Skip to main content
Open this photo in gallery:

A U.S. soldier of a team protection squad of a Provincial Reconstruction team walks along a road under-construction near Bagram, about 60 kms from Kabul on January 11, 2010.JOEL SAGET/AFP/Getty Images

The Taliban entered two provincial capitals in northern Afghanistan on Sunday, local officials said, the culmination of an insurgent offensive that has overrun dozens of rural districts and forced the surrender and capture of hundreds of government forces and their military equipment in recent weeks.

In Kunduz, the capital of the province of the same name, the Taliban seized the city’s entrance before dispersing throughout its neighbourhoods. Kunduz was briefly taken by the Taliban in 2015 and 2016 before they were pushed back by U.S. air strikes, special operations forces and Afghan security forces.

“Right now, I hear the sound of bullets,” said Amruddin Wali, a member of Kunduz’s provincial council. “The Taliban have appeared in the alleys and back alleys of Kunduz, and there is panic all over the city.”

The setbacks come at a harrowing moment for Afghanistan. U.S. and international troops – now mostly based in Kabul, the national capital, and at Bagram Airfield, are set to leave the country in weeks after President Joe Biden’s announcement in April to end the U.S. war in the country by Sept. 11.

To the west of Kunduz in Maimana, the capital of Faryab province, Taliban fighters appeared at the city’s entrance before moving into the city’s periphery. The Taliban clashed with security forces into Sunday night, after a series of takeovers in past days in the capital’s surrounding districts. In one such recent battle, the Taliban killed more than 20 of the government’s most elite forces. In another, dozens of government troops surrendered together after running low on ammunition.

The looming U.S. withdrawal means Afghan troops will be left without the kind of combat support that has stopped such Taliban offensives in the past.

“If reinforcements come from Kabul, and aircraft support the security forces, the Taliban cannot enter the city,” said Sebghatullah Selab, deputy of Faryab’s provincial capital. There was also fighting Sunday near the entrance of Taloqan, the capital of Takhar, a province that neighbours Kunduz.

U.S. air support in past weeks has been significantly reduced because of restrictive rules of engagement, and many U.S. military aircraft are now based outside Afghanistan. Afghan air power is struggling to make up the difference.

On Friday, Afghan President Ashraf Ghani is to meet Mr. Biden at the White House to discuss the U.S. troop withdrawal.

Biden to meet with Afghan President Ashraf Ghani as violence surges

Afghan ceasefire ends amid calls for fresh peace talks

In the past 24 hours, around a dozen districts have fallen to the Taliban – mostly in the country’s north. Since May 1, when U.S. forces officially began their withdrawal from the country, the Taliban – through local mediation, military offensives and government retreats – have taken more than 50 districts, according to data collected by The New York Times.

Only a small number of districts have been retaken by government forces as the defeats have forced Afghan commanders to consider what territory they can hold after the American departure.

But Rohullah Ahmadzai, a Defence Ministry spokesperson, told Al-Jazeera on Saturday, “There is a new, robust and effective plan to retake areas from which we have pulled back our forces.”

There are roughly 400 districts in the country, many of which have been contested and controlled by the Taliban for some time. But before the U.S. withdrawal began, only a handful of districts had exchanged hands in the past year. In the past, many such takeovers played out with the Taliban seizing territory that was later retaken by the government.

In May, Taliban forces entered Lashkar Gah, the capital of Helmand province in the country’s south. Afghan forces and U.S. air strikes managed to push the insurgents back.

The current situation does not bode well for government forces and militias under the command of northern Afghanistan’s power brokers, some of whom are notorious warlords who have held onto power since the country’s civil war in the 1990s and the U.S. invasion in 2001.

Those militia forces, often primarily made up of ethnic Tajik, Uzbek and Hazaras, have long seen the north as their stronghold from the Taliban, a primarily Pashtun group that rose in the south.

Even with adjacent militia forces, government troops are low on morale and are frequently besieged in isolated outposts and bases that can be resupplied only by the Afghan air force. The small group of pilots and aircraft are facing their own array of issues as international forces and maintenance contractors leave the country.

On Saturday, in a clear sign of the deteriorating security situation, the Afghan government appointed a new acting minister of defence, minister of interior and army chief.

Our Morning Update and Evening Update newsletters are written by Globe editors, giving you a concise summary of the day’s most important headlines. Sign up today.

Follow related authors and topics

Authors and topics you follow will be added to your personal news feed in Following.

Interact with The Globe