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Russian operation in Afghanistan targeted coalition forces, received intelligence

The Russian military intelligence unit has gifted the Taliban-linked militants for attacking coalition forces in Afghanistan, with US intelligence finding a major cause of the Kremlin's hostility to the US.   The Russian operation, first reported by the New York Times, sparked fierce debate in the Trump administration over how best to respond to the disturbing new strategy of a country that most US officials consider a potential enemy, but President Trump has often accepted it as an ally of officials who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss the sensitive intelligence case.


The Russian military intelligence unit has gifted the Taliban-linked militants for attacking coalition forces in Afghanistan, with US intelligence finding a major cause of the Kremlin's hostility to the US.


The Russian operation, first reported by the New York Times, sparked fierce debate in the Trump administration over how best to respond to the disturbing new strategy of a country that most US officials consider a potential enemy, but President Trump has often accepted it as an ally of officials who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss the sensitive intelligence case.

Officials said administration leaders had been aware of reported encounters from US intelligence agencies in recent months, triggering many internal discussions, including a large intergenerational meeting in late March. According to one person familiar with the matter, the reactions at the meeting included the sending of diplomatic communications to deny rejection and authorize new sanctions.

If Russian involvement in acts of targeting Americans is confirmed, there could be resentment on Capitol Hill and questions about why the administration did not respond.

Representatives of the National Security Council, Pentagon, and CII declined to comment.

In this effort, it was not immediately clear whether Russia had approached terrorists who had succeeded in killing Americans or Allied troops. MULKEY initiative news is now in its 19th year as US diplomats attempt to resolve the political discourse that could end America's long war.

Earlier this year, the administration signed an initial peace agreement with the Taliban. The deal would mean a complete withdrawal of the U.S. military in 14 months, allowing negotiations between militant representatives and the Afghan government to begin.

But the Afghan parties have not been able to reach an agreement on interim measures, and with the coronavirus crisis in Afghanistan, those talks have not materialized yet. Trump's willingness to remove US troops from the country, which has not had the edge over the Taliban, has been hanging in the process despite two decades of foreign funding and advice.

If confirmed, the attempt to instigate violence against Americans marks a departure from Moscow's previous location towards Islamic militants in Afghanistan. Earlier, U.S. officials said they had occasional, low-level Russian support for the Taliban, including the supply of small arms by Afghanistan's northern neighbors.

After the Soviet Union's coup in Afghanistan in the 1980s, the US and Moscow have largely been in the background since September 11, 2001, NATO forces entered the country. Russia, however, appeared to try to exert greater influence in recent years, as it fueled more uncertainty with US concerns.

Moscow's motives for the alleged bouncers were not immediately clear, but officials said they could join the US military in retaliation for 2018, killing Russian soldiers working for Yevgeny Pryogyn in Syria and Russian Vladimir Putin. "The attempt to thwart Afghanistan was thrown at him and obstruct negotiations," the official said.

During the Soviet war in Afghanistan, which ended in 1989, the US government provided arms and money to Afghan mujahideen rebels fighting the Soviet army.

Units alleged to have been responsible for the bounce offer were attempted in 2018 by poisoning and murdering former Russian military spy Sergei Skripal in Britain.

That attack has provoked fierce criticism in Europe over Russia's invasion of Ukraine and its role in the war in Syria, and among many of Trump's senior advisers, the president often appears to have Russian affiliations with Putin. , Overthrowing the Russian. Interference with the 2016 US elections and other Russian changes.

Russia is just one of many issues where Trump’s propensity is different from that of his senior advisers. The United States has banned Russia on a number of issues, including the invasion of Ukraine, cyber attacks and electoral mediation, but the Pentagon ranks second to Russia in terms of its great power / rivals.

Military officials have been extraordinarily harsh this month, saying that Russia's decision to provide fourth-generation jet fighters to a rogue general in Libya has sparked a fierce counterfeit fight.

With the Pentagon confirming the withdrawal of US forces from Afghanistan for about 8,600 service members, this is the first step towards a complete withdrawal. Officials said the complete withdrawal was "conditional," suggesting that if the Taliban did not make a political deal with the Afghan government, they would try to put a bigger force there.

Despite Taliban forces halting attacks on the US as part of the deal, militants continue to attack Afghan forces, calling on an Afghan senior official to call the worst situation in 19 years this week.

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