Tuesday to support the Afghan troops.
The forces comprise US, British and German troops, a Western military source told AFP on condition of anonymity, without specifying the number.
But a government spokesman in Berlin said the German troops who reached Kunduz on Tuesday left the city on the same day.
The fall of the provincial capital, which sent thousands of panicked residents fleeing, has dealt a major blow to the Afghan military and highlighted the insurgency’s potential to expand beyond its rural strongholds.
The Afghan security official said the militants had slowly infiltrated Kunduz during the recent Eid festival, launching a Trojan horse attack that enabled them to capture it within hours.
Pentagon press secretary Peter Cook said the fall of the city on Monday — achieved by a militant force significantly smaller than the army contingent — was “obviously” a setback but the US believed the Afghan authorities would be able to regain control.
Cook added he was “not sure it reflects any new assessment of the Taliban”, but several analysts see it as a game-changer for a group that many had believed was fraying.
Despite the military build up, Kunduz remained largely under Taliban control — the first major urban centre in their grasp since they were toppled from national power in 2001.
Fighters erected checkpoints across the city and were seen racing stolen police, UN and Red Cross vehicles. Local bakeries were selling stale bread at inflated prices and residents reported woeful shortages of water, medicines and electricity, as many people hunkered down in their homes amid frequent gunfire.
“Kunduz looks like a ghost town. Only a few dare to go out — every few minutes you hear gunshots,” a local doctor, who did not want to be named, told AFP. “The Taliban this morning used loudspeakers, telling people to reopen shops, but who would dare do that?”
Insurgents, showing off seized tanks and armoured cars, have issued edicts against looting and vowed to enforce the Islamic Shariah law.
Rights groups say the Taliban have exposed civilians to grave danger by hiding in people’s houses and conducting door-to-door searches for Afghan security personnel or government staff.
In a televised speech on Tuesday, Afghan President Ashraf Ghani said the Taliban were using civilians as human shields, hampering the counter-offensive since troops were trying to prevent casualties.
The Taliban’s recent gains in Kunduz and neighbouring provinces highlight that a large and strategic patch of northern Afghanistan is imperilled by a rapidly expanding insurgency.
“If air strikes increase, we might have to retreat tactically from Kunduz, but we plan to expand the war towards neighbouring Takhar and Balkh provinces,” a senior Taliban source told AFP.
The Kunduz province, which borders Tajikistan and is a major transport hub for the north of the country, could offer the Taliban an important new base of operations.
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