Taliban taunts US with defeat on 9/11 anniversary

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The Taliban has taunted the United States with the prospect of “utter defeat” in Afghanistan, marking the 11th anniversary of the 9/11 attacks that saw US troops invade to bring down the militia’s repressive regime.
The anniversary itself was muted in Afghanistan, where US and NATO troops organised only small ceremonies to commemorate the deaths of nearly 3,000 people in the worst terror strike on US soil.
Soldiers sang the US national anthem and said prayers on behalf of the victims, said an AFP photographer who attended one of the commemorations.
On the eve of the anniversary, a rocket fired by insurgents on the largest US base in Afghanistan destroyed a helicopter, killing three Afghan intelligence agents, officials said. On the day itself, a suicide bomber killed a local Afghan police commander and four civilians in a shop in a remote town near the border with Turkmenistan.
There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the suicide attack, but in a statement posted online ahead of the anniversary, the Taliban said the United States “is facing utter defeat in Afghanistan militarily, politically, economically and in all other facets”. The militia said the war had “no legal or ethical” basis and that Afghans had “no hand” in what happened on September 11, 2001.
The statement added that despite the billions spent on the conflict “no American is safe in any society today”. The United States led international military action to bring down the Taliban regime in October 2001 because it refused to give up Al-Qaeda boss Osama bin Laden, who ultimately escaped into Pakistan, where he was shot dead by US forces in May 2011. A report from a British think-tank suggested this week that the Taliban are open to a ceasefire and a political agreement that could lead to a US military presence in Afghanistan until 2024.

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