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040 _aES-MaBCA
_cES-MaBCA
100 _914754
_aDuPée, Mathew C.
245 _aRed on Red: Analyzing Afghanistan’s Intra-Insurgency Violence
_hRecurso electrónico [PDF]
260 _bCTCSentinel
_cJan. 2018
300 _aRecurso online, 6 p.
520 _a Once renowned for its political cohesion, the Afghan Taliban movement now finds itself enduring sustained internal divisions and threats from rival factions. The revelation in July 2015 that the leader of the Taliban, Mullah Omar, had, in fact, been dead for nearly two years led to an internal power struggle that further fractured the Taliban movement. Ever since, various factions of Taliban fighters opposed to the current Taliban leadership council have engaged in open combat with their former group. The emergence of the Islamic State in Khorasan Province, a group that includes some disaffected Afghan Taliban commanders, has resulted in conflict between the two groups. The Afghan Taliban remains the most organized and lethal insurgent group operating in Afghanistan, and it controls significant swaths of the country. But its fracturing is weakening its ability to sustain its current position.
610 0 _912870
_aEstado Islámico
650 0 _915418
_aViolencia
651 0 _9939
_aAfganistán
651 0 _91221
_aPakistán
773 _aCTC Sentinel
_g. -- Vol. 11 Issue 1 (Jan. 2018) p. 26-31.
_iEn :
_tCTC Sentinel
_w4458
856 _uhttps://ctc.usma.edu/red-red-analyzing-afghanistans-intra-insurgency-violence/
942 _2udc
_cAN
999 _c21202
_d21205