Guy Taylor
Articles by Guy Taylor
Shadowy ‘ISIS-K’ group well known for grisly attacks
It boasts only a few thousand fighters in its ranks, but the Islamic State-Khorasan -- or ISIS-K -- has built its reputation on high-profile, horrific terrorist attacks, from a brutal assault on an Afghan maternity ward 15 months ago to Thursday's dual suicide bombings that killed civilians and American troops at Kabul's airport. Published August 26, 2021
New Israeli prime minister wants Biden to see Iran deal as ‘no longer relevant’
Israel remains America's closest Middle East ally, but there are likely to be disagreements when new Prime Minister Naftali Bennett makes his first visit to the White House on Thursday. Published August 25, 2021
Russia begins constructing nuclear submarines amid increasing friction with West
Russia has begun building new nuclear submarines capable of carrying intercontinental ballistic missiles as part of a wide-reaching military modernization effort amid rising tensions with the United States and other Western powers. Published August 23, 2021
Special envoy urges North Korea to consider restarting nuclear talks
The Biden administration's top diplomat for North Korea policy on Monday called for Pyongyang to consider restarting nuclear talks with the U.S. as he said America "does not have hostile intent" toward the country. Published August 23, 2021
Evacuation proceeds, but fears of Taliban reprisal soar
Even as the U.S. and its allies continued the scramble to evacuate citizens and their Afghan associates from Kabul, a confidential United Nations assessment is warning that the Taliban are intensifying efforts to hunt down Afghans who worked with American and NATO forces over the past two decades and that the militants have threatened to kill or arrest their family members if the people being sought cannot be found. Published August 19, 2021
Taliban intensifying search for Afghans who helped U.S. and NATO forces, confidential document warns
A confidential United Nations document warns the Taliban is intensifying efforts to hunt down Afghans who worked with American and NATO forces over the past two decades, and that the militants have threatened to kill or arrest their family members if the people being sought cannot be found. Published August 19, 2021
Anti-Taliban protests spread to Kabul, grow in other Afghan cities
Anti-Taliban protests grew for a second day in Afghanistan and spread to the streets of Kabul for the first time since the militant group seized the country's capital, where tense crowds of Afghans gathered on Thursday to celebrate the anniversary of the country's independence from British control more than a century ago. Published August 19, 2021
Protests, clashes mar first days of Taliban control
Protests against the Taliban broke out in several Afghan cities Wednesday, with the militants struggling to contain the uprisings even as they were consolidating power in Kabul. Published August 18, 2021
Taliban fighters clash with protesters in first major violence since fall of Kabul
Protests against the Taliban broke out in several Afghan cities Wednesday, with the militants struggling to contain the uprising and shooting into at least one crowd of demonstrators just a day after Taliban leaders vowed to forgive people who'd fought against the group in recent years. Published August 18, 2021
Human remains found in C-17’s wheel well after Afghanistan departure; Air Force investigating
The Air Force has opened a formal review of what led a C-17 transport plane to take off from Afghanistan's main international airport with people clinging to its landing gear -- a scene that resulted in Afghan civilians falling to their deaths. Published August 18, 2021
Taliban plot next steps as U.S. retreat accelerates
A surge of American troops restored order and evacuation flights resumed from Afghanistan's main international airport Tuesday, while Taliban representatives now ruling Kabul began a publicity blitz to plead for calm and convince the world the militant group has changed its ways since ruling over the Afghan capital with an iron Islamist fist two decades ago. Published August 17, 2021
Taliban promise to respect women’s rights; few are buying it
Taliban militants now controlling Afghanistan claim Tuesday that they will not seek reprisal attacks for now and would honor women's rights, as long as those rights fit within the group's definition of Islamic law -- an assurance that fell largely on deaf ears Tuesday as thousands of men, women and children continued to scramble for the exits in Kabul. Published August 17, 2021
Chaos on the ground, uncertainty on what’s to come in Afghanistan
Chaos enveloped the international airport in Kabul on Monday, with U.S. troops trying to maintain order while throngs of people rushed the tarmac and large crowds pushed against the facility's outer gates amid mounting collective panic a day after the Taliban swept back to power in the Afghan capital. Published August 16, 2021
At least seven dead in chaos at Kabul airport as U.S. troops scramble to maintain order
Chaos enveloped the international airport in Kabul on Monday, with U.S. troops trying to maintain order while throngs of people rushed the tarmac and large crowds crushed against the facility's outer gates amid mounting collective fear a day after the Taliban swept back to power in the Afghan capital. Published August 16, 2021
Rapid Afghanistan collapse leaves U.S. scrambling to evacuate personnel
The government America built and supported for nearly 20 years in Afghanistan collapsed in a single day Sunday. Published August 15, 2021
Blinken: Biden admin ‘inherited’ Afghan situation from Trump
Political mudslinging over the apparent fall of Kabul to the Taliban escalated in Washington Sunday, with Secretary of State Antony Blinken claiming the Biden administration "inherited" the situation from the former Trump administration and had to go along with a rushed U.S. pullout to avoid restarting "a war that we need to end." Published August 15, 2021
Ghani flees Afghanistan, U.S. diplomats burn documents as Taliban enter Kabul
American diplomats burned documents and the U.S. military rushed to evacuate personnel from Kabul on Sunday morning as Taliban fighters entered the Afghan capital and pushed for the unconditional surrender of the Afghan government, capping a stunning insurgent offensive coinciding with the American military withdrawal after two decades of war. Published August 15, 2021
Death toll from Haiti quake continues to rise; Officials say more than 300 killed
The death toll from the major earthquake that rocked Haiti on Saturday continued to climb Sunday as rescuers scrambled through widespread wreckage in cities and towns around the Caribbean nation. Local authorities said at least 1,800 people were injured or remained missing, with the official death toll rising above 300 as of Sunday morning. Published August 14, 2021
Chinese pressure sparks debate on Taiwan’s resilience
China's expanding military provocations toward Taiwan have elevated concern among the United States and its allies that Beijing could be on the verge of using force against the island democracy, which China considers to be an integral part of its sovereign territory. Published August 8, 2021
Tunisia power grab creates unease for Biden administration
The Biden administration is expressing fresh unease this week over the appearance of an unconstitutional power grab in Tunisia, after the country's president abruptly fired his government's ambassador to the United States without explanation. Published August 4, 2021