Islamic State joins others in training children for jihad in Afghanistan

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Teen-aged jihadists training in an Islamic State Khorasan “province” propaganda video.

The Islamic State’s branch in the Afghanistan-Pakistan region, called Wilayat Khorasan or Khorasan “province,” is training children to wage jihad. It is unclear where the children’s training center is located, but it is likely situated in Afghanistan’s eastern province of Nangarhar.

The Islamic State showcased the training of young boys in a video entitled “Cubs of the Caliphate Camp.” The training camp appears to be relatively small compared to others operated by the group in the region. Most of the training shown is weapons related, including how to properly handle and fire different variants of the Kalashnikov assault rifle. The last instructions shown include training in small unit tactics in an open field.

This facility joins at least three other Islamic State training facilities in the region. In October, the jihadist group showcased the “Sheikh Abu Omar al Baghdadi camp” and the “Sheikh Abu Musab al Zarqawi camp”, which are also likely in Nangarhar. The two facilities are named after the former leader of the Islamic State of Iraq and the founder al Qaeda in Iraq (the predecessor of the Islamic State), respectively. These images offer the first official visual evidence of Islamic State training centers in Afghanistan. [For more information, see LWJ report, Islamic State promotes training camps in ‘Khorasan’.)

In August, photos emerged purporting to show the “Shahid Hakeemullah Mehsud camp,” which is named after the last leader of the Movement of the Taliban in Pakistan and is thought to be located somewhere in Pakistan’s tribal areas. This facility has yet to be officially confirmed by the jihadist group.

Much has been made of the Islamic State’s presence in Afghanistan by the Western media. While it has training centers for both adults and children in the country, it has so far been contained to the province of Nangarhar after defeats elsewhere in the country, particularly in Farah and Helmand provinces.

The Taliban, al Qaeda, and their allies are far more potent in Afghanistan and Pakistan at this time, having overrun dozens of districts. Additionally, other jihadist groups, including the Turkistan Islamic Party, operate training centers for children in the region.

The Islamic State has been in competition with al Qaeda for the mantle of leadership in the global jihad, and the establishment of the Khorasan province is a direct threat to both al Qaeda and the Taliban.

Screenshots from the Islamic State video:

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Bill Roggio is a Senior Fellow at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies and the Editor of The Long War Journal. Caleb Weiss is a research analyst at FDD's Long War Journal and a senior analyst at the Bridgeway Foundation, where he focuses on the spread of the Islamic State in Central Africa.

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6 Comments

  • Dennis says:

    As it seems to be a showdown of who is less deviate ,obviously the Islamic state doesn’t give a Damm that the the high command of Al Qaida, the remnants of Osama, have said that children would not be used,…..as if any of their “Fatwas” meant anything. Who are they trying to impress?

  • Abrek says:

    Why US, CIA and drones not eliminate those isis camps? It seems like USA supports Daesh.

  • Dashui says:

    In high school, my teenage friend was radicalized by a JROTC cadre. One summer he went to a secret training camp(Fort Knox). There after learning to fire weapons. the Cadre told him that he could be buried on the “Plain of Martyrs” (Arlington National Cemetery) if he died heroically in battle.

  • Don Bacon says:

    The US military enlists teenagers, age seventeen.

  • CSMBones says:

    Notice the new combat boots and the ACU pattern camelbacks being worn. I see the ANA supply system is doing ok. Also notice the western looking dude in the ball cap intructing.

  • Abrek, the United States does not in any way support Daesh, aka ISIL-Khorasan. ISIL grew to exploit a vacuum left when the US departed Iraq while the Baghdad government was still too divided to offer something better.

    Eliminating the camps requires finding them first. The US and its allies need to trace the photos and videos.

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