Undoubtedly she is trying, in a breathtakingly inarticulate way, to make such a statement but I question the validity of it nonetheless. It's true that in WW2, particularly toward the end of the war, any male who could walk and carry a gun was drafted into the German army and forced to fight for the Fatherland, and those who resisted or attempted to escape were routinely executed, oftentimes by being hung from lamp posts to serve as a warning for others. This was enforced by the entire (remaining) machinery of the State. I haven't seen a comparable situation on the part of the Taliban, in that my understanding is that their active, frontline fighters are composed of willing true-believers.
Not all the decent, honourable people who fought in the wermacht were fighting under duress, many were fighting in the defence of their homeland, which is a legitimate and understandable thing especially when you consider that they had no real way of knowing that liberation by foreign forces would be better, and in the case of the invading Russians, a hell of a lot worse....