The deadliest attack in the Afghan capital this year set off a fresh wave of grief in a country where nowhere is safe from suicide attacks, and deepened questions about the Trump administration’s plan to withdraw U.S. troops from Afghanistan.
Abdul Sattar was leaving his cousin’s wedding with his wife and a son when he noticed the late-arriving guest, a well-dressed man who pulled up on a bicycle festooned with flowers and rushed inside the hall.
Taliban leaders, who in recent months have continued to launch violent attacks of their own, say they are prepared to make a deal, but they hold no sway over Islamic State militants, a relatively small number of fighters including Pakistani operatives and other foreigners who fled the group’s former strongholds in Iraq and Syria. The group has been buffeted by U.S. ground operations and airstrikes in eastern Afghanistan in recent years, but continues to carry out major attacks.The most recent U.
The dead -- including his two teenage brothers, 11-year-old nephew and sons aged 6 and 10 -- were buried in simple wooden coffins. Mourners helped dig the graves by hand. “Some with half a body, some without hands and legs, some without heads,” he said. “It was like a nightmare.”The Dubai City Wedding Hall is one of many large, brightly lighted venues in Kabul that host elaborate festivities costing upward of tens of thousands of dollars and offer a rare chance for Afghans to celebrate in large groups.
Graeme Smith, a consultant for the International Crisis Group, said Islamic State is fearful of a peace deal because it is “getting hammered on the battlefield” by both U.S.-backed government forces and the Taliban and “does not want to see its two biggest enemies make peace and join forces against them.”
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