“We’re concerned that ISIS-K can take advantage of a significantly weakened security environment,” after the U.S. withdrawal, FBI Director Christopher Wray told lawmakers last month. In the same hearing,
National Counterterrorism Center Director Christine Abizaid expressed worry that ISIS is “building off the notoriety it received” from the Kabul airport attack.According to report, a deadly wave of attacks recently claimed by the Islamic State (ISIS) in Afghanistan is sparking fears across intelligence communities worldwide that a familiar nightmare is re-emerging.
The pattern is alarming: Ever since
the suicide bombing that killed roughly 100 Afghans and 13 U.S. servicemembers
on Aug. 26, the group has persisted with more mass-casualty attacks across the
country, including a suicide bombing at the funeral for Taliban spokesman
Zabihullah Mujahid’s mother, another suicide bombing against the Shi'a Hazara
mosque in Kunduz, and a dual suicide attack on Shi’a Bibi Fatima mosque in
Kandahar just a couple of weeks ago.
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