Battle of Kunduz

The Battle of Kunduz is an ongoing battle since April 2015 for control of the city of Kunduz located in northern Afghanistan, with Taliban fighters attempting to displace Afghan security forces. On 28 September 2015, the Taliban forces suddenly overran the city, with government forces retreating outside of the city. The capture marked the first time since 2001 that the Taliban had taken control of a major city in Afghanistan. The Afghan government claimed to have largely recaptured it by 1 October 2015 in a counterattack, although local sources in the city disputed the claim made by government officials. By 5 October, the battle had killed over 50 people and injured about 600.

Twelve hospital staff of Médecins Sans Frontières (Doctors Without Borders) and ten patients, including three children, were killed on October 3 by a prolonged series of US airstrikes on Kunduz Trauma Centre, an emergency trauma hospital run by the agency. Thirty-seven people were injured including nineteen staff members.

Initial attack
The Taliban launched its attacks on Kunduz on 24 April, targeting four outlying districts around the city. By the 28th, they largely controlled the suburb of Gortepa, while in the Imam Sahib District Taliban fighters surrounded an Afghan National Army base and Afghan Local Police forces in the area were forced to retreat on several fronts. In response to the attacks, the Afghan government dispatched several thousand army troops to the region, and President Mohammad Ashraf Ghani convened an emergency meeting with military officials. United States fighter jets were deployed under the authority of the Resolute Support Mission, although they did not fire on the Taliban.

Sustained fighting
After a week-long standoff following the initial assault, government troops began an offensive on 7 May against Taliban fighters, which had largely grouped to the south of Kunduz in the Gul Tepa district. By late May, about 3,000 Afghan troops had arrived in the area, with Taliban strength estimated at 2,000 fighters, including militants from the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIS) and the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan. The surge of government troops forced the Taliban fighters to about 15 km from Kunduz, back from their closest approach about 2 km from the city earlier in the offensive.

A Taliban counteroffensive in June brought insurgent fighters into the Char Dara District, several miles from Kunduz. On 21 June, a Taliban spokesman said that it had taken complete control of the district, and had captured local police officers. A spokesman for the Kunduz District police force disputed the claim, saying that while there had indeed been fighting in the district, the Taliban only controlled about half of it and had not captured any police. Throughout July, the Taliban continued to make gains, capturing towns outside of Kunduz and in the Khan Abad District to the southeast. According to the commander of a local militia allied with the government, about 2,000 local militia members and government troops had been forced to retreat, as the Afghan government had failed to dispatch reinforcements and supplies. Also ISAF air power was not used to assist them.

Capture
On the morning of 28 September, a rapid advance by the Taliban forces from three directions displaced the government troops in Kunduz city, who after several hours retreated to the outlying airport, leaving the Taliban in complete control of the city. According to a government security official, the Taliban had been vastly outnumbered, with only an estimated 500 fighters remaining against about 7,000 government troops and allied militia members. However, local politicians from Kunduz said that the government had failed to provide leadership and support to its fighters in the area.

On 29 September, Afghan forces began a counterattack from the airport towards the city, supported by American airstrikes throughout the day in the area. However, by the end of the day government forces had failed to make headway, as the Taliban forced them back to and surrounded the airport. The government dispatched additional troops by both air and land, though reinforcements traveling via road were delayed by Taliban ambushes.

By 30 September it was being claimed that anti-Taliban militias led by warlords were also joining the battle.

Government counter-offensive
Approximately 200 Afghan Special Forces personnel launched a counter-attack at 9:00 pm on 30 September, alongside forces from the army and police. Also supporting the counter-attack were international special forces operating as part of the Resolute Support Mission. The Afghan Interior Ministry claimed that the city had been taken from the Taliban by 3:30 am on 1 October. However, residents claimed fighting was continuing in certain districts.

Afghan Security Forces also claimed to have taken back Imam Sahib, although the wider Imam Sahib District remained under Taliban control.

On 4 October Taliban fighters claimed to have recaptured the majority of Kunduz. The following day, Afghan troops mounted a counter-offensive that pushed the Taliban back out of much of the city, with the national flag raised over the governor's residence for the first time since the beginning of the battle. According to a police spokesperson, while the Taliban still threatened, their primary battle line had been broken.

On 6 October The Taliban appear to have seized the upper hand again in Kunduz. The Taliban’s white flag was once again hanging on the flagpole over Chowk Square, and half of the city was reported to be under Taliban control.

On 15 October, it was confirmed that the ANA had gained the upper hand, piercing Taliban defenses and capturing large portions of the city. Taliban leaders have allegedly decided to pull out of the city.

MSF hospital airstrike
A US airstrike hit a hospital run by Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF [Doctors Without Borders]), killing at least 22 people, including three children and twelve hospital staff, in a series of bombing raids, which lasted from 2:08 am local time until 3:15 am, on 3 October. MSF said that the trauma center "was hit several times during sustained bombing and was very badly damaged," while there were 105 patients and 80 medical staff inside. The aid group said that it had warned US and Afghan authorities of the hospital's location ahead of time, but bombing continued for more than 30 minutes after it notified military officials it was under attack.

Effects
Within the first weeks of fighting, an estimated tens of thousands of people had been displaced. In response, the World Food Programme sent aid packages for about 500 families in early May. By late May, some 100,000 people had been displaced, though some began returning as the Taliban were pushed back from the city proper.

By 30 September, a number of Afghan parliamentarians began calling for the resignation of President Ashraf Ghani and CEO Abdullah Abdullah. In response Ghani's office replied that he had ordered an investigation into how Kunduz City fell so quickly.

Casualties
At least 30 people, mostly civilians, had been killed in the fighting as of Wednesday, September 30, 2015, according to a health ministry spokesman. He also said hospitals in Kunduz had treated about 340 wounded. By 5 October, the government's casualty estimates were of 55 dead and 600 injured, while Al Jazeera reported that residents of the city had counted over 100 dead.