WASHINGTON – Days before the attack at the Kabul airport in Afghanistan that killed more than a dozen U.S. troops Thursday, Biden administration officials had warned of danger posed by ISIS-K, a terrorist group that is a sworn enemy of the Taliban.
ISIS-K claimed responsibility for a suicide bombing at Hamid Karzai International Airport. Among the dead were eleven Marines, a Navy corpsman and another service member whose service branch was not immediately identified. There were also multiple Afghan deaths and injuries. Biden vow to hunt down the culprits and U.S. officials said the group poses a continuing threat.
“It would be difficult to overestimate the number of unusual challenges and competing demands that our forces on the ground faced the threat to our forces, particularly from ISIS K is very real as we have seen today,” Gen. Kenneth McKenzie, commander of U.S. Central Command, said hours after the bomb attack.
ISIS-K is an offshoot of the Islamic State terrorist organization that established a sprawling caliphate in Iraq and Syria. The group was all but destroyed by a U.S.-led campaign but affiliates have since emerged and drawn recruits from other local and regional militant groups.
ISIS-K considers the Taliban, noted for its brutality, to be insufficiently devout in its adherence to Islam. The two militant groups have engaged in attacks on each other.
The Taliban, which took control of Afghanistan earlier this month, has been guarding the perimeter of the Kabul airport, where evacuations of Americans and Afghan allies were taking place.
Latest from Afghanistan:U.S. personnel among casualties after explosions at Kabul airport
Douglas London, the CIA's former top counterterrorism chief for the region, including Afghanistan, said the threat posed by ISIS-K is now higher because of the vacuum created after the Taliban toppled the Afghan government within a matter of days.
The Pentagon inspector general, in a report released last week, noted ISIS-K had lashed out in the last months of the Afghan government, seizing on its weakness.
"ISIS-Khorasan exploited the political instability and rise in violence during the quarter by attacking minority sectarian targets and infrastructure to spread fear and highlight the Afghan government’s inability to provide adequate security," the report said.
What is ISIS-K?
The "K" in ISIS-K stands for Khorasan, the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria's affiliate in Pakistan and Afghanistan, where U.S.-led forces have fought Taliban and al-Qaida militants since 2001. U.S. officials have grown alarmed in recent years about the group's growing strength, savagery and intent on attacking Western targets.
WARNING: This story contains graphic images below
Of particular concern for military planners is ISIS-K's focus on launching attacks in Kabul. It mounted six major attacks in the Afghan capital in 2016, 18 attacks in 2017 and 24 in 2018, the official said. Its attacks have continued to intensify.
“They've been a persistent and vexing problem because, despite all the pressure that we and then the Taliban have placed on them, they've managed to maintain operational cells that have been effective as we've seen over the past few years in Kabul," London said. "Most of the attacks that were the most heartless ones, like against hospitals and the maternity ward, were all ISIS-K.”
That capability to launch deadly attacks is also the reason ISIS-K poses such a threat to the Taliban and the affiliated Haqqani Network, London said. “They maintain these capabilities, and those are the reasons they and the Taliban are mortal enemies – because ISIS-K represents a competitor. They represent a competitor for resources, materials and power, even though they're relatively small.”
ISIS-K school attack
On May 8, ISIS-K attacked a school for girls in Kabul and killed at least 68 people, wounding more than than 165, most of them girls, according to a Defense Intelligence Agency assessment cited by the inspector general. A suicide bomber drove a car laden with explosives into the school's gate, and, as the children fled, additional bombs exploded.
The school was for the Hazara, a Shiite Muslim ethnic minority targeted by the Sunni ISIS-K. In May 2020, ISIS-K attacked a Hazara maternity clinic, killing 24 mothers, newborns and a health care provider.
Before the withdrawal of U.S. troops, negotiated by former President Donald Trump and accelerated by Biden, U.S. military commanders sought to annihilate ISIS-K. Army Gen. Joseph Votel, former head of U.S. Central Command, declared that ISIS-K terrorists were "not reconcilable." In 2017, the Pentagon unleashed the largest conventional bomb in the U.S. arsenal, the Massive Ordnance Air Blast, also known as the Mother of All Bombs, on an ISIS-K stronghold. The explosion killed an estimated 96 fighters.
Evidence of the group's fanaticism, according to intelligence gathered two years ago, showed that ISIS-K fighters stranded in mountain passes survived on a small supply of pine nuts, the intelligence official said. They preferred starving to profiting from the lucrative trade in opium, he said.
London said ISIS-K developed in Afghanistan and parts of Pakistan. Its members are a cross section of tribes including Mehsudis, Waziris and Pashtuns from the cross-border area in the northeast quadrant.
“That's where the heart of it is been. Those folks, really they don't really see themselves as Afghans, nor do they really see themselves as Pakistanis," London said.
A lot of ISIS-K members came up through the ranks of Pakistani extremist groups like Tehrik-E Taliban (TTP) and Lashkar-e-Jhangvi (LJ), which was involved in the 2002 kidnapping and murder of Wall Street Journal reporter Daniel Pearl, according to London. But he said others defected from the Taliban because they favored its more extreme and militant ideology.
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