Taliban: The Contemporary Cavemen
Introduction
The Taliban (so-called students) emerged in the mid-1990s as a reactionary force in the ruins of Afghanistan’s civil war, claiming to restore peace and “pure Islam.” Yet, beneath their religious façade lies a socio-cultural phenomenon deeply embedded in the tribal traditions of the Pashtun belt rather than in the universal principles of Islam. Their worldview represents an uneasy fusion of medieval tribal customs, selective Islamic symbolism, and an aggressive rejection of modernity — especially in social and applied sciences. Hence, they may aptly be called the contemporary cavemen — men physically present in the 21st century but mentally and morally confined within the caves of pre-modern ignorance.
The Taliban claim to establish a state ruled exclusively by Shariah, but in practice, much of their legal and moral framework is derived from Afghan tribal culture, especially Pashtunwali — the unwritten moral code of the Pashtun tribes who make up the Taliban’s core.
The Tribal Roots of Taliban Ideology
The Taliban movement is not a purely theological creation but a socio-political manifestation of Pashtunwali — the tribal code of honor, revenge, and patriarchy — cloaked in the language of Shariah.
- Pashtunwali disguised as Shariah:
Concepts like badal (revenge), tor (female modesty), and melmastia (hospitality) dominate Taliban jurisprudence more than fiqh (Islamic legal reasoning). Their insistence on extreme gender segregation, rigid dress codes, and public punishments are not Quranic imperatives but tribal mechanisms for social control. - Selective Islamization:
Instead of embracing Islam as a universal civilization that harmonizes reason with revelation, the Taliban reduced it to a tribal identity marker. They Islamized tribal customs and then sacralized them — thus creating a distorted fusion of culture and creed. - Anti-intellectualism and Clericalism:
The Taliban’s madrassa-based education system, influenced by the Deobandi network but stripped of its intellectual pluralism, produced ideologues who read Shariah without context and theology without philosophy. Hence, they inherited dogma, not depth.
Taliban and the Rejection of Modern Sciences
Modernity, for the Taliban, represents an existential threat — not only because it challenges their primitive worldview but because it demands rational engagement.
- Suspicion of Science:
The Taliban’s perception of science is utilitarian at best and heretical at worst. They accept technology when it serves warfare — such as modern weaponry or digital propaganda — but reject scientific thought as a way of understanding nature and society. The underlying fear is that empirical reasoning might displace dogmatic authority. - Denial of Modern Education:
Girls’ education is banned, and boys’ education is confined to rote memorization of religious texts. Universities are under surveillance; critical thinking is considered rebellion. Knowledge that liberates is replaced by indoctrination that enslaves. - War on Applied Sciences:
Fields like medicine, psychology, sociology, and economics — which require open inquiry — are dismissed as Western corruption. Ironically, the Taliban rely on imported medical aid and digital platforms while ideologically condemning their scientific foundations. - Isolation from Global Civilization:
Their regime has no intellectual ambassadors. Where Muslim societies once produced philosophers like Ibn Rushd and scientists like Al-Biruni, the Taliban produce only mullahs trained to resist questioning. Thus, Afghanistan remains intellectually quarantined from the rest of humanity.
The Theological Deviation
Islam, in its essence, encourages reflection, observation, and progress. The Qur’an repeatedly calls humanity to ponder upon nature, history, and the self — “Do they not reflect?” (Qur’an 45:13). The Taliban, however, interpret obedience as silence and faith as submission to clerical authority.
Their ideology lacks:
- Spiritual depth — Islam’s inward purification (tazkiyah) is replaced by coercive enforcement.
- Intellectual humility — Reason is declared the enemy of revelation.
- Moral compassion — Justice is reduced to punishment rather than restoration.
Thus, the Taliban’s Islam is not Islam universal, but Islam tribalized.
Social Structure: Patriarchy and Power
The Taliban’s social model places women at the bottom of the social hierarchy and clerics at the top. Women are treated as symbols of family honor rather than as moral agents. This tribal mindset, reinforced by selective scriptural interpretation, sustains a system where gender inequality is not just tolerated but institutionalized.
Even within male society, hierarchy rules — obedience to the Amir (leader) is absolute. The Taliban’s emirate model mirrors medieval autocracy rather than the consultative (shura-based) governance of classical Islam.
The Paradox of Modernity
While rejecting modern thought, the Taliban have mastered modern tools. They use social media for propaganda, cryptocurrency for funding, and drones for surveillance. This paradox reveals that their struggle is not against modern instruments, but against modern intellect. They live in the 21st century technologically, but the 7th century ideologically.
Why “Contemporary Cavemen”?
The term cavemen symbolizes those who resist enlightenment, who fear the light that reveals truth. Like the dwellers of Plato’s cave, the Taliban prefer shadows to reality — dogma to reason, coercion to dialogue.
Their caves are not of stone but of thought — sealed against philosophy, science, and the universality of Islam. They inhabit a mental terrain where time has stopped, and revelation is misused to fossilize ignorance.
Indeed, this is one of the deepest contradictions within the Taliban’s claim of implementing Shariah.
While they present themselves as defenders of Islam, their economic backbone — the opium and heroin trade — stands in direct violation of Islamic injunctions. A detailed discussion follows:
Taliban and the Drug Economy: A Moral and Religious Contradiction
Afghanistan’s rugged terrain, poverty, and lack of infrastructure have made it heavily dependent on a single major cash crop — opium poppy. Since the 1980s, Afghanistan has emerged as the world’s largest producer of opium, the raw material for heroin. Unfortunately, under the Taliban regime, this illicit economy became institutionalized, and its revenues were treated as a legitimate means of sustaining their rule.
1. Economic Dependency on Drugs
The Taliban derive significant revenue from the cultivation, taxation, and smuggling of opium. Farmers are allowed or even encouraged to cultivate poppy in exchange for a fixed tax or a share of the harvest. The group also levies transport and protection fees on smugglers. According to multiple international reports, the Taliban earn hundreds of millions of dollars annually through this network.
Such a system has entrenched narcotics as Afghanistan’s chief economic activity. Instead of developing agriculture, industry, or education, the Taliban economy thrives on drug profits — feeding corruption, addiction, and violence across borders.
2. Religious Hypocrisy
Islam unequivocally forbids intoxicants. The Qur’an states:
“O you who believe! Intoxicants, gambling, idols, and divining arrows are abominations of Satan’s handiwork, so avoid them that you may succeed.”
(Surah al-Ma’idah 5:90)
Despite this clear command, the Taliban justify opium production on pragmatic grounds — arguing that since the drugs are mainly consumed outside Afghanistan, they are not responsible for the moral consequences. This argument blatantly contradicts Islamic ethics, which forbid both the production and facilitation of haram substances, regardless of who consumes them.
The Prophet Muhammad ﷺ laid down a categorical rule that admits no exceptions:
كُلُّ مُسْكِرٍ خَمْرٌ وَكُلُّ خَمْرٍ حَرَامٌ
“Every intoxicant is Khamr (wine), and every Khamr is forbidden.”
(Sahih Muslim, Hadith 2003; Jami‘ at-Tirmidhi, Hadith 1861)
This Hadith is one of the most decisive statements in Islamic law (fiqh al-jināyāt and fiqh al-ṭahārah). It establishes that any substance causing intoxication — regardless of its form, source, or cultural usage — falls under the prohibition of khamr.
Therefore, narcotics such as opium, heroin, hashish, and all derivatives are unequivocally haram in Islam, even if they are not “liquid wine.” The juristic consensus (ijmā‘) of all four Sunni madhhabs confirms that intoxicating or mind-altering drugs carry the same legal ruling as wine because they impair intellect (‘aql), which is among the five fundamental objectives (maqāṣid al-sharī‘ah) protected by Islamic law.
Application to the Taliban’s Practices
Despite this unambiguous Hadith, the Taliban have legitimized opium cultivation and smuggling on the pretext that these drugs are exported to non-Muslim lands — a reasoning that collapses under the very Hadith above.
- Universality of the Prohibition
The Prophet ﷺ did not say “Every intoxicant consumed by Muslims is forbidden.”
He said “Every intoxicant” — a comprehensive and absolute expression (‘āmm). Thus, producing or facilitating any intoxicant, even for non-Muslims, is an act of disobedience to divine law. - Violation of the Principle of “Sadd al-Dharā‘iʿ”
Islamic jurisprudence blocks not only direct sins but also any means leading to sin. Financing or enabling intoxication — even indirectly — is prohibited. The Taliban’s drug economy thus violates this core principle. - Moral Dissonance
It is hypocritical for a regime that claims to stone adulterers and cut thieves’ hands — citing the Shariah — to sponsor and profit from narcotics that destroy entire generations. This inversion of priorities exposes the political and material motives behind their so-called “Islamic governance.”
The Hadith “كل مسكر خمر وكل خمر حرام” demolishes any claim that drug production under Taliban rule can be reconciled with Islam. It serves as a divine rebuke to those who exploit religion for profit and power. By institutionalizing narcotics, the Taliban have not only defied prophetic guidance but have turned Afghanistan into a global factory of sin, contradicting both the letter and spirit of Islam.
3. Impact on Society
The normalization of opium cultivation has devastated Afghan society. Addiction rates within Afghanistan have soared, affecting not only men but also women and children. Drug money fuels corruption, finances militancy, and weakens all forms of legitimate governance. The so-called “Islamic Emirate” has, in effect, institutionalized a narco-state, masking it under religious slogans.
4. The Global Consequence
The Taliban’s drug trade has far-reaching consequences:
- It finances terrorism across the region.
- It poisons global youth with narcotics.
- It undermines the credibility of genuine Islamic movements that seek reform through justice and knowledge, not vice and violence.
5. The Moral Paradox
While the Taliban enforce harsh punishments for minor moral infractions like women not wearing the full veil or men shaving beards, they turn a blind eye to the massive moral and social sin of drug smuggling. This hypocrisy exposes the political, rather than spiritual, nature of their movement. Their concern is not the moral uplift of Muslims but the survival of their power structure, even if that means financing it through means explicitly condemned by Islam.
The Taliban’s involvement in the drug trade reveals that their rule is not the revival of the Prophetic model but a distortion of Islam intertwined with tribal customs and economic opportunism. Their governance depends on the very crimes Islam sought to eradicate — oppression, ignorance, and corruption. In effect, they have created an empire of addiction and misery under the banner of Shariah, proving that their Islam is not a return to purity but a retreat into hypocrisy.
Cultural Crimes
1. Bride Price with the Tag of Dowry
In parts of Afghanistan’s Pashtun-dominated regions, particularly under Taliban rule or tribal authority, researchers and humanitarian agencies have documented several customs related to wedding, including Bride Price (Walwar in Pashtu, Toyana or Sherbaha in Dari).
- “Bride price” (Walwar): The groom’s family pays money or livestock to the bride’s family. While in Islamic law the mahr is a gift for the woman herself, walwar is often paid to the father or male guardian — turning marriage into a financial transaction. Though most of the fathers demans this walwar in the name od dowry, it is not dowry in reality.
- Sale of daughters due to poverty: In drought-stricken or war-torn provinces, some families “marry off” girls — even minors — in exchange for money, food, or debt relief. UNICEF, Human Rights Watch, and the UN have all reported rising cases since the Taliban’s 2021 return, when unemployment and hunger soared.
- Conflict resolution marriages (“baad”): To settle blood feuds, a girl from one family is forcibly given in marriage to a man from the opposing clan. She serves as a token of peace — essentially a human payment.
2. Causes behind the practice
a) Economic collapse
Though, Afghanistan’s economy shrank drastically after 2021 sanctions and aid withdrawal. Many households lost all income, so marrying off daughters became a survival mechanism. But it is not a recent practice, but Bride Price has been in practice for more than a thousnad years.
b) Tribal patriarchy
In tribal Pashtun culture, women are often seen as extensions of family honor and assets of exchange. Decision-making rests with male elders, not with the women involved.
c) Absence of legal protection
Under Taliban rule, women’s ministries were dissolved, and courts are dominated by conservative clerics who seldom challenge patriarchal customs. There is no effective system to prosecute forced or under-age marriages.
d) Misuse of religion
While Islam commands a mahr (dowry paid to the bride herself), tribal leaders conflate it with walwar, diverting it to the father. The Qur’an explicitly forbids coercion in marriage — “Do not inherit women against their will” (4:19) — but tribal norms override Islamic injunctions.
3. Islamic Perspective
- Marriage cannot be a sale: A nikāh (Islamic marriage contract) requires free consent of both bride and groom. A transaction in which a guardian “sells” a daughter for cash violates Qur’anic and prophetic commands.
- Mahr belongs to the woman: It is a right, not a bride price. Using it as family income is theft of her property.
- Forced marriage is void: Classical jurists from all Sunni schools (Hanafi, Maliki, Shafi‘i, Hanbali) condemn coercion; Prophet Muhammad ﷺ said, “A woman without a husband (divorced or a widow) must not be married until she is consulted, and a virgin must not be married until her permission is sought. [Sahih Muslim: H#1419]
Thus, these acts are cultural crimes and economic desperation, not Shariah.
4. The Taliban’s role
- Failure to prevent abuses: Despite claiming to enforce Shariah, the Taliban have largely ignored or even tolerated such practices under the guise of local custom.
- Reinforcement of patriarchy: Their restrictions on women’s education and work make girls financially dependent and families more likely to view them as liabilities.
- Selective morality: The Taliban punish petty crimes harshly but rarely intervene in forced marriages, showing that their “Islamization” is applied unevenly and politically.
5. Consequences
- Psychological and physical trauma: Girls as young as 9–13 are married to older men, leading to health complications, depression, and lifelong abuse.
- Cycle of poverty: Such marriages rarely improve family conditions; instead, they perpetuate illiteracy and economic stagnation.
- Damage to Islam’s image: Outsiders conflate tribal barbarism with Islamic law, tarnishing the faith’s universal ethics.
6. The real Islamic remedy
- Education and empowerment of women — as commanded in Qur’an 96:1 (“Read!”).
- State enforcement of consent laws — guardianship cannot override individual will.
- Economic reforms — poverty alleviation and microfinance can reduce child marriages.
- Scholarly reform — clerics must publicly denounce walwar and baad as haram.
- International humanitarian coordination — aid should target communities where girls are at risk of being traded.
1) What “Kharijite” (Al-Khwarij) means (briefly)
The Kharijites (al-Khwārij) were an early deviant sect (7th century) known for:
- Extreme moral absolutism and literalism.
- Declaring other Muslims who commit major sins to be kāfir (takfīr) — permitting violence against them.
- Rebelling against rulers they considered unjust, even if those rulers were nominally Muslim. First Khariji group rebelled against Imam Ali (May Allah be pleased with him).
They pioneered takfīr as a political weapon and justified rebellion and assassination of Muslim rulers on theological grounds.
2) How the Taliban’s conduct echoes Kharijite logic
Several Taliban practices and policies resemble Kharijite patterns — not necessarily in explicit theology, but in political outcomes and methods:
A. Tolerance (or facilitation) of groups that declare takfīr of Muslim regimes
The Taliban have sheltered and tolerated groups—most importantly Al-Qaida historically and TTP operationally—that justify attacks on Muslim states (e.g., Pakistan) or on Muslim institutions. Afghanistan under Taliban control has hosted foreign jihadi cadres and commanders whose rhetoric and practice include takfīr of Muslim rulers and attacks on them.
B. Refusal to seriously suppress anti-state militants
Since 2021 the Taliban have repeatedly resisted Pakistani pressure to restrain the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP). Islamabad bashes Kabul of providing refuge or at least failing to act; Kabul often replies that TTP is an internal Pakistani matter. That de facto tolerance enables a group that carries out attacks inside a fellow Muslim state — behavior Kharijites historically celebrated when they judged rulers un-Islamic. main.un.org+1
C. Use of theological language to delegitimise rivals
The Taliban’s rhetoric (and that of allied networks) sometimes frames rival Muslim leaders and institutions as un-Islamic, corrupt, or apostate in ways that lower the moral barrier to violence. While the Taliban rarely publish systematic doctrinal treatises on takfīr, allied militant formations do, and Afghanistan has been a safe space for such thinking. UN, U.S., and NGO reporting has repeatedly documented the difficulty the Taliban have in dismantling clandestine terrorist networks.
D. Institutional links with explicitly violent networks
Power centres within the Taliban — for example, ministries dominated by Haqqani affiliates — are linked historically and organisationally to groups on UN terrorist lists. That institutional overlap creates space where anti-state operations are planned or facilitated rather than simply denounced.
TTP: Custodians of Chaos and Agents of Death
1. Background
The Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) was formally established in December 2007 under the leadership of Baitullah Mehsud, as an umbrella organization uniting various militant factions operating in Pakistan’s tribal belt. While they drew inspiration from the Afghan Taliban, their focus quickly shifted from fighting foreign forces in Afghanistan to attacking Pakistan itself, which they accused of “collaborating with infidels.”
2. Wave of Terror in Pakistan
Over the past two decades, the TTP has waged an unrelenting campaign of suicide bombings, assassinations, and armed assaults, targeting:
- Mosques and markets filled with civilians,
- Security forces and intelligence personnel,
- Schools and places of worship of all sects.
According to government and independent reports, more than 95,000 Pakistanis — civilians, soldiers, and law enforcement officers — have been killed or injured in TTP-led or inspired attacks since 2001. Each attack carries the same ideological mark: declaring fellow Muslims as infidels and waging jihad against the Pakistani state.
3. The Ideological Root — Kharijism in Modern Garb
The TTP’s doctrine reflects the ancient Kharijite (Khawarij) mindset — a sect that emerged in the early Islamic period, labeling Muslims who disagreed with them as unbelievers and justifying their killing.
Like the Khawarij, the TTP:
- Declares the Muslim government illegitimate for cooperating with “non-Muslim powers.”
- Considers civilians supporting that government as lawful targets.
- Rejects scholarly consensus (ijmāʿ) and usurps the authority of ijtihād for political violence.
This self-righteous extremism, disguised as puritanical Islam, has no basis in the Qur’an or Sunnah but thrives on ignorance, tribal vengeance, and political frustration.
4. Pakistan’s Response
In response to this internal war, Pakistan has launched multiple military operations — Rah-e-Raast, Zarb-e-Azb, and Radd-ul-Fasaad — to dismantle terrorist sanctuaries. These operations significantly reduced TTP’s capabilities between 2015 and 2020.
However, following the U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan in 2021, and the return of the Afghan Taliban to power, the TTP has regrouped and rearmed. Their attacks have once again surged, especially in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Balochistan, compelling Pakistan to take harsh and defensive measures to protect its sovereignty.
5. The Hypocrisy of “Brotherhood”
While the Afghan Taliban publicly claim neutrality, their silent tolerance of TTP safe havens inside Afghanistan reveals a troubling duplicity. They shelter the very militants who spill Muslim blood across the border, undermining both regional stability and their own claims of enforcing Shariah.
Islamic law is explicit:
“If two groups of believers fight, make peace between them. But if one oppresses the other, fight against the one that oppresses until it returns to Allah’s command.”
(Qur’an 49:9)
By failing to curb the TTP, the Afghan Taliban have become complicit in oppression, violating the very Shariah they claim to defend.
6. Pakistan’s Moral and Strategic Justification
Pakistan’s recent decisive response is not merely political; it is defensive and moral. The state bears the Qur’anic duty to:
- Protect the lives and property of its citizens.
- Eliminate internal rebellion and sedition (baghy).
- Defend its borders from aggressors.
Thus, harsh measures against TTP and their sanctuaries are a legitimate act of national self-defense, fully justified by Islamic jurisprudence and international law alike.
The Durand Line: History, Reality, and Taliban’s Contradiction
1. Historical Background
The Durand Line was established in 1893 as a demarcation between British India and Afghanistan, following an agreement between Sir Mortimer Durand, the British foreign secretary in India, and Amir Abdur Rahman Khan, the ruler of Afghanistan.
It runs approximately 2,640 km (1,640 miles) through rugged mountains and tribal areas, dividing Pashtun and Baloch ethnic populations between the two territories.
After Pakistan’s creation in 1947, it inherited all treaties and borders of British India, including the Durand Line — making it, by international law, the legitimate international boundary between the two countries.
2. Taliban’s Claim
The Taliban regime — both in its earlier (1996–2001) and current (2021–present) forms — has refused to recognize the Durand Line as a legitimate international border. They often describe it as a “hypothetical” or “artificial” division imposed by colonial powers to divide the ummah and Pashtun tribes.
Their narrative rests on two arguments:
- Ethno-tribal unity — that Pashtuns on both sides belong to one nation and cannot be separated by a line.
- Colonial rejectionism — that the Durand Line represents Western-imposed fragmentation of Islamic lands.
However, both claims collapse under historical and legal scrutiny.
3. The Legal and Political Reality
- Under international law, Pakistan’s borders were recognized by the United Nations and by Afghanistan itself when it joined the UN in 1946.
- The Durand Agreement was never revoked; its validity automatically transferred to Pakistan upon independence.
- No other Muslim or international state questions Pakistan’s territorial integrity.
Thus, the Taliban’s stance is not a religious or legal claim — it is a nationalist and tribal one, inconsistent with their own claim of establishing an “Islamic Emirate” that supposedly rejects nationalism.
4. The Contradiction
The Taliban’s rejection of the Durand Line exposes their selective use of Islamic rhetoric:
- When convenient, they speak of the ummah and Shariah.
- When politically useful, they revive ethnic Pashtun nationalism, which Islam actually condemns as ‘asabiyyah (tribal partisanship).
The Prophet Muhammad ﷺ said:
“He is not one of us who calls for tribalism, or fights for tribalism, or dies for tribalism.”
(Abu Dawud, Hadith 5119)
Hence, by prioritizing Pashtun identity over Islamic unity and legality, the Taliban reveal that their agenda is tribal-territorial, not Islamic-universal.
5. Security Implications for Pakistan
The Taliban’s non-recognition of the Durand Line provides strategic cover for cross-border militancy. Groups like TTP exploit this ambiguity to move freely across the porous frontier, carrying out attacks inside Pakistan and then retreating to Afghan territory.
Pakistan’s efforts to fence the border — a legitimate step to secure its sovereignty — have been met with hostility by the Taliban, who claim it “divides brothers.” In truth, it divides terrorists from citizens, not brothers from brothers.
6. Pakistan’s Rightful Position
Pakistan’s stance is supported by:
- International law (successor state principle).
- Historical continuity (inheritance from British India).
- Security necessity (containment of terrorism and smuggling).
Afghanistan — and the Taliban as its de facto rulers — have no legal basis to deny the boundary. Their argument is emotional, tribal, and politically self-serving.
The Taliban’s claim that the Durand Line is “hypothetical” is historically false, legally untenable, and theologically contradictory.
By refusing to recognize Pakistan’s border, they expose the tribal-nationalist roots of their ideology — the same roots that drive them to support TTP militancy and oppose Pakistan’s sovereignty.
In essence, while the Taliban claim to revive Shariah, their stance on the Durand Line proves that their movement is guided not by Islam, but by ethnic Pashtun chauvinism masked in religious language.
Conclusion
The Taliban are not simply a militant group; they are a civilizational regression. Their claim of representing Islam is as false as their understanding of it is shallow. By fusing tribal codes with divine law, they have turned faith into fear and governance into tyranny.
If civilization is measured by how a society treats knowledge and women, then the Taliban remain the cave dwellers of our age — men who walk under the sun but whose minds dwell in darkness. Islam’s future, and indeed humanity’s, depends on breaking the walls of these caves — not with bombs, but with books, reason, and authentic spirituality.
The TTP represents the modern reincarnation of the Khawarij — violent extremists hiding behind Islamic slogans while committing the gravest of sins: spilling Muslim blood and sowing disorder (fasād) in the land.
Their Afghan patrons — the Taliban — have, by sheltering them, chosen tribal loyalty over Islamic brotherhood.
Pakistan’s firm military stance, therefore, is not just a strategic necessity but an Islamic obligation to protect peace, faith, and the lives of innocents.