’t think I’d have to pick up
a gun again,” Mr. Siddiqi said, surrounded by a new cohort of fighters who had
also left the same village to join. The group’s weapons arrived in the back of
a pickup truck some days before Mr. Siddiqi enlisted, apparently signed off on
by the government and freely distributed with just enough ammunition to defend
themselves.
The Taliban entered Mr. Siddiqi’s
village when they attacked near Mazar last month, capturing it around 20 days
ago, he said. His family is still there, now under the insurgent group’s
hard-line Islamist rule that prevents women from leaving the house
unaccompanied by a family member.
All these disparate militia forces
are being propped up by the government and local power brokers who are flooding
a war-weary population with more weapons, though little oversight, to hold what
territory remains under their control.
“Right now we have a common enemy,”
said Atta Muhammad Noor, the former governor of Balkh province and one of the
key ringleaders of these new militias, in a recent interview with The New York
Times.
During the civil war, Mr. Noor was
a warlord — a commander for Jamiat-i-Islami, an Islamist party in the country’s
north. He then became Balkh’s governor shortly after the U.S. invasion in 2001
and refused to leave his position after President Ashraf Ghani fired him in
2017. But following the Taliban’s offensive, he is once more ascendant. On
Tuesday, he met with Mr. Ghani, despite their fraught relationship.
Speaking from one of the
gift-studded meeting rooms at his vast residence compound in Mazar-i-Sharif
this month, Mr. Noor said the security forces had failed. And these new
militias have been equipped with “our own resources.”
Those resources are food, money
and, most of all, people.
Gen. Mohammed Amin Dara-e-Sufi, is
a provincial council member in Balkh and a militia commander under another influential
businessman and politician in Mazar: Abbas Ibrahimzada. Mr. Ibrahimzada equips
and feeds his forces with meals cooked in gigantic steel vats next to his
headquarters. Where his growing tranche of weapons and ammunition comes from is
anyone’s guess.
General Dara-e-Sufi, 55, fought the
Soviets in the 1980s and the Taliban in the 1990s. He turned in his rifle as
the militias first disarmed in 2003.
“We were tired of war,” he said of
those heady days after the Taliban government had been toppled. “We though the
situation had changed. I started a business.”
Then the general sighed. Underneath
his bed was a Kalashnikov, its magazine inserted. He said he had bought it only
a few days ago.
Jim Huylebroek contributed
reporting.