The fall of Jalalabad on Sunday to the Taliban, surrendered like so many other cities without a fight, was followed by a sustained advance on Kabul. By Sunday evening the insurgents had taken the presidential palace in Kabul and were effectively in control of the capital.
In a confused situation, the evacuation of Western embassies and nationals, safeguarded by several thousand returned US and UK troops, has all the appearance of the fall of Saigon in April 1975, down even to the frantic burning of documents in the US embassy compound. Afghanistan's ineffective president, Ashraf Ghani, has also left the country, only a day after he went on TV to issue a rallying call to his collapsing army.
Only days ago, US intelligence was predicting that Kabul could hold out for three months. It is clear that this was a complete miscalculation. By Sunday night the Taliban had entered the presidential palace, saying it would declare an Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan. The foreign minister has blogged about negotiating a smooth transition to Taliban rule, but following the collapse of the army, the writing was on the wall.
What next? “We don’t want a single innocent Afghan civilian to be injured or killed as we take charge,” the Taliban’s spokesman tweeted unconvincingly. No reprisals against those who worked for foreign armies, NGOs, or served in the army, terrified refugees in ad hoc camps springing up around Kabul were promised.
The Irish Times view on Heritage Week: Something for every citizen
The Irish Times view on the death of a Belarusian dissident in Kiev: the long arm of Lukashenko
The Irish Times view on the Merrion Hotel party: Undermining public buy-in
The Irish Times view on tax trends: an increasing reliance on corporate taxes
But few believe it. Taliban control over the territories they have already taken resembles that of the Taliban of old – hardline Islamist rule. Yes, there have been reprisals, and women have lost the rights 20 years of semi-democratic rule brought. Girls again banned from school, forced marriages, attacks on unaccompanied women ...
Concerns internationally that the Taliban victory will mean a humanitarian and refugee disaster for the country's neighbours, and again on Europe's borders, have yet to manifest in any new willingness by regional powers Pakistan, Iran, or China to engage robustly with the Taliban. The latter have hinted, through their negotiators in Doha, that a new regime would want to avoid the diplomatic isolation that its predecessor suffered 20 years ago. Its willingness not to harbour a resurgent al-Qaeda and a commitment to rule with less harshness might offer a diplomatic opening.
With the US sidelined, the best hope for opening talks lies within the ambit of the UN. Secretary General António Guterres is demanding an immediate ceasefire followed by "good faith" negotiations. Estonia and Norway have called for an immediate convening of the Security Council, presumably supported by Ireland.The onus now rests on the big five veto powers to respond and the Security Council looks set to meet shortly. It will have much to discuss.