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008 230910b2023 fr |||||s|||| 00| 0 eng d
040 _cES-MaBCM
100 1 _9128727
_aCreighton, Lucinda
245 1 0 _aSecurity risks emanating from Afghanistan :
_bassessing the Islamist terror threat post-August 2021
_cLucinda Creighton, Hans-Jakob Schindler
_h[Recurso electrónico]
260 _aParis
_b : European Union Institute for Security Studies
_c , 2023
300 _a8 p.
490 0 _aBrief
_v8
505 _aBibliografía: p. 7-8
520 _aPolitical instability in one country will inevitably have a particularly strong spillover effect across its borders (1). The takeover of power by the Taliban in August 2021 and the re-establishment of their regime in Afghanistan represented a shock to regional and transnational security dynamics, with neighbouring countries fearing that activities of Islamist terrorist groups present in Afghanistan would spill over into their territory. The Taliban maintain close ties with Islamist terrorist groups, essentially acting as their protector. Some, such as the Islamic State Khorasan Province (ISKP), an Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) affiliate, include former Taliban among their membership. This is notwithstanding the declaration by Zabihullah Mujahid, the spokesman of the Taliban government, at their first press conference in Kabul, that the new regime was committed to ensuring security (2). While no high-profile attack has occurred in Europe since August 2021, the assumption that the Taliban has a purely local agenda that does not extend beyond the borders of Afghanistan fails to take into account the various regional and transnational networks that have been built since the 1980s.
610 2 7 _aUnión Europea
_2
_952895
650 7 _aTerrorismo
_2
650 0 _aTalibán
650 0 _aPolítica común de seguridad y defensa
651 4 _9115600
_aAfganistán
700 1 _9128728
_aSchindler, Hans-Jakob
856 _uhttps://mpr.bage.es/cgi-bin/koha/opac-retrieve-file.pl?id=1f8a94f68e581837a40a93af8626d83d
_yDESCARGAR DOCUMENTO
942 _cLE
999 _c225630
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