Ghani denies US-Taliban deal on troop withdrawal

| Reassures his people their future can’t be decided without taking Kabul in loop | Khalilzad tells NYT framework for a deal agreed with Taliban

Lahore  -   The Afghan president has assured his people that their rights will not be compromised in the name of peace with the Taliban and no deal would be made without Kabul’s awareness and full participation in negotiations.

President Ashraf Ghani said this in an address to the nation on Monday, days after the US envoy tasked with resolving America’s longest war reported significant progress in talks with the insurgents.

“Our commitment is to provide peace and to prevent any possible disaster,” he was quoted as saying by a news agency. “There are values that are not disputable, such as national unity, national sovereignty and territorial integrity,” he averred.

The statement issued by President’s office, after a meeting of Ghani with Zalmay Khalilzad late Sunday in Kabul, said that the US envoy shared details of his latest round of talks with the Taliban in Qatar.

It quoted Khalilzad as saying he had discussed a ceasefire deal with the Taliban but that there was no progress on the issue.

The statement also claimed that the Taliban demanded from Khalilzad the withdrawal of all foreign troops from Afghanistan, but that there was also no agreement on that issue.

It added that the US peace envoy has no authority to discuss issues such as a future Afghan administration but that his goal is to facilitate an intra-Afghan dialogue, meaning direct talks between the Taliban and Kabul.

Khalilzad earlier told the New York Times that American and Taliban officials have agreed in principle to the framework of a peace deal with the insurgents.

The newspaper on Monday quoted him as saying the “framework deal, which still has to be fleshed out before it becomes an agreement,” will see the Taliban commit to guaranteeing that Afghan territory is not used as a “platform for international terrorist groups or individuals.”

The deal, the envoy said, could lead to full pullout of American troops in return for a ceasefire and Taliban talks with the Afghan government.

But Ghani, in his Monday’s address to the nation, stressed that American and other foreign forces are in Afghanistan because they are needed here and that if there is to be any downsizing or pullout, the Kabul government will have to play a role in the talks.

The Afghan president also reiterated his call on the Taliban to engage “in direct talks with the Afghan government.”

The Taliban have been staging near-daily attacks targeting Afghan forces, causing scores of casualties every week. Their offensive has not let up despite the severe Afghan winter and the Taliban now hold sway over nearly half of the country.

That has made peace an even more pressing issue.

Khalilzad met with the Taliban on a number of occasions in recent months — most recently last week in Qatar where the Taliban have a political office — in the latest bid to end America’s longest war.

The US invaded Afghanistan after the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks to topple the Taliban, who were harboring Osama bin Laden and al-Qaida.

On Saturday, after six days of meetings with the Taliban in Qatar, Khalilzad on his official twitter account said: “Meetings here were more productive than they have been in the past.”

“We made significant progress on vital issues,” he tweeted, without offering details.

Abdul Hakim Mujahid, a former Taliban official and currently a member of the High Peace Council, an independent body of clerics and respected Afghan figures, said he believes the Qatar talks resulted in a “good understanding between both sides” but that more discussions are needed in the coming weeks or months.

“Afghanistan’s problem is not so simple that it can be solved in a day, week or month, it needs more time and more discussions,” Mujahid told The Associated Press.

The Taliban have in the past refused to negotiate directly with Kabul — a standing that does not appear to have changed. They have maintained that they are prepared to talk with U.S. officials only and only about the pullout of foreign forces from Afghanistan.

Afghan political analyst Waheed Muzhda says he believes that Khalilzad and the Taliban have reached agreement on both the withdrawal of US forces from Afghanistan and a ceasefire deal, but that neither side is prepared to say so at this point.

“But peace talks are not possible unless both sides first agree on a ceasefire,” Muzhda said.

 

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