China Daily

Mattis: Taliban interested in Afghan peace talks

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KABUL — The United States is seeing signs of interest from elements of Afghanista­n’s Taliban insurgency about talks with Kabul to end the more than 16-year-old war, US Defense Secretary Jim Mattis said on Tuesday, as he made an unannounce­d visit to Afghanista­n.

Mattis offered few details about the Taliban outreach and it was unclear whether the latest reconcilia­tion prospects would prove any more fruitful than previous, frustrated attempts to move toward a negotiated end to Washington’s longest war.

Taliban fighters still control large parts of the country and any new battlefiel­d gains by the United States and US-backed Afghan forces cannot promise to overcome Afghanista­n’s yawning political divisions and entrenched corruption.

“We’ve had some groups of Taliban — small groups — who have either started to come over or expressed an interest in talking,” Mattis told reporters.

His comments came during a trip to Afghanista­n that is expected to precede a sharp increase in fighting after US President Donald Trump approved a more aggressive strategy against the insurgents last year that included more US combat advisers and airstrikes.

That reversed a trend of scheduled drawdowns under his predecesso­r, Barack Obama, and set the stage for an open-ended conflict.

Afghan President Ashraf Ghani offered talks without preconditi­ons with the Taliban last month, in what was seen by US officials as a major overture from Kabul.

His plan includes eventually recognizin­g the Taliban as a political party.

Game changer

Ghani, hosting Mattis at his presidenti­al palace in Kabul, described the new US strategy as a breakthrou­gh, allowing Kabul to extend its peace offer to the Taliban without doing so from a position of weakness.

“It has been a game changer because it has forced every actor to re-examine their assumption­s,” Ghani said.

Western diplomats and officials in Kabul say contacts involving intermedia­ries have Jim Mattis, US defense secretary been under way with the aim of agreeing on ground rules and potential areas of discussion for possible talks with at least some elements in the Taliban.

However, the insurgents, who seized a district center in western Afghanista­n this week, have given no public sign of accepting Ghani’s offer, instead issuing several statements suggesting they intended to keep fighting.

Mattis stressed that the military campaign was aimed at driving the insurgents toward a political reconcilia­tion, as opposed to an outright battlefiel­d defeat.

“It may not be that the whole Taliban comes over in one fell swoop. That may be a bridge too far to expect,” Mattis said.

“But there are elements of the Taliban clearly interested in talking to the Afghan government.”

But there are elements of the Taliban clearly interested in talking to the Afghan government.”

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