The US war in Afghanistan is nearly 20 years old, although US meddling in the country has lasted twice as long and is in large part responsible for the rise to power of radical Islamist groups like the Taliban, al-Qaeda, and Daesh*. Washington once found their hatred of secular communism useful and hailed their righteous fight as their own.
Former US Defense Secretary and CIA chief Leon Panetta told CNN on Friday that al-Qaeda will regain its former strength in a Taliban-ruled Afghanistan, necessitating a new US war in the future.
“We're going to have to go back in to get ISIS [Daesh]. We're probably going to have to go back in when al Qaeda resurrects itself, as they will, with this Taliban,” Panetta told CNN's Erin Burnett on Friday. “They gave safe haven to al Qaeda before, they'll probably do it again.”
His comments come a day after a series of deadly terrorist attacks in Kabul that killed 13 US service members and at least 180 Afghan civilians, with another 1,300 people wounded. The bombs, which targeted crowds attempting to get out of the country via Hamid Karzai International Airport in the wake of the Taliban's seizure of power, were claimed by Daesh-K, a branch of the terrorist group that was founded in 2015 in Afghanistan – with American help, according to former Afghan President Hamid Karzai.
Panetta warned Friday that the Taliban are “terrorists, and certainly supporters of terrorists, operating checkpoints for terrorists.” During their…