Is Al-Qaeda/ISIS Returning? 🏴‍☠️🥷

Hood Critic

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Are you suggesting that the US should have stayed in Afghanistan?
Yes, a small contingent of special forces, military trainers, interpreters and a couple companies of infantry troops.

We were in Afghanistan for over a decade fighting ISIS/ISIL and the Taliban, leveraging locals and causing tribal leaders who would normally be enemies to unite against the West. You can't just pick up and leave in the night after all of that, there needs to be a couple years (minimum) of a wind down to handle locals who worked with us as well make some light treaties and arrangements to prevent total Taliban control of the country again.
 

MAKAVELI25

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Yes, a small contingent of special forces, military trainers, interpreters and a couple companies of infantry troops.

We were in Afghanistan for over a decade fighting ISIS/ISIL and the Taliban, leveraging locals and causing tribal leaders who would normally be enemies to unite against the West. You can't just pick up and leave in the night after all of that, there needs to be a couple years (minimum) of a wind down to handle locals who worked with us as well make some light treaties and arrangements to prevent total Taliban control of the country again.

I dont think there was any way to prevent total Taliban control, but these are not unreasonable points.
 

☑︎#VoteDemocrat

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The Deep State

Mali shuts schools and universities as jihadist blockade worsens fuel crisis​

10 hours ago​
AFP via Getty Images Motorcycles and vehicles queue up to get petrol at a service station in Bamako, on October 7, 2025.
AFP via Getty Images​
Long queues have been snaking around petrol stations in recent weeks​
Mali has suspended schools and universities nationwide due to a severe fuel scarcity caused by a blockade on fuel imports imposed by Islamist insurgents.​
Education Minister Amadou Sy Savane announced on state television that all education institutions would remain shut until 9 November, saying the movement of staff and students had been affected by the blockade.​
He said the authorities were "doing everything possible" to end the crisis so that classes could resume on 10 November.​
For weeks, Mali has been hit by a fuel shortage, especially in the capital Bamako, after militants from an al-Qaeda affiliate imposed a blockade by attacking tankers on major highways.​
Mali is landlocked, so all fuel supplies are brought in by road from neighbouring states such as Senegal and Ivory Coast.​
Long queues have been snaking around petrol stations in Bamako in recent weeks, and the city's usually crowded streets have now reportedly fallen quiet.​
The military government had earlier this month assured residents that it was only a temporary issue, but the crisis has persisted.​
Last week, the US Embassy in Bamako announced that non-essential diplomatic staff and their families would leave Mali amid the worsening fuel shortage and growing security concerns.​
It said the fuel disruptions had affected the supply of electricity and had the "potential to disrupt the overall security situation in unpredictable ways".​
Mali is currently ruled by a military junta led by Gen Assimi Goïta, who seized power in a coup in 2021.​
The junta had popular support when it took power, promising to deal with the long-running security crisis prompted by a separatist rebellion in the north by ethnic Tuaregs, which was then hijacked by Islamist militants.​
The UN peacekeeping mission and French forces had been deployed in 2013 to deal with the escalating insurgency.​
Both have left since the junta took over, and the military government has hired Russian mercenaries to tackle the insecurity.​
However, the jihadist insurgency has continued and large parts of the north and east of the country remain outside government control.​
 
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