High Council of the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan | |
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د افغانستان اسلامي امارت عالي شوری | |
Jihadist flag, which was used by the group multiple times Flag of the Taliban, which the group split from | |
Leader |
|
Foundation | 2015 |
Dissolved | 2021 |
Split from | Taliban (rejoined in 2021) |
Allegiance | Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan (since 2021) |
Active regions | Afghanistan |
Ideology | Jihadism Pro-Islamic State (alleged, until 2021) |
Size | 3,000–3,500[4] |
Part of | Taliban (since 2021) |
Allies | Haqqani network (2021-present)
Islamic Republic of Afghanistan (alleged until 2021)[1][3][5][6] Islamic State – Khorasan Province (alleged until 2021, denied by the group)[7][8][9] Mullah Dadullah Front (alleged until 2021, denied by the group) Fidai Mahaz (alleged until 2021, denied by the group) |
Opponents |
|
Battles and wars | War in Afghanistan (2001–2021) Islamic State–Taliban conflict |
High Council of the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan (HCIEA)[10][8][9] (Pashto: دٙ اَفغانِستان اِسلامي اِمارَت عالي شوریٰ, romanized: Də Afġānistān Islāmī Imārat Ālī Šūrā ; Dari: شُورٰایِ عٰالئِ اِمٰارَتِ اِسلٰامئِ اَفغٰانِستٰان, romanized: Šūrā-yi Ālī-yi Imārat-i Islāmī-yi Afġānistān) was a breakaway Taliban faction active in Afghanistan since 2015. The faction broke away from the Taliban in 2015 following the appointment of Akhtar Mansour as the leader of the Taliban[4] and elected Muhammad Rasul as its leader.[11] The faction was involved in deadly clashes with mainstream Taliban in southern and western Afghanistan, leaving scores of dead on both sides.[10] The Islamic Republic of Afghanistan allegedly provided financial and military support to the faction, however, both the Islamic Republic and the faction denied this.[5][6] Following the Taliban offensive of 2021 and the fall of Afghanistan to Taliban forces, the group dissolved, and its leaders pledged allegiance to the new government.[12][13]
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