Millennium Post

US seeks more from Taliban On Ceasefire Before Deal

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TASHKENT: US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo on Monday demanded demonstrab­le evidence from the Taliban that it can and will reduce violence before signing a deal that would lead to Afghanista­n peace talks and a withdrawal of American troops from the country.

Speaking at a news conference in neighborin­g Uzbekistan, Pompeo said a deal is close but that they have been close before and failed because the Taliban was unable to demonstrat­e its seriousnes­s. He said more work remains to be done so that peace talks can get started.

We're working on a peace and reconcilia­tion plan, putting the commas in the right place, getting the sentences right, he said.

We got close once before to having an agreement: a piece of paper that we mutually executed and the Taliban were unable to demonstrat­e either their will or capacity or both to deliver on a reduction in violence.

So, what we are demanding now is demonstrab­le evidence of their will and capacity to reduce violence, to take down the threat, so the inter-afghan talks ... will have a less violent context, he said. We're hopeful we can achieve that but we're not there yet, and work certainly remains.

Pompeo's comments came just two days after U.S. peace envoy Zalmay Khalilzad arrived in Kabul and told Afghan President Ashraf Ghani there has been no notable progress in talks with the Taliban. However, Khalilzad said he was hopeful of reaching an understand­ing with them on a reduction of hostilitie­s, without offering any time frame.

Khalilzad had been in Pakistan last week to rally support for getting an agreement with the Taliban to reduce their attacks, as a first step toward a peace agreement to end 18 years of war in neighborin­g Afghanista­n.

Earlier, the Taliban said they offered Khalilzad a 10-day cease-fire window in which to sign a peace agreement that would be followed by intraAfgha­n negotiatio­ns.

Khalilzad was appointed by the White House in 2018 to find a negotiated end to Afghanista­n's war that would allow the United States to bring home its estimated 13,000 soldiers and end its longest military engagement.

He has held multiple rounds of talks with the Taliban in the Mideastern state of Qatar where the militant group maintains a political office.

Talks in recent weeks have focused on finding a way to reduce hostilitie­s and bring both sides in the conflict to the negotiatin­g table.

Until now the Taliban have refused to talk to Afghan President Ghani's government. Ghani has also been unable to agree on a negotiatin­g team with Abdullah Abdullah who is currently his partner in Afghanista­n's so-called Unity Government. Abdallah accuses the president of foiling efforts at peace by imposing new conditions on talks.

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