Iran’s Envoy in Islamabad: Kabul-Islamabad Tensions Benefit No One

The Iranian ambassador in Islamabad also described regional cooperation and continued engagement with the Islamic Emirate as important.

Iran’s ambassador in Islamabad expressed concern over the recent round of tensions between Pakistan and Afghanistan and said that Tehran is working to de-escalate tensions between the two countries.

Reza Amiri-Moqaddam, speaking at a conference organized by the Islamabad Institute of Strategic Studies, emphasized restraint by the involved parties and insisted that any military movements or war would not benefit either side. He expressed hope that the issue would be resolved peacefully and through mutual cooperation.

“Despite domestic and regional efforts, particularly the good offices of the Islamic Republic of Iran to reduce tensions between Kabul and Islamabad, this situation has once again intensified between them.” Said Muqaddam.

The Iranian ambassador in Islamabad also described regional cooperation and continued engagement with the Islamic Emirate as important.

Stating that the Islamic Emirate is the present reality of Afghanistan, the Iranian diplomat reported close coordination between Tehran and Islamabad on Afghanistan, although neither country has so far recognized the Taliban government.

He said: “The Taliban are the present reality of Afghanistan and the product of 20 years of U.S. occupation of the country. Tehran and Islamabad have close coordination regarding Afghanistan, although neither of the two countries has so far recognized the Taliban government.”

At the same time, the special representatives of Pakistan and Iran for Afghanistan have also held virtual consultations regarding Afghanistan.

Moeen Gul Samkanai, a political analyst, said: “Iran is well aware that behind Pakistan’s actions stands the United States, and that Pakistan is essentially pursuing U.S. interests. For this reason, Iran does not want Afghanistan to be dragged into instability.”

Consultations between Iran and Pakistan on Afghanistan are taking place as tensions between Afghanistan and Pakistan have escalated again in recent days, and the future of relations between Kabul and Islamabad remains uncertain.

Iran’s Envoy in Islamabad: Kabul-Islamabad Tensions Benefit No One
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Pakistan Exports to Afghanistan Fall 59% to $228 Million Amid Trade Suspension

Pakistan’s exports to Afghanistan plunged sharply in the first seven months of the current fiscal year, reflecting deepening trade disruptions and political tensions.

Official data from the State Bank of Pakistan show exports to Afghanistan fell by more than half compared with the same period last year. The value dropped from over five hundred fifty million dollars to nearly two hundred thirty million dollars during the July to January period.

Trade between the two countries has remained suspended since early October, a factor cited as a key reason behind the steep fall in Pakistan’s regional exports. The disruption has significantly limited formal cross-border commercial activity.

At the same time, Pakistan’s imports from Afghanistan also declined markedly during the same period. Import values fell to just over six million dollars, compared with more than fifteen million dollars a year earlier, highlighting a parallel contraction in bilateral trade flows.

The reduction in exchanges comes despite Afghanistan previously being considered one of Pakistan’s important regional export markets. Analysts say prolonged uncertainty has weakened commercial confidence among traders on both sides.

Economic experts attribute the downturn to the suspension of official trade channels and escalating political and security tensions that have directly affected cross-border transport and transit routes. Businesses have faced logistical hurdles and increased risks.

In recent months, relations between Islamabad and Kabul authorities have been strained by border incidents and mutual accusations over security concerns, further complicating efforts to restore stable economic engagement.

The decline in trade with Afghanistan has occurred within a broader slowdown in Pakistan’s regional export performance, even as imports from several neighboring countries have increased, widening the regional trade deficit.

Afghan officials have urged traders and pharmaceutical importers to seek alternative trade routes and diversify supply sources to prevent shortages in local markets. Authorities emphasized the need to reduce dependence on a single transit corridor and encouraged businesses to explore regional partnerships to maintain stable supplies of essential goods.

Pakistan Exports to Afghanistan Fall 59% to $228 Million Amid Trade Suspension
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UN Expert Warns of Deepening Women’s Health Crisis in Afghanistan

UN Special Rapporteur Richard Bennett says current restrictions have drastically limited Afghan women’s access to healthcare, further weakening an already fragile system.

Richard Bennett, the UN Special Rapporteur on human rights in Afghanistan, has warned that women and girls face severe restrictions in accessing healthcare since the Taliban’s return to power. The report highlights how bans on education, employment and freedom of movement have intensified the health crisis.

The findings are based on group discussions and individual interviews with 137 people across 29 provinces, 17 written submissions and survey data from over 8,000 women in 33 provinces. The report presents one of the most comprehensive recent assessments of women’s right to health in Afghanistan.

According to the report, the Taliban’s return has significantly curtailed women’s independent decision-making over their own bodies and medical needs. Without urgent international engagement, Afghanistan faces a deeply concerning trajectory in women’s public health.

It further notes that women’s healthcare is largely confined to maternal and reproductive issues, while chronic illnesses, mental health and preventive care remain neglected. Patriarchal norms and economic dependency often delay treatment until illnesses become critical.

Since regaining control in August 2021, the Taliban have imposed sweeping restrictions on women’s education, employment and mobility, drawing widespread international condemnation. Afghanistan remains one of the few countries where girls are barred from secondary and higher education.

Healthcare access is particularly limited in rural and remote areas, where long distances to clinics, lack of transport, high treatment costs and shortages of female medical staff pose serious barriers. Examination by male health workers is often considered inappropriate, further discouraging women from seeking care.

The report underscores that poverty, discrimination, disability, ethnicity, religion and lack of identification documents compound these challenges. The UN expert calls for immediate global action to safeguard Afghan women’s fundamental right to health and prevent further deterioration.

UN Expert Warns of Deepening Women’s Health Crisis in Afghanistan
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Fresh Clashes Erupt Between Pakistan Forces and Afghan Fighters in Khyber

Heavy fighting broke out Wednesday evening between Taliban forces and Pakistani border troops in Khyber, with both sides using heavy weapons.

Security sources said clashes resumed on Wednesday night in the Khyber border region, with exchanges of heavy gunfire continuing at multiple points. The fighting reportedly spread to the Zakhakhel market area.

Pakistani security officials confirmed simultaneous firing in several locations of Khyber district, bordering Nangarhar’s Momand Dara, Achin and Lalpur districts. Both sides are said to have deployed heavy weapons, escalating tensions along the volatile frontier.

Neither Pakistani authorities nor the Taliban have issued formal statements on the latest clashes. However, cross-border tensions have been mounting in recent days.

The renewed violence follows Pakistani airstrikes in eastern Afghanistan earlier this week, targeting what Islamabad described as militant hideouts. The Taliban condemned the strikes and warned of retaliation “at an appropriate time.”

On Tuesday, similar confrontations were reported in Nangarhar’s border areas. Pakistan accused Afghan Taliban forces of unprovoked firing along the frontier and said its troops responded effectively to what it termed “aggression.”

Islamabad has repeatedly alleged that militant groups operate from Afghanistan territory, a claim the Taliban deny. The deteriorating security situation has heightened fears of broader instability along the disputed Durand Line.

The latest escalation underscores fragile relations between Kabul and Islamabad, with both sides trading accusations amid rising military activity and deepening mistrust.

Fresh Clashes Erupt Between Pakistan Forces and Afghan Fighters in Khyber
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What’s behind the latest tension between Afghanistan and Pakistan?

By Reuters

ISLAMABAD, Feb 24 (Reuters) – Tensions have heated up again between Islamabad and Kabul this week after Pakistan launched airstrikes on militant targets in Afghanistan.
Pakistani security sources said the strike killed at least 70 terrorists, while the United Nations said at least 13 civilians were killed.
The attack threatens a fragile ceasefire following border clashes in October that killed dozens of soldiers, the worst fighting between the two countries since the Taliban took over Kabul in 2021.
WHY ARE THE NEIGHBOURS AT ODDS?
Pakistan welcomed the return to power of the Taliban in 2021, with then-Prime Minister Imran Khan saying that Afghans had “broken the shackles of slavery”.
But Islamabad soon found that the Taliban were not as cooperative as it had hoped.
Islamabad says that the leadership of militant group Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) and many of its fighters are based in Afghanistan, and that secular armed insurgents seeking independence for the southwestern province of Balochistan also use Afghanistan as a safe haven.
Militancy has increased every year since 2022 with attacks from the TTP and Baloch insurgents growing, according to Armed Conflict Location & Event Data, a global monitoring organization.
Kabul for its part has repeatedly denied allowing militants to use Afghan territory to launch attacks in Pakistan.
Even as the fragile ceasefire has held there have been repeated clashes and border closures that have disrupted trade and movement along the rugged frontier.

WHAT SPARKED SATURDAY’S OFFENSIVE?

The day before the strikes, Pakistani security sources said they had “irrefutable evidence” that militants were using Afghan soil to attack Pakistan.
The sources listed seven planned or successful attacks by militants since late 2024 that they said were connected to Afghanistan.
One attack last week that killed 11 security personnel and two civilians in Bajaur district was undertaken by an Afghan national, according to Pakistani security sources. This attack was claimed by the TTP.

WHO ARE THE PAKISTANI TALIBAN?

The TTP was formed in 2007 by several jihadist outfits active in northwest Pakistan. It is commonly known as the Pakistani Taliban.
The TTP has attacked markets, mosques, airports, military bases, police stations and also gained territory – mostly along the border with Afghanistan, but also deep inside Pakistan, including the Swat Valley, where they later shot schoolgirl Malala Yousafzai.
They also fought alongside the Afghan Taliban in Afghanistan and hosted Afghan fighters in Pakistan. Pakistan has launched military operations against the TTP on its own soil with limited success, although an offensive that ended in 2016 drastically reduced attacks till a few years ago.

WHAT HAPPENS NEXT?

After the attack, the Taliban warned “an appropriate and measured response will be taken at a suitable time.”
Analysts say this is likely to come in the way of cross-border action. Two attacks targeted security forces in northwest Pakistan in the days after Pakistan’s airstrikes.
On paper, there is a wide mismatch between the two sides. At 172,000, the Taliban have less than a third of Pakistan’s personnel.
Though the Taliban do possess at least six aircraft and 23 helicopters, their condition is unknown and they have no fighter jets or effective air force.
Pakistan’s armed forces include more than 600,000 active personnel, have more than 6,000 armoured fighting vehicles and more than 400 combat aircraft, according to 2025 data from the International Institute for Strategic Studies. The country is also nuclear armed.

Reporting by Lucy Craymer in Islamabad and Saad Sayeed in Bangkok; Editing by Aidan Lewis

What’s behind the latest tension between Afghanistan and Pakistan?
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Nearly 2.9 Million Afghans Returned in 2025, UNHCR Reports

According to the organization’s statistics, nearly 2.9 million Afghans returned to the country during that year.

The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), in its latest report, stated that 2025 was marked by the large-scale return of Afghans from neighboring countries.

According to the organization’s statistics, nearly 2.9 million Afghans returned to the country during that year. Close to half of these returns were forced. Among them, 1.9 million individuals were deported from Iran, 1 million from Pakistan, and 1,953 from Tajikistan.

The report further states that these returns were often accompanied by detention and violations of human rights. Many returnees entered Afghanistan under pressure, following sudden displacement from their places of residence and after enduring difficult journeys.

Return figures from neighboring countries in 2025, as cited in the report:

Iran: 1.9 million people

  • 54% undocumented
  • 46% holders of census registration slips
  • 49% women and girls
  • 57% children

Pakistan: 1 million people

  • 44% holders of Proof of Registration (PoR) cards
  • 2% asylum seekers
  • 54% undocumented
  • 45% women and children
  • 21% unaccompanied children

Faramarz Barzin, spokesperson for the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, said: “The return process was often marked by sudden deportations, which did not even give individuals the opportunity to gather their belongings. Many were forced to leave behind their assets and were even separated from family members. These issues increased protection and legal risks during return and placed additional pressure on reception and reintegration capacities in areas of return.”

At the same time, families recently returned from Pakistan, particularly women who are heads of households have expressed their concerns and demands.

Zainab, deported from Pakistan, said: “We neither have the ability to return to our home province nor can we afford transportation costs. We want land to be allocated to us so that we can live.”

Another deportee from Pakistan stated: “We borrowed money to pay for the vehicle fare to come here. They should find jobs for our children and provide us with housing.”

The United Nations Assistance Mission has also reported that over the past two years, nearly 5 million people approximately 10 percent of the country’s total population have returned to Afghanistan as a result of forced deportations and strict migration restrictions imposed by neighboring countries.

Although the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan has assured that it is prepared to address the needs of returnees, it has repeatedly called on host countries, particularly Pakistan and Iran to prevent the forced deportation of Afghan migrants.

Nearly 2.9 Million Afghans Returned in 2025, UNHCR Reports
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Millions in Afghanistan Face Hunger as Ramadan Begins, WFP Says

The World Food Programme (WFP) says millions of people in Afghanistan are beginning the holy month of Ramadan facing severe hunger and deep economic hardship.

In a statement issued Tuesday, Febraury 24, the agency stressed that it is working with partners to help provide essential food supplies to struggling families across the country.

WFP said that in a country where 17 million people are experiencing acute food insecurity, Ramadan traditionally a time of reflection and generosity brings additional pressure for vulnerable households.

The agency noted that many Afghans are entering the holy month without reliable income after years of economic crisis, drought, and limited access to basic services.

The organization added that children, as well as pregnant and breastfeeding women, considered the most vulnerable groups are receiving specialized and nutritious food assistance.

However, WFP warned that these critical programs are now at risk due to funding shortfalls, threatening millions of Afghans who depend heavily on life-saving aid.

Various UN agencies have cautioned that at least 17 million people in Afghanistan require urgent humanitarian assistance to survive worsening economic and social conditions.

Ramadan arrives as food prices continue to rise across the country, compounding existing hardships and increasing the urgency for sustained international support.

Millions in Afghanistan Face Hunger as Ramadan Begins, WFP Says
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They Fought for the C.I.A. in Afghanistan. In America, They’re Living in Fear.

By Matthieu Aikins and Wesley Morgan

The New York Times

Feb. 23, 2026

A shooting in Washington, D.C., threw their immigration status into jeopardy — and brought attention to a long-hidden dimension of America’s war.

Portraying them as sources of crime and terrorism, Trump and his officials have blamed the Biden administration for bringing a total of nearly 200,000 Afghans to the United States without, they claim, proper vetting. A longtime C.I.A. asset like Lakanwal was no exception. “The individual — and so many others — should have never been allowed to come here,” John Ratcliffe, the C.I.A. director, said in a statement the day after the shooting.

In fact, it was the C.I.A. that had brought Lakanwal and the rest of the Zero Units to the United States; Ratcliffe’s comments stunned many Americans who served alongside them. The Zero Units were a classified C.I.A. counterterrorism program, what was known as a surrogate force, armed, paid and controlled by the United States. While the C.I.A. has established other surrogate forces since the Sept. 11 attacks, including units in Iraq and Somalia, the Afghan program was the biggest. Their evacuation was regarded by many within the C.I.A. as fulfilling a debt of honor.

Three weeks after the shooting, Iqbal sat with several other former Zero Unit soldiers at a makeshift Afghan community center in El Cajon, trying to make sense of what the brutal act of violence would mean for them. Lakanwal had been part of an elite reconnaissance team, tasked with surveillance and plainclothes work.

The Zero Units had prided themselves on discipline and their loyalty to their American advisers. What could have made one of their own betray both his adopted country and his fellow soldiers? Lakanwal was accused of shooting the two soldiers in Washington at close range near a subway station; only one survived. Lakanwal, they speculated, must have been unable to adjust and suffered a mental breakdown. One of the men, who asked not to be identified because of his pending immigration claim, described what he heard about Lakanwal’s situation: “He didn’t have any work. He was still in his house. He was very upset.”

The Zero Unit soldiers had been evacuated in the name of saving them from the new Taliban government. But their salvation was tenuous. Most had been granted temporary status, and efforts to help them permanently immigrate had failed in Congress. “Everybody already knew what was happening with immigration and the new administration,” Iqbal said. “And now beyond that, you get this trouble.”

Even as the C.I.A.’s recent paramilitary operations in Venezuela have attracted public scrutiny, the extent of its wartime role in Afghanistan has yet to be fully understood. Although intended as a covert program, the Zero Units expanded into a sophisticated standing army controlled by the C.I.A., its allegiance well known to both the Afghan government and its insurgent foes. Although the units were dogged by allegations of abuses and labeled by some critics as death squads, U.S. commanders came to consider them their most effective and trustworthy local assets. As the Afghan Army and police faltered, they came to play a key role in the war in Afghanistan, including during Trump’s first term.

But public understanding of who the Zero Units were, and how they ended up in the United States, has been impeded by the C.I.A.’s habitual secrecy, even about programs that have operated in plain sight for years. “I’m scared to talk, to be honest,” Iqbal said. But he believed that the story of the Zero Units deserved to be told.

‘We Trusted Them Completely’

Iqbal first heard about the C.I.A.’s mysterious commando units as a boy living in the mountains of eastern Afghanistan, along the border with Pakistan. The steep and heavily forested valleys there had long offered a base of operations for militants, including Al Qaeda. When the C.I.A. established its own outpost, Falcon Base, there in 2006, it recruited Afghans, including several of Iqbal’s relatives, through a local warlord.

The secrecy that surrounded the C.I.A.’s growing army was driven in no small part by bureaucratic imperatives. The 2001 invasion of Afghanistan was led by small teams of Special Forces and C.I.A. operatives working with existing militias from the Northern Alliance, which had been at war with the Taliban regime for years. The Pentagon faced legal restrictions on paying foreign fighters, but not the C.I.A., which was legally permitted to hand out cases full of U.S. cash to local warlords. In the months and years that followed, the C.I.A. hired Afghan fighters directly into what it called Counterterrorism Pursuit Teams — the teams that would later come to be known as the Zero Units.

Because it was authorized as a covert intelligence program, the Counterterrorism Pursuit Teams were cloaked by the fiction that they were run by independent Afghans who were only advised and assisted by Americans. Beyond providing the U.S. government deniability, this cover story also prevented embarrassment to the Afghan government over the presence of a foreign-controlled force within its own borders.

But there was little doubt on the ground about who was in charge of the Afghan fighters. “The way they were recruited, they were brought in locally, through word of mouth,” said Marc Polymeropoulos, a former C.I.A. base chief in Afghanistan. If any of the recruits underperformed or misbehaved, the C.I.A. could fire not only them but also the people who recommended them. The C.I.A. paramilitaries who ran the program — most of them veterans of the military’s elite Special Operations units who joined the spy agency as officers and contractors — called themselves advisers, but they trained their recruits, commanded them on missions and fought alongside them in battle. In addition to an unknown number of Afghans, at least nine C.I.A. officers and contractors died in combat with the teams.

One of the first to join the new teams was Mohammad Wali Tasleem, who was hired in 2002 when the agency asked several Northern Alliance commanders, including Tasleem’s uncle, to send recruits. Tasleem started out guarding C.I.A. officers as they moved around the country, but over time he was trained to conduct raids, clandestine surveillance operations and snatch-and-grab missions. “Just pick up the guys and run — no one would know,” said Tasleem, who emigrated to the United States in 2015, part of a trickle of unit members who obtained visas over the course of the war, before the Afghan government’s collapse.

The first C.I.A. teams worked out of what they called Eagle Base, located in a former brick factory northeast of Kabul International Airport, but other outposts spread around the country as the agency expanded its counterterrorism operations. Because the units operated under C.I.A. authority, they could carry out covert cross-border missions in Pakistan, but most of their work focused on fighting militants within Afghanistan, a role that expanded along with the U.S. presence.

At the peak of the U.S. war, the C.I.A. maintained Counterterrorism Pursuit Teams at seven paramilitary bases, each one made up of several hundred soldiers, as well as a larger unit of thousands of soldiers in Khost Province that maintained checkpoints along the border. With striking unit names — Tigers, Vipers, Mustangs — and distinctive Vietnam-style tiger-stripe uniforms, the ostensibly covert program was well known to locals. As the units came to resemble a light infantry force, they were increasingly drawn into combat missions that blurred the line between intelligence and military operations.

U.S. military leaders embraced the C.I.A.’s paramilitary force. Under the Omega program, the Joint Special Operations Command sent its own teams out with the units, typically from the Navy’s SEAL Team 6 and Army Rangers. The Omega teams brought with them access to the military’s air power and the ability to send detainees to U.S. military prisons. “We trusted them completely,” said John Burnham, a retired SEAL officer who oversaw the Omega teams and other JSOC forces in Afghanistan in 2008 and 2009. “They were tactically sound, well trained, and they had a feel for the local terrain that was essential.”

As time went on, the Afghan government chafed at the units’ total independence, and officials in Kabul began to complain about civilian casualties caused by units operating without their knowledge. In June 2009, the unit in the southern province of Kandahar clashed with the local police over the arrest of one of its members, resulting in a gun battle that killed 10 Afghan officials, including the provincial police chief. Furious, President Hamid Karzai demanded their arrest, and 41 soldiers from the unit were imprisoned.

The incident spurred the C.I.A. to integrate the program with the Afghan intelligence service, the N.D.S., which registered their men and weapons and assigned the units new names based on the Afghan codes for each province: Zero One was Kabul, Zero Two was Nangarhar, Zero Three was Kandahar and so on. Afghan officials soon began referring to them as qeteh-ye sefrdar, the Zero Units, the name by which they would eventually become known to the public.

The Zero Units were now formally part of the Afghan government, but they continued to be paid and commanded by their C.I.A. advisers. As the war entered its second decade and the United States began drawing down its military presence, the C.I.A. closed some bases and disbanded some of the Zero Units. But it kept the forces along the border and in cities like Kabul and Kandahar in place. A senior retired C.I.A. officer who was involved with the program put the reason for it bluntly: “We were forced to remain in place to keep the country from collapsing.”

‘There Was Never a Plan’

Iqbal joined the Zero Units in 2017, at a pivotal moment for the war in Afghanistan. Trump, who campaigned on a promise to quickly bring all of the American troops home, had been persuaded by his military commanders to begin a surge in hopes of bringing the Taliban back to the negotiating table. But the additional 4,000 soldiers were only a small fraction of those sent during his predecessor’s own surge, and U.S. and Afghan leaders leaned on special-operations forces like the Zero Units to execute Trump’s offensive. Iqbal, who had recently lost his job working as a military interpreter, was recruited to Zero Three, where several relatives also worked.

The unit operated out of Gecko Base, a U.S. compound at the bottom of a jagged spine of rock on the outskirts of Kandahar City that had once been home to the Taliban’s leader, Mullah Omar. Zero Three had its own section of the base, with a firing range, barracks, a meal hall and a landing pad for the Mi-17 helicopters that the C.I.A. used in Afghanistan. The Americans and the Afghans lived in separate parts of the compound but ate and trained together, sometimes running up the mountainside for exercise. Each month, Zero Three’s soldiers received $500 in cash from the Americans, roughly double what Afghan Army troops earned, in addition to a token salary, the equivalent of $8, from the Afghan intelligence service.

Iqbal at first worked as an interpreter in the intelligence section, which ran human sources in Kandahar and put together target packages for raids. He quickly clashed with his Afghan boss over what he said were sloppy practices that led to people being targeted based on weak intelligence, he said. But the C.I.A. advisers, appreciating his independence, promoted him to deputy and then head of the section.

Earlier in the war, Zero Three had focused on Qaeda operatives and other high-value targets, but now they hunted low-level insurgents in the rural districts surrounding Kandahar City, rolling out in drab-painted pickups or flying in Mi-17 helicopters operated by the C.I.A. In Kabul and Nangarhar, the Zero One and Zero Two units maintained an equally high tempo, hitting targets almost nightly in the provinces surrounding the capital city.

As the Zero Units took on a larger role in the war, they drew increasing scrutiny. Although the Afghan intelligence forces — which largely consisted of the Zero Units — were tiny in size compared with hundreds of thousands of army and police force members, the United Nations reported in 2018 that they were responsible for a majority of civilian casualties during government raids. The nature of combat in Afghanistan, which often took place inside homes and villages, meant that some civilian casualties were inevitable, but human rights groups and journalists accused the Zero Units of indiscriminate killings and summary executions.

Over the course of the war, the C.I.A. repeatedly denied such allegations, calling them Taliban propaganda. Some of the Zero Units’ former C.I.A. advisers say now that given the degree of U.S. supervision of their operations, it would have been impossible for the Afghans to carry out widespread abuses. “They weren’t perfect,” said a former paramilitary operative with the C.I.A., who like others who served with the units requested anonymity to discuss intelligence operations. “Neither were many American units. But the allegations of human rights violations are, in my experience, unfounded. It would’ve required more than complicity from advisers. It would’ve required direction. They followed our orders.”

But other former members of the Zero Units, the U.S. military and the C.I.A. described potentially illegal killings that were tacitly condoned, ordered or even carried out by American advisers, in the name of preventing militants from returning to the battlefield.

In this respect, far from being a renegade Afghan force, the Zero Units faced similar dynamics as other units within the U.S.-led special-operations campaign, which as time went on placed an increasing emphasis on killing rather than capturing those they suspected of being militants. It is, of course, legal to target opponents on the battlefield, but during the war in Afghanistan, aggressive raids in enemy-held terrain in some cases escalated to the killing of unarmed men who posed no immediate threat. In Britain and Australia, government inquiries have unearthed evidence of summary executions of captives, a war crime, and subsequent cover-ups by their nations’ special-operations units, and U.S. forces have faced similar allegations. Such practices, which were often concealed from higher command, were driven by frustrations with so-called catch-and-release detention, as well as the murkiness of an irregular war that blurred the distinction between combatant and civilian, one in which insurgent groups like the Taliban were also accused of committing extensive abuses.

One Special Operations veteran who served on the Omega teams said he’d been on multiple Zero Unit missions in which unarmed captives were shot. “We’d hear: ‘This guy is a bomb maker who keeps killing U.S. troops. He isn’t going to resist. He’s just going to surrender, but he’s just going to be released.’ So an adviser would tell a couple of guys to stay back and then kill him,” he said. Afterward, he said, photographs of the bodies would be taken with guns planted on them.

The executions would take place after most of the raid force left the target, to limit the number of people with direct knowledge. “I’ve seen it happen both ways, where a couple of Americans stayed behind and did it and where Afghans were told to do it. They were doing it willingly, but on an American’s instructions,” the former Omega team member said.

A former JSOC officer described an incident he witnessed while watching an aerial video feed of a Zero Unit convoy traveling through eastern Afghanistan in 2019. A group of Afghan soldiers dismounted and detained a man who had been watching their trucks go past, he said. Then a taller man from the convoy walked over and shot the prisoner. The footage was infrared, and there wasn’t enough detail to be sure whether the man was an Afghan or an American. But the officer said that he and others who watched the video with him believed that it was one of the C.I.A. advisers. “We taught these guys,” he said. “They shoot like us. They move like us. So I can’t be sure, but I thought it was an American because of his size. I watched someone be straight-up executed, a detainee, two in the chest and one in the head with a pistol.”

According to the officer, a formal military investigation was initiated and eventually turned over to the C.I.A. inspector general’s office. A spokeswoman for the U.S. military’s Special Operations Command declined to comment. Liz Lyons, the director of public affairs for the C.I.A., declined to comment on specific allegations but strongly rejected as baseless any claim that C.I.A. personnel were involved in extrajudicial killings: “C.I.A. takes adherence to the law and the protection of civilian life extremely seriously.”

Other C.I.A. and Zero Unit veterans were adamant that they never participated in illegal killings and that any such allegations, if true, represented isolated incidents. Iqbal said he never witnessed any while he was with Zero Three; as a leader, he said, he didn’t permit them.

In early 2020, Iqbal was promoted to deputy commander of Zero Three just as the Trump administration was finalizing the Doha Accords with the Taliban, promising the withdrawal of all U.S. troops in 2021. Within the C.I.A., there was a widespread perception that Trump had signed the Afghan government’s death warrant. “We all knew,” said the senior retired C.I.A. officer who was involved with the Counterterrorism Pursuit Team program. “Nobody believed the government would survive.

In Kandahar, Zero Three’s C.I.A. advisers stopped joining it on missions, Iqbal said, severely limiting its access to U.S. air support and medical evacuation, and foreshadowing the difficult battle it would face after the withdrawal. “It was very hard to convince my men we are capable,” Iqbal said. Many Afghan army and police units were facing waves of desertions. But Iqbal rallied Zero Three, arguing that it was their chance to counter their enemies’ claim that they were just mercenaries for the Americans.

As the deadline for the U.S. withdrawal approached, the C.I.A. had decided that only a small group of Zero Unit soldiers — the high-profile commanders who were most at risk and those who were privy to intelligence information — were to be urgently resettled in the United States. The rest of the C.I.A.’s Afghan proxies would be given a choice: Either stay and fight by joining the Afghan intelligence service’s own special forces, which the C.I.A. would continue financially support, or accept a generous cash payout.

“There was never a plan to bring them all to America,” the senior retired C.I.A. officer said. He said the sentiment among many advisers was that resettling thousands of them in the United States was a bad idea. The cultural gap was too vast, and many of the soldiers had little education or experience with anything besides warfare. “The paramilitary guys I talked to were like, ‘I trust these guys with my life here, but I wouldn’t want them as my neighbor in the U.S.’”

‘We’re Not Leaving These Guys’

The chaos of the U.S. pullout would scramble that plan. After Joe Biden took office in 2021, he and his advisers felt that there was no choice but to continue with the withdrawal that Trump had negotiated. Biden announced that U.S. troops would be out by Sept. 11, but the U.S. military rushed to pull out even faster. Without foreign advisers and contractors, the Afghan police and army began to crumble. Around the country, districts and cities fell to the Taliban’s relentless march.

As Kandahar City fell under siege, the C.I.A. pulled out of Gecko Base, leaving Iqbal, who had recently been promoted to overall commander of Zero Three, to lead a last-ditch defense. On Aug. 12, the governor and army and police commanders surrendered to the Taliban, and it was clear that all was lost. Iqbal and his men retreated to Kandahar Airfield to seek whatever transport they could to Kabul.

When they arrived at the airfield, they found a desperate scene, with members of the police and army searching for hiding places as Taliban forces gathered outside the perimeter. The Taliban had given Iqbal a midnight deadline to surrender himself and his unit, with no guarantee that they wouldn’t be executed. Iqbal prepared to die. But before the airfield was finally overrun, a pair of transport planes landed on the tarmac. The C.I.A. had come to the rescue. Over three tense nights, Iqbal and the rest of Zero Three were flown to Kabul. Exhausted, Iqbal called a U.S. veteran he’d stayed friends with from his days as an Army interpreter in Kunar. “God has given us all another life,” he said.

The speed of the fall, it turned out, had upended the political calculus in Washington, where many were overcome with guilt and horror at the calamitous way the war was coming to an end. Suddenly, there was broad bipartisan support to evacuate Afghans who, because of their work for the United States, would face retribution from the Taliban. C.I.A. leadership decided to pull out all the Zero Units. “They were target No. 1 for the Taliban,” a former senior intelligence official said. “We’re not leaving these guys to get slaughtered by the people they’ve been fighting against for America.”

Zero Three had escaped to Kabul, but the Taliban were closing in on the capital, too. The other Zero Units in Nangarhar, Orgun and Khost raced to the capital by road, in some cases striking bargains with the Taliban for safe passage. Weary and demoralized, the secret army, some 10,000 men in total, converged on Eagle Base, the C.I.A.’s remaining stronghold on the edge of Kabul. The sheer speed of the insurgents’ advance had caught everyone by surprise.

On Aug. 15, three days after the fall of Kandahar, the Taliban reached Kabul. The capital’s defenders panicked. President Ashraf Ghani and his entourage fled by helicopter to Uzbekistan; soldiers and police officers threw down their weapons and uniforms and melted away. As darkness fell, thousands of desperate Afghans stormed Kabul International Airport, where the first C-17 transports had begun to ferry people out. A U.S. force led by the Marine Corps was supposed to secure the runway, but at that point only 350 Marines had landed. The crowds surged onto the tarmac as the Marines fell back; as dawn broke, desperate Afghans clung to the landing gear of a C-17 as it took off, falling to their deaths.

The evacuation ground to a halt. Thousands of U.S. and other allied nationals were still trapped in the capital. U.S. military commanders realized that there was only one force that could get rid of the crowds: the Zero Units. “It was a conversation on the ground between the agency and the military,” the former senior intelligence official said. “They were trying to clear what was an out-of-control situation.”

The C.I.A. and the military quickly drew up a plan. The Marines would hold the northern end of the airfield; the Taliban, meanwhile, had secured the civilian terminal in the south. Between these two blocking forces, the Zero Units would do the ugly work of evicting unarmed men, women and children from the runways.

On the evening of Aug. 16, a convoy of more than 1,000 Zero Unit soldiers rolled out from Eagle Base. Arriving at the northwest side of the airport, they breached the perimeter wall and descended onto the crowd milling around the tarmac.

Among them was a combat interpreter with Nangarhar’s Zero Two unit who asked to be identified as Musa, his code name in the unit, out of concern that the Taliban would target his family in Afghanistan. “It was chaos,” Musa said. “The Marines who arrived, they were brand-new. They had no experience about Afghanistan.”

Some of the Marines were horrified by what they saw: Zero Units ramming their vehicles through crowds, firing live ammunition and beating people back with sticks. “The Afghans are firing rounds in the air, at people’s feet or at people to crowd control,” a Marine officer recounted in a military investigation into an ISIS suicide bombing that took place during the evacuation. Some Marine officers would later publicly claim, in the documentary “Escape From Kabul,” to have seen the Zero Units executing and running over unarmed civilians. The Marine Corps did not respond to a request for comment, and U.S. Central Command declined to comment. Zero Unit veterans pushed back on claims that they harmed civilians. “I didn’t see anything like that,” Musa said. “Yes, Zero Unit soldiers opened fire, but it was to scare the people. We fired in the air over them.”

By daybreak, the airfield was clear, and flights could resume. Over the next two weeks, the Zero Units and their C.I.A. advisers secured part of the airport perimeter, allowing many of them to bring out their immediate family members — more than 20,000 relatives, along with the 10,000 Zero Unit members. As the soldiers waited on the tarmac to board planes, the agency handed them their final payment in bundles of U.S. dollars.

No longer set apart by their tiger-stripe fatigues, the Zero Unit veterans were part of a wave of Afghan evacuees facing uncertain futures in exile. The United States granted them “humanitarian parole” — a temporary immigration status — and they scattered around the country. Some never saw their C.I.A. advisers again; others were helped by networks of veterans. Iqbal made his way to El Cajon by way of Seattle; Musa went to Texas, then landed in Virginia.

‘I See Them Like American Veterans’

In January, Musa was stocking the shelves at a halal market he runs in a town in Virginia where many Afghans have settled. The market, which bakes fresh naan twice a day, has become a gathering spot for his fellow Zero Unit veterans. That day, a group had bought a goat for a feast celebrating one veteran’s upcoming move to Nebraska. Another Zero Two veteran, a bomb-disposal specialist, proudly showed off his newly issued green card.

Permanent legal status, Musa said, was essential for Zero Unit veterans seeking to overcome the hurdles of culture shock and wartime trauma and integrate into American society. Without proper legal status, they were unable to work. When Musa lived in Texas, he saw jobless Zero Unit veterans living on the streets. “You will see a lot more of them become homeless in the near future because the administration has paused everything,” he said.

Faced with bureaucratic delays and inaction by Congress in providing immigration visas, many of the Zero Unit soldiers are now seeking asylum — in theory, an even more arduous bureaucratic path — on the grounds that if they were sent back to Afghanistan, they would face retribution from the Taliban they once fought. And indeed, when Trump began his second term, his administration worked to clear roughly two-thirds of the remaining 3,000 outstanding Zero Unit immigration cases, including that of Lakanwal, the shooting suspect. Since that attack, however, all asylum and special immigrant visa cases in the United States have been put on hold, including those of the remaining 1,000 Zero Unit veterans.

As part of their crackdown on asylum seekers, government officials have taken aim at Afghan evacuees. At a congressional hearing on Dec. 11, Joe Kent, a former C.I.A. paramilitary operative who is now the head of the National Counterterrorism Center, said that migrants who entered under the Biden administration, like Lakanwal, were “probably the top terrorist threat.” He dismissed the idea that their C.I.A. vetting should set a standard for clearance to enter the United States. Lakanwal “was vetted to serve as a soldier in Afghanistan,” Kent said. “The Biden administration essentially used his tactical-level vetting as a ruse to bring him here and to bring him into our communities.”

Apart from Lakanwal, several of the C.I.A.’s Afghan allies have been the focus of domestic terrorism cases. In 2024, Nasir Tawhedi, a former security guard, was arrested and charged with plotting an Election Day attack on behalf of ISIS; he pleaded guilty. In December, Mohammad Alokozay, another Zero Three veteran, was charged with making bomb threats in Fort Worth — an incident that his former teammates say was blown out of proportion from comments made during a heated online argument. That same month, ICE arrested Jan Shah Safi, a former Afghan intelligence officer, and claimed that he’d been involved in supporting terrorism in Afghanistan, releasing a statement that his case “marks the third arrest of an Afghan national terrorist released into the country by the Biden administration in less than a week” — without mentioning that all three had worked with the C.I.A.

The crackdown on asylum seekers has led one arm of the national-security state to turn on another. U.S. asylum law bars applicants involved in serious crimes and, according to people familiar with the proceedings of Zero Unit veterans in ICE detention, the government has brought up the same human rights reports that the C.I.A. has dismissed as the results of Taliban propaganda. “Those who meaningfully assisted U.S. troops and do not pose a threat to the homeland will still qualify for immigration benefits, but those who have no basis to be here and pose a risk to the American people will be removed,” said Tricia McLaughlin, a spokeswoman for the Department of Homeland Security.

Former Zero Unit members and their supporters argue that a few isolated cases of violence don’t represent a vast majority who simply want to settle their families and move on with their lives. “I see them like American veterans,” the former paramilitary operative said. “Last year, we had an Army veteran run through a bunch of people in New Orleans with his car and a Marine veteran shoot up a church in Michigan. It’s horrible, but we don’t then paint the whole Army or whole Marine Corps with that brush.”

The Zero Units, like other migrants in the United States, live with a daily fear of detention and deportation. At his market, Musa pulled out his phone to share a Spanish-language TikTok video, posted the day before, that appeared to show ICE vehicles outside a nearby Costco. Another Zero Unit veteran, Musa explained, had called him in the middle of the night after watching the video, asking what would happen to them. Would ICE raid their homes?

Their history, for better or worse, was their only protection. The Zero Unit veterans “are in a tough position, and I wish the U.S. government would help them tell their story,” said Burnham, the retired Special Operations commander. “I understand the impulse for secrecy, but I think it would be more valuable to have these guys talking about what they did.”

For now, some veterans of the Zero Units — men who fought for years in America’s longest war — fear leaving their homes in the country that once employed them. “They can’t sleep,” Musa said of his former comrades in arms. One of them hung an old photo of himself in Zero Unit tiger stripes on his wall, Musa said, “so that if there’s an immigration raid, they’ll see that he fought for us.”

Matthieu Aikins is a contributing writer for the magazine and a fellow at Type Media Center. His work for The Times has won two Pulitzer Prizes. Wesley Morgan is the author of “The Hardest Place: The American Military Adrift in Afghanistan’s Pech Valley.”

They Fought for the C.I.A. in Afghanistan. In America, They’re Living in Fear.
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At least 13 civilians killed in Pakistani airstrikes in Afghanistan, UN says

Arpan Rai

The Independent

Taliban claim airstrikes by Pakistan’s military killed ‘innocent women and children’

The United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (Unama) said it has “credible reports” that overnight Pakistani attacks targeted civilian areas in the Behsud and Khogyani districts of Nangarhar province in the country’s eastern region, killing and injuring 20 civilians.

Pakistan and Afghanistan are once again facing a major military confrontation with fears of disruption of a fragile ceasefire along their 2,600km-border.

Over the weekend, Afghanistan’s education ministry said five boys and three girls were killed in the Pakistani airstrikes on Behsud in Nangarhar province. One more student of madrasa was also injured in Barmal in Paktika province, the ministry said.

It also added that dozens of other civilians were killed or wounded and educational centres destroyed.

While the Taliban’s top officials have accused Pakistan of sowing instability in the region, Pakistan’s information ministry said the airstrikes were in retaliation to recent suicide attacks on Islamabad during Ramadan. The Pakistani government has accused militants operating from Afghanistan’s territory of carrying out the attack.

Pakistan’s information ministry in a post on X said the “intelligence-based” operation struck seven camps of the Pakistani Taliban (TTP) and Islamic State Khorasan Province (ISKP) and that it had “conclusive evidence” the militant assaults on Pakistan were directed by “Afghanistan-based leadership and handlers”.

The air raids in the Nangarhar and Paktika provinces killed at least “80 militants in intelligence-based air strikes along the Pakistan-Afghanistan border targeting seven camps”, the Pakistan authorities have claimed.

In response, Zabiullah Mujahid, the Taliban’s chief spokesperson vowed retaliation, claiming that the attack from Pakistan’s military has killed “innocent women and children”. The Taliban will hit back at Pakistan’s military targets and not civilians, Mr Mujahid said.

Mr Mujahid said a specific circle within Pakistan was acting at the direction of the superpowers and looking to create instability in the region, reported Tolo news.

Pakistan’s government has a mission not only to destabilise Afghanistan, but the entire region, the Taliban spokesperson said.

The Taliban-run government in Kabul has repeatedly denied the presence of militants to use Afghan territory to launch attacks in Pakistan.

On Tuesday, the Taliban’s acting foreign minister Amir Khan Muttaqi took the military escalation issue to the UN as he spoke with the UN under-secretary general for political affairs Rosemary DiCarlo, calling Pakistan’s accusations “baseless”.

“He expressed deep concern and noted that in the past four years, only civilians have been targeted in such repeated attacks by Pakistan. Also, no militants have ever been killed in these attacks, which the Pakistani side claims to have targeted,” the Taliban’s foreign affairs ministry said, sharing the details of the telephonic exchange between the two.

Mr Muttaqi has assured the UN official that there are no armed groups in Afghanistan and invited all diplomatic corps to visit the site targeted by Pakistan in the latest attack.

The Afghan foreign ministry has also summoned Pakistan’s ambassador.

The strikes come just days after Kabul released three Pakistani soldiers in a Saudi-mediated exchange in signs of improving ties between the two countries.

Afghanistan’s defence ministry condemned the strikes and called them a violation of sovereignty and international law, saying an “appropriate and measured response will be taken at a suitable time”.

At least 13 civilians killed in Pakistani airstrikes in Afghanistan, UN says
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New Afghan, Pakistani border clashes follow deadly strikes

Al Jazeera
By AFP and Reuters

Afghan and Pakistani forces engaged in new clashes along their troubled border region, days after deadly air strikes on Afghanistan by Pakistan sent tensions soaring.

The two countries gave competing accounts of the violence on Tuesday, each accusing the other of triggering it.

Zabihullah Noorani, head of the Afghan information department in the eastern Nangarhar Province, said Pakistani forces carried out the first shots in the Shahkot area near the border. The fighting has ⁠since stopped, and there are no Afghan casualties, he added.

Pakistani government official Mosharraf Zaidi accused Afghan forces of firing unprovoked near the Torkham border area.

“Pakistan’s security forces responded immediately and effectively silencing the Taliban aggression,” Zaidi wrote in a post on X.

The fighting follows Pakistani strikes on Afghanistan’s Nangarhar and Paktika Provinces on Sunday, which the UN mission in Afghanistan said killed at least 13 civilians.

Afghanistan’s Taliban government said at least 18 people were killed and denied Pakistan’s announcement that the military operation killed more than 80 fighters.

Relations between the neighbours have plunged in recent months, with land border crossings largely shut since deadly fighting in October that killed more than 70 people on both sides.

Islamabad accuses Afghanistan of failing to act against armed groups that carry out attacks in Pakistan, which the Taliban government denies.

Pakistan’s military claimed its latest air strikes in Afghanistan targeted “camps and hideouts” belonging to armed groups behind a spate of recent attacks, including a deadly suicide bombing at a Shia mosque in Islamabad.

The Afghan Defence Ministry condemned the attacks, saying they “hit a religious school and residential homes”, causing “dozens of deaths and injuries, including women and children”.

“We hold the Pakistani military responsible for targeting civilians and religious sites. We will respond to these attacks in due course with a measured and appropriate response,” said the ministry.

New Afghan, Pakistani border clashes follow deadly strikes
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