Taliban may be executing Afghan troops who surrender, U.S. Embassy says

Taliban may be executing Afghan troops who surrender, U.S. Embassy says

Kabul — The U.S. Embassy in Kabul said Wednesday that it was hearing reports of the Taliban executing some surrendering Afghan troops, as the extremist group captured its 10th provincial capital in a week.

The Taliban took control of the strategically important city of Ghazni, which is on the Kabul-Kandahar motorway linking Kabul to militant strongholds in the south of the country. It now controls almost one third of the 34 provincial capitals in Afghanistan.

We’re hearing additional reports of #Taliban executions of surrendering Afghan troops. Deeply disturbing & could constitute war crimes.

— U.S. Embassy Kabul (@USEmbassyKabul) August 12, 2021

The U.S. Embassy said the reported executions of surrendering Afghan troops were "deeply disturbing" and "could constitute war crimes."

"Don't erase Afghanistan's human rights gains of the last 20 years," the embassy tweeted.

Meanwhile, the United States and its NATO allies continued preparations to withdraw entirely from the country after two decades of war.

Can the government maintain control?

The United States invaded Afghanistan in 2001 and broke up the Afghanistan-based al Qaeda terrorist network, which had carried out the September 11th attacks. It also overthrew the extremist Taliban, which was ruling the country under fundamentalist Islamic law and had been harboring Osama bin Laden and al Qaeda.

Under Taliban rule, people could be publicly executed for adultery or have limbs amputated for theft. Girls were discouraged from going to school, and music and dancing were banned.

A U.S. official told CBS News' David Martin on Wednesday that the Taliban could be 30 days away from putting pressure on the Afghan capital, Kabul, and that the Afghan government could be 90 days away from collapse.

The United Nations says at least 1,000 civilians have been killed in the last month.

Thousands of people have flocked to Kabul, fleeing the fighting. They are camping in fields, parks and abandoned warehouses.

"We have no money to buy bread or get some medicine for my child," a 35-year-old man told BBC News after he fled his home in Kunduz when the Taliban lit his house on fire.

What's next?

The Afghan military has limited air power, so the U.S. Air Force is believed to be carrying out some strikes to help.

U.S. envoy Zalmay Khalilzad met in Doha with diplomats from Russia, Pakistan and China in the hopes of jointly warning the Taliban that they could become international pariahs if they do not stop their offensive.

Khalizad also planned to meet with Taliban officials and representatives of the Afghan government, the Associated Press reported.

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