AT Monitoring Desk-KABUL: Following a string of defections and reported clashes with Daesh militant group, the Taliban on Tuesday warned the leader of ISIS against waging a parallel insurgency in Afghanistan.
Daesh has never formally acknowledged having a presence in Afghanistan but fears are growing that the group is making inroads in the country.
In a letter addressed to ISIS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, the Taliban insisted that “jihad (holy war) against the Americans and their allies must be conducted under one flag and one leadership.”
“The Islamic Emirate (Taliban) does not consider the multiplicity of jihadi ranks beneficial either for jihad or for Muslims,” said the letter signed by the Taliban deputy leader Mullah Akhtar Mohammad Mansoor.
“Your decisions taken from a distance will result in [ISIS] losing support of religious scholars, mujahideen … and in order to defend its achievements the Islamic Emirate will be forced to react,” it added.
The letter, published on the Taliban website in Pashto, Urdu, Arabic and Dari, did not elaborate on its threat.
Analysts believe that the statement demonstrates a growing concern within the Taliban about the creeping influence and popularity of ISIS within insurgent ranks.
The Taliban have seen defections in recent months – with some insurgents apparently adopting the ISIS flag to rebrand themselves as a more lethal force as NATO troops depart.
“To their traditional backers, the Taliban are like an expired formula. The Taliban know this and increasingly fear being sidelined,” said Kabul-based author and analyst Ahmad Saeedi.
“This letter is a kind of reconciliation proposal to Daesh… telling them that they are on the same boat and they should not fight each other,” Saeedi told AFP.
The two groups, which espouse different ideological strains of Sunni Islam, are believed to be arrayed against each other in Afghanistan’s restive south, with clashes frequently reported.
Last week, local media reported pitched battles between the Taliban and supporters of ISIS in eastern Afghanistan, with casualties reported on both sides.
General John Campbell, the commander of NATO forces in Afghanistan, last month said ISIS was recruiting fighters in Afghanistan but they were not yet operational.
There have been fears of ISIS making inroads in Afghanistan since US-led NATO forces ended their combat mission late last year, after 13 years of fighting the Taliban.
In February, a NATO drone strike killed Mullah Abdul Rauf Khadim, a former Taliban commander and Guantanamo detainee with suspected links to ISIS, in the volatile southern province of Helmand.
According to the Defense Ministry, Hafiz Waheed, a successor to Khadim, was killed along with nine others in Sangin district of southern Helmand province in March.