Red Group saw its first operational deployment in Sangin in early 2016. In the summer of that year a Taliban spokesperson reported to media that the Red Group was producing consistently "good" results in actions against the Afghan National Army and discussions were underway about utilizing it for increased operational deployments. The assessment of the unit's potency was echoed by provincial officials in Helmand who described the outfit as "very dangerous and very successful". In the subsequent time, the Red Group began operating all around Afghanistan and used by the insurgents for the most important as well as dangerous missions. In July 2018, the Red Group played an important part in the Battle of Darzab, which resulted in a major Taliban victory over the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant – Khorasan Province. By late 2018, the unit was known to be most active in Kunduz Province, Baghlan Province, and Faryab Province, aiding in a number of major Taliban advances in these areas.
Tactics, equipment, and membership
The Red Group, which numbered approximately 300 by 2016, reportedly employs commando tactics and is equipped with "advanced weaponry", including night vision equipment, heavy machine guns and M4 carbines. They are known to be especially proficient in night combat, and considered to be better trained and equipped than most Afghan National Army soldiers. Though generally called the Taliban's special forces, analysts have argued that the Red Group was probably not performing traditional special operations missions, but were, instead, being used as shock troops or a rapid deployment force. Moving on motorcycles, the unit often raids isolated outposts, destroying the local defences, and then retreating before other forces can respond. The Red Group often spearheads Taliban offensives, as it has proven to be very effective in combat. Nevertheless, its equipment and training are inferior to those of Western special forces. Its members differ in various regards from regular Taliban troops. Red Group fighters are mostly recruited from refugee camps in Pakistan, are indoctrinated in madrasas, and trained at camps along the Afghan-Pakistani border. Unlike other Taliban, they are not loyal to various clans or villages, but to the movement itself. By 2020, one of the unit's training camps was the so-called "Tariq bin Ziad Military Corps", located in the mountains of Paktika Province.
Leadership
The first known commander of the unit was Haji Nasarv according to a 2016 report by the Military Times. In 2017 the BBC reported the Red Group commander was Mullah Taqi. On 3 December 2017, Reuters reported that Mullah Taqi was killed by NATO forces. He was succeeded by Mullah Shah Wali, who was killed in December 2017. An advisor to Mullah Shah Wali, the German mujahidAbdul Wadood, was captured by the Afghan military in March 2018. By 2020, one of the unit's main trainers was Ammar Ibn Yasser who was described as "the Mujahideen of Mujahideen" by Taliban media.