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Russia Denies Supplying Taliban After NATO Claim

by AFP

File Photo. Noorullah Shirzada—AFP

Moscow rejects allegations forwarded by General Curtis Scaparrotti before lawmakers in Washington.

Russia on Friday denied allegations by the commander of NATO that Moscow may be assisting the Taliban as the insurgents fight U.S. and NATO forces in Afghanistan.

“These claims are absolutely false,” Zamir Kabulov, head of the Russian foreign ministry’s department responsible for Afghanistan and the Kremlin’s special envoy in the country, told RIA Novosti state news agency. “These fabrications are designed, as we have repeatedly underlined, to justify the failure of the U.S. military and politicians in the Afghan campaign. There is no other explanation.”

NATO’s Supreme Allied Commander, U.S. General Curtis Scaparrotti, who also heads the U.S. military’s European Command, told lawmakers in Washington on Thursday that he had witnessed Russia’s influence grow in many regions, including in Afghanistan.

In a statement to the Senate Armed Services Committee, Scaparrotti said Moscow was “perhaps” supplying the Taliban.

In February General John Nicholson, the U.S. commander of NATO forces in Afghanistan, testified that Russia is encouraging the Taliban and providing them with diplomatic cover in a bid to undermine U.S. influence and defeat NATO.

Kabulov in 2015 said that Russia was exchanging information with the Taliban and saw shared interest with them when it comes to fighting the Islamic State jihadist group.

Russia considers the Taliban a terrorist group and it is banned in the country, along with the Islamic State group.

Taliban fighters on Thursday captured Afghanistan’s strategic district of Sangin, where U.S. and British forces suffered heavy casualties until it was handed over to Afghan personnel.

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