
© ReutersIslamist fighters drive along the streets of northern Raqqa province, Syria
The terrorist group Islamic State has over 10,000 loyal fighters in Afghanistan, and Moscow believes the US may be underestimating their threat, Russia's special envoy says.
Islamic State (IS, formerly ISIS) was pushed out of their home base in Syria and Iraq this year by separate military operations of a US-led coalition, and the Syrian Army backed by Russia.
Many of the IS fighters who fled those countries ended up in Afghanistan, where the terrorist group has as many as 10,000 troops at the moment, Zamir Kabulov, the head of the Middle East department in the Russian Foreign Ministry, said.
"Russia was among the first nations to ring alarm about the expansion of IS into Afghanistan," he told RIA Novosti. "Lately IS has boosted its presence in the country. Our estimate is that their force there is stronger than 10,000 troops and is
continuing to grow. That includes new fighters with combat experience received in Syria and Iraq."
IS forces are strongest in the north of Afghanistan
on the border with Tajikistan and Turkmenistan - a point of concern for Russia, which has close historic ties with both nations, Kabulov added.
Comment: With the amount of time it's taken to get a concrete narrative slapped together, as well as conflicting narratives throughout the investigation, it seems pretty obvious by now that the investigators are making it up as they go along. It also seems that the officials in this whole fiasco were caught with their pants down, leaving them scrambling to try and explain things away. See: