Taliban released bomber just days before deadly Kabul airport attack

A Taliban fighter stands at the site of the, August 26, suicide bomb attack that killed nearly 200 people. (AFP)
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Updated 07 October 2021
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Taliban released bomber just days before deadly Kabul airport attack

  • Over 170 Afghans, 13 US service members were killed in Daesh attack
  • Joint chiefs chairman: ‘Real possibility in not-too-distant future’ for reconstitution of terror groups in Afghanistan

LONDON: A Daesh suicide bomber who killed nearly 200 people in an attack on people trying to enter Kabul airport as international troops withdrew was released from prison by the Taliban just days before the attack.

Two unnamed US officials and Republican Rep. Ken Calvert told CNN that the bomber was freed from Parwan prison at Bagram Airbase 11 days before carrying out the attack.

Over 170 Afghans and 13 US service members were killed in the attack, which targeted crowds of Afghans and others trying to flee the country as international troops withdrew.

Two US officials confirmed the bomber’s identity as Abdul Rehman Al-Loghri, whom Isis-K — Daesh’s Afghanistan affiliate — named while claiming responsibility for the attack.

Al-Loghri was held by Afghan authorities in a prison in Bagram that held hundreds of Isis-K members, many of whom were released once the base was taken by the Taliban earlier this year. Thousands of other prisoners were also released by the group at that time.

Asked by a reporter whether the Biden administration should have done more to secure Bagram, White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki said she could not speak to the new report, adding: “I’d point you to the intelligence community.”

She said: “I’d remind you that as it relates to Bagram, there was a decision made to close Bagram because it wasn’t strategically in the interest of the United States and our national security to keep it open with 5,000 troops there protecting Bagram at a distance that was far away from the capital and where people from the embassy would be evacuated. So that was the broad-based decision.”

Despite the attack, top American military officials have said the terrorist threat from Afghanistan is currently lower than it was after the 9/11 attacks that spurred the US-led invasion of the country, but a future resurgence of terrorist groups in Afghanistan is a distinct possibility.

Joint Chiefs Chairman Gen. Mark Milley said: “It’s a real possibility in the not-too-distant future — six,12, 18, 24, 36 months, that kind of timeframe — for a reconstitution of Al-Qaeda or ISIS, and it’s our job now, under different conditions, to protect American citizens against attacks from Afghanistan.”


Syria’s Kurdish fighters agree to leave Aleppo after deadly clashes

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Syria’s Kurdish fighters agree to leave Aleppo after deadly clashes

  • Syria’s official SANA news agency reported that “buses carrying the last batch of members of the SDF organization have left the Sheikh Maqsud neighborhood in Aleppo, heading toward northeastern Syria”

ALEPPO: Syria’s Kurdish fighters said Sunday that they agreed under a ceasefire to withdraw from Aleppo after days of fighting government forces in the city.
Hours earlier, Syria’s military said it had finished operations in the Kurdish-held Sheikh Maqsud neighborhood with state television reporting that Kurdish fighters who surrendered were being bused to the north.
The military had already announced its seizure of Aleppo’s other Kurdish-held neighborhood, Ashrafiyeh.
Kurdish forces had controlled pockets of Syria’s second city Aleppo and operate a de facto autonomous administration across swathes of the north and northeast, much of it captured during the 14-year civil war.
The latest clashes erupted after negotiations to integrate the Kurds into the country’s new government stalled.
“We reached an understanding that led to a ceasefire and secured the evacuation of the martyrs, the wounded, the trapped civilians and the fighters from Ashrafiyeh and Sheikh Maqsud neighborhoods to northern and eastern Syria,” the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) wrote in a statement.
Syria’s official SANA news agency reported that “buses carrying the last batch of members of the SDF organization have left the Sheikh Maqsud neighborhood in Aleppo, heading toward northeastern Syria.”
The SDF initially denied its fighters were leaving, describing the bus transfers as forced displacement of civilians.
An AFP correspondent saw at least five buses on Saturday carrying men out of Sheikh Maqsud, but could not independently verify their identities.
According to the SDF statement, the ceasefire was reached “through the mediation of international parties to stop the attacks and violations against our people in Aleppo.”
The United States and European Union both called for the Syrian government and Kurdish authorities to return to political dialogue.
The fighting, some of the most intense since the ousting of long-time ruler Bashar Assad in December 2024, has killed at least 21 civilians, according to figures from both sides, while Aleppo’s governor said 155,000 people fled their homes.
Both sides blamed the other for starting the clashes on Tuesday.

Children ‘still inside’

On the outskirts of Sheikh Maqsud, families who had been trapped by the fighting were leaving, accompanied by Syrian security forces.
An AFP correspondent saw men carrying children on their backs board buses headed to shelters.
Dozens of young men in civilian clothing were separated from the crowd, with security forces making them sit on the ground before transporting them to an unknown destination, according to the correspondent.
A Syrian security official told AFP on condition of anonymity that the young men were “fighters” being “transferred to Syrian detention centers.”
At the entrance to the district, 60-year-old Imad Al-Ahmad was heading in the opposite direction, trying to seek permission to return home.
“I left four days ago...I took refuge at my sister’s house,” he told AFP. “I don’t know if we’ll be able to return today.”
Nahed Mohammad Qassab, a 40-year-old widow also waiting to return, said she left before the fighting to attend a funeral.
“My three children are still inside, at my neighbor’s house. I want to get them out,” she said.
A flight suspension at Aleppo airport was extended until further notice.

‘Return to dialogue’

US envoy Tom Barrack met Syrian President Ahmed Al-Sharaa on Saturday, and afterwards called for a “return to dialogue” with the Kurds in accordance with the integration framework agreed in March.
The deal was meant to be implemented last year, but differences, including Kurdish demands for decentralized rule, stymied progress as Damascus repeatedly rejected the idea.
The fighting in Aleppo raised fears of a regional escalation, with neighboring Turkiye, a close ally of Syria’s new Islamist authorities, saying it was ready to intervene. Israel has sided with the Kurdish forces.
The clashes have also tested the Syrian authorities’ ability to reunify the country after the brutal civil war and commitment to protecting minorities, after sectarian bloodshed rocked the country’s Alawite and Druze communities last year.