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L’Afghanistan va-t-il redevenir un sanctuaire du jihadisme international?
Le retrait américain d’Afghanistan y favorise la poussée rapide des talibans, avec le risque d’un retour des groupes jihadistes dans leur sillage.
Des miliciens afghans, mobilisés contre les talibans, aux côtés des forces gouvernementales, à Hérat, le 10 juillet (Jalil Ahmad, Reuters)
Le dernier soldat américain aura quitté l’Afghanistan le 31 août prochain. Ce départ marquera la fin de la plus longue guerre des Etats-Unis, entamée en octobre 2001, en représailles aux attentats du 11-Septembre à New York et Washington, perpétrés par Al-Qaida, elle-même soutenue par le régime taliban. L’administration Trump et les insurgés islamistes ont signé, en février 2020 au Qatar, un «
Terrorismo de rostro amable en Siria: cómo blanquear a un yihadista para convertirlo en una alternativa
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Reorganización interna y más presencia: así ha cambiado Al Qaeda diez años después de la muerte de Bin Laden
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Whatever Happened to Al Qaeda? Published May 5th, 2021 - 10:59 GMT
Osama bin Laden (Getty/AFP File Photo)
The terrorist organisation that changed the trajectory of global politics through its spectacular attack on September 11, 2001 has survived, but just.
A decade has passed since Al Qaeda s founder Osama bin Laden was killed in an American raid in Abbotabad, Pakistan. In spring 2011, with the charismatic bin Laden gone and Al Qaeda’s ambitions for regional upheaval seemingly preempted by widespread revolts across the Middle East, optimistic predictions abounded that Al Qaeda stood to lose.
New Details of the Raid to Kill Osama bin Laden: Rosary Beads, Card Games and So Many Pizza Boxes https://t.co/bZYNaYKDmv
US Troops Are Leaving Afghanistan, But Al Qaeda Remains
In this Sept. 11, 2011 file photo, U.S. soldiers sit beneath an American flag just raised to commemorate the tenth anniversary of the 9/11 attacks at Forward Operating Base Bostick in Kunar province, Afghanistan. (AP Photo/David Goldman)
25 May 2021 The Los Angeles Times | By Nabih Bulos, David S. Cloud
In a hidden corner of Hamid Karzai International Airport, half a dozen military officers sat at their desks, staring glassily at monitors showing high-resolution video feeds and surveillance footage beamed from drones, warplanes and helicopters across the country.
It was a tableau often seen in years past, but on this recent afternoon there was a crucial difference: The Afghans were alone, without the American forces that have backed them in a 20-year war.