<p>Two days before 9/11, an Al-Qaeda suicide squad posing as journalists sat down for an interview with Ahmad Shah Massoud, the last major commander resisting the jihadist group's Taliban allies in northern Afghanistan.</p>.<p>Before he could answer a question, they detonated explosives that investigators said later had been cunningly disguised in their camera equipment.</p>.<p>Twenty years on, Massoud's assassination and the September 11 attacks on the United States are for many Afghans the twin cataclysms that started yet another era of uncertainty and bloodshed -- and which continue to reverberate following the Taliban's return.</p>.<p><strong><a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/taliban-govt-is-anything-but-inclusive-afghan-envoy-to-un-1028237.html" target="_blank">Read | Taliban govt is anything but inclusive: Afghan envoy to UN</a></strong></p>.<p>The charismatic Massoud, known as the Lion of Panjshir after his native valley, built his name during the 1980s as a brilliant guerrilla commander repelling Soviet forces.</p>.<p>By the late 1990s, he was fighting the Taliban -- and their Al-Qaeda allies.</p>.<p>Both wanted him gone.</p>.<p>The audacious hit was ordered by Osama bin Laden himself.</p>.<p>The assassins pretended to be filming a documentary, and secured the Massoud interview by presenting a concocted back story printed on a letterhead from an Islamic centre in Britain. They used stolen Belgian passports to travel.</p>.<p>Then they hit a wall -- Massoud was too busy to sit down with them when they arrived in August 2001 at his base in Khwaja Bahauddin village.</p>.<p>"They spent 10 days with us calmly and patiently waiting, and never unnecessarily insisting on the interview," Fahim Dashti, a journalist and close Massoud aide, told AFP a few weeks after the assassination.</p>.<p><strong><a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/un-doesnt-engage-in-recognition-of-governments-says-its-deputy-spokesman-on-talibans-new-government-1028279.html" target="_blank">Read | UN doesn't engage in recognition of governments, says its deputy spokesman on Taliban's new government</a></strong></p>.<p>Dashti was setting up his own camera to record the interview as the two Al-Qaeda operatives relayed their questions in Arabic to the commander's close aide, Masood Khalili, for translation.</p>.<p>"We were not feeling comfortable," Khalili told AFP in October 2001, especially because they had asked questions about bin Laden.</p>.<p>"The 'cameraman' had a nasty smile. The 'journalist' was very calm," he said.</p>.<p>Just as Massoud heard the translation, the explosives went off.</p>.<p>The killing sent shockwaves across Afghanistan and the world.</p>.<p>Massoud was seen as the last big hope by anti-Taliban Afghans at the time, and by Western governments as a potent ally against even more hardline Islamists.</p>.<p>With his Northern Alliance resistance already on the back foot against the Taliban, his aides hid his death for days.</p>.<p>A week after he was killed, Massoud was buried in his home district of Bazarak -- his body shrouded in the colours of the Afghan flag and with thousands of followers in the funeral procession.</p>.<p>A marble tomb was built attracting huge numbers of devotees.</p>.<p>"When (Massoud) was killed, I was in Panjshir. The resistance forces were...surrounded from all sides," a 47-year-old resident of the area told AFP on Monday, requesting anonymity because of security fears.</p>.<p><strong><a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/pakistan-deports-over-200-afghan-nationals-1028261.html" target="_blank">Read | Pakistan deports over 200 Afghan nationals</a></strong></p>.<p>"The Taliban even announced on the radio: your leader is dead and you're done. But... the death of the leader gave the people another reason to fight harder."</p>.<p>The tables were turned within weeks as the United States, looking to punish the Taliban for harbouring the 9/11 perpetrators, invaded Afghanistan.</p>.<p>The Taliban regime fell by the end of 2001, pummelled by American bombers guided by Northern Alliance fighters.</p>.<p>Al-Qaeda, hoping to get the upper hand both against the United States and in Afghanistan with their two major attacks, was on the run.</p>.<p>The Taliban launched a lightning offensive as the last US-led troops left Afghanistan this year, capping their 20-year insurgency with the capture of Kabul on August 15.</p>.<p>Once again, the main opposition emerged in Panjshir -- led this time by Ahmad Massoud, who was 12 years old when Al-Qaeda killed his father.</p>.<p>But the Taliban swiftly sent fighters to surround the area, claiming eventually on Monday that they had captured Panjshir.</p>.<p><strong><a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/who-is-mullah-hasan-akhund-what-does-the-taliban-s-choice-of-interim-prime-minister-mean-for-afghanistan-1028239.html" target="_blank">Read | Who is Mullah Hasan Akhund? What does the Taliban’s choice of interim prime minister mean for Afghanistan?</a></strong></p>.<p>Among the resistance dead in the heavy fighting was Fahim Dashti, the journalist who survived the Massoud bombing 20 years ago.</p>.<p>One Taliban account posted a picture of fighters in Panjshir standing in front of a vandalised Ahmad Shah Massoud poster.</p>.<p>Ahmad Shah Massoud's brother Ahmad Wali said in Geneva Tuesday that while their National Resistance Front was "wounded", thousands of fighters can come back at any time.</p>.<p>It is a difficult scenario for Mohammad Sana Safa, a 63-year-old who worked with Massoud in the 1980s when there were daily attacks by the Soviets.</p>.<p>"Ahmad Massoud is a young man, patriotic, but he has no military experience like his father," Safa said Monday.</p>.<p>"Had (his father) been alive today, we would have not witnessed this... the fall of Panjshir to the Taliban."</p>.<p><b data-stringify-type="bold">Check out the latest </b><b data-stringify-type="bold"><i data-stringify-type="italic">DH </i></b><b data-stringify-type="bold">Videos here:</b></p>
<p>Two days before 9/11, an Al-Qaeda suicide squad posing as journalists sat down for an interview with Ahmad Shah Massoud, the last major commander resisting the jihadist group's Taliban allies in northern Afghanistan.</p>.<p>Before he could answer a question, they detonated explosives that investigators said later had been cunningly disguised in their camera equipment.</p>.<p>Twenty years on, Massoud's assassination and the September 11 attacks on the United States are for many Afghans the twin cataclysms that started yet another era of uncertainty and bloodshed -- and which continue to reverberate following the Taliban's return.</p>.<p><strong><a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/taliban-govt-is-anything-but-inclusive-afghan-envoy-to-un-1028237.html" target="_blank">Read | Taliban govt is anything but inclusive: Afghan envoy to UN</a></strong></p>.<p>The charismatic Massoud, known as the Lion of Panjshir after his native valley, built his name during the 1980s as a brilliant guerrilla commander repelling Soviet forces.</p>.<p>By the late 1990s, he was fighting the Taliban -- and their Al-Qaeda allies.</p>.<p>Both wanted him gone.</p>.<p>The audacious hit was ordered by Osama bin Laden himself.</p>.<p>The assassins pretended to be filming a documentary, and secured the Massoud interview by presenting a concocted back story printed on a letterhead from an Islamic centre in Britain. They used stolen Belgian passports to travel.</p>.<p>Then they hit a wall -- Massoud was too busy to sit down with them when they arrived in August 2001 at his base in Khwaja Bahauddin village.</p>.<p>"They spent 10 days with us calmly and patiently waiting, and never unnecessarily insisting on the interview," Fahim Dashti, a journalist and close Massoud aide, told AFP a few weeks after the assassination.</p>.<p><strong><a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/un-doesnt-engage-in-recognition-of-governments-says-its-deputy-spokesman-on-talibans-new-government-1028279.html" target="_blank">Read | UN doesn't engage in recognition of governments, says its deputy spokesman on Taliban's new government</a></strong></p>.<p>Dashti was setting up his own camera to record the interview as the two Al-Qaeda operatives relayed their questions in Arabic to the commander's close aide, Masood Khalili, for translation.</p>.<p>"We were not feeling comfortable," Khalili told AFP in October 2001, especially because they had asked questions about bin Laden.</p>.<p>"The 'cameraman' had a nasty smile. The 'journalist' was very calm," he said.</p>.<p>Just as Massoud heard the translation, the explosives went off.</p>.<p>The killing sent shockwaves across Afghanistan and the world.</p>.<p>Massoud was seen as the last big hope by anti-Taliban Afghans at the time, and by Western governments as a potent ally against even more hardline Islamists.</p>.<p>With his Northern Alliance resistance already on the back foot against the Taliban, his aides hid his death for days.</p>.<p>A week after he was killed, Massoud was buried in his home district of Bazarak -- his body shrouded in the colours of the Afghan flag and with thousands of followers in the funeral procession.</p>.<p>A marble tomb was built attracting huge numbers of devotees.</p>.<p>"When (Massoud) was killed, I was in Panjshir. The resistance forces were...surrounded from all sides," a 47-year-old resident of the area told AFP on Monday, requesting anonymity because of security fears.</p>.<p><strong><a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/pakistan-deports-over-200-afghan-nationals-1028261.html" target="_blank">Read | Pakistan deports over 200 Afghan nationals</a></strong></p>.<p>"The Taliban even announced on the radio: your leader is dead and you're done. But... the death of the leader gave the people another reason to fight harder."</p>.<p>The tables were turned within weeks as the United States, looking to punish the Taliban for harbouring the 9/11 perpetrators, invaded Afghanistan.</p>.<p>The Taliban regime fell by the end of 2001, pummelled by American bombers guided by Northern Alliance fighters.</p>.<p>Al-Qaeda, hoping to get the upper hand both against the United States and in Afghanistan with their two major attacks, was on the run.</p>.<p>The Taliban launched a lightning offensive as the last US-led troops left Afghanistan this year, capping their 20-year insurgency with the capture of Kabul on August 15.</p>.<p>Once again, the main opposition emerged in Panjshir -- led this time by Ahmad Massoud, who was 12 years old when Al-Qaeda killed his father.</p>.<p>But the Taliban swiftly sent fighters to surround the area, claiming eventually on Monday that they had captured Panjshir.</p>.<p><strong><a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/who-is-mullah-hasan-akhund-what-does-the-taliban-s-choice-of-interim-prime-minister-mean-for-afghanistan-1028239.html" target="_blank">Read | Who is Mullah Hasan Akhund? What does the Taliban’s choice of interim prime minister mean for Afghanistan?</a></strong></p>.<p>Among the resistance dead in the heavy fighting was Fahim Dashti, the journalist who survived the Massoud bombing 20 years ago.</p>.<p>One Taliban account posted a picture of fighters in Panjshir standing in front of a vandalised Ahmad Shah Massoud poster.</p>.<p>Ahmad Shah Massoud's brother Ahmad Wali said in Geneva Tuesday that while their National Resistance Front was "wounded", thousands of fighters can come back at any time.</p>.<p>It is a difficult scenario for Mohammad Sana Safa, a 63-year-old who worked with Massoud in the 1980s when there were daily attacks by the Soviets.</p>.<p>"Ahmad Massoud is a young man, patriotic, but he has no military experience like his father," Safa said Monday.</p>.<p>"Had (his father) been alive today, we would have not witnessed this... the fall of Panjshir to the Taliban."</p>.<p><b data-stringify-type="bold">Check out the latest </b><b data-stringify-type="bold"><i data-stringify-type="italic">DH </i></b><b data-stringify-type="bold">Videos here:</b></p>