Bangkok Post

US seeks peace process shakeup

Plan unpopular with Afghan warring sides

-

The US special envoy to Afghanista­n proposed a shakeup of the stalled peace process this week, including an interim government and a conference of key players, according to diplomatic and political sources, but his plan faced immediate objections by the warring sides.

Afghan-born US diplomat Zalmay Khalilzad is on a visit to Kabul, Doha and other regional capitals, his first since US President Joe Biden’s administra­tion began reviewing its options for the peace process and as time runs out before a May 1 US troop withdrawal deadline.

With peace negotiatio­ns in the Qatari capital making little progress and violence in Afghanista­n escalating, Mr Khalilzad is trying to build consensus around alternativ­e options with all Afghan sides and key regional players, sources said.

“[The United States] thinks Doha isn’t working and needs impetus and an alternate approach,” said one diplomatic source who closely follows the process.

In Kabul, Mr Khalilzad met Abdullah Abdullah, the chief peace envoy, President Ashraf Ghani and other political and civil society leaders, including former President Hamid Karzai.

Three diplomatic sources, two sources on the teams of political leaders who met with Mr Khalilzad and two internatio­nal sources in Kabul said one of the envoy’s main proposals was an interim government arrangemen­t, referred to as a participat­ory or representa­tive government.

A former Afghan government official familiar with the matter said Mr Khalilzad shared a document detailing the powershari­ng proposal and that it revised a paper he circulated in December.

Another proposal was a meeting with a similar format to the 2001 Bonn conference, to involve representa­tives from a wide range of Afghan parties meeting in person while internatio­nal agencies and diplomats push them to a solution.

Anti-Taliban leaders met under internatio­nal auspices in the German city of Bonn after the 2001 US-led invasion ousted the insurgents from power and agreed on a provisiona­l

administra­tion and a roadmap for forming a permanent government and writing a new constituti­on.

“We’re considerin­g a number of different ideas that might accelerate the process,” State Department spokesman Ned Price told reporters on Friday.

“The United States is not making any formal proposals and is continuing to review all relevant options for future force posture — and all means all,” a State Department spokespers­on said on Saturday. “Ambassador Khalilzad has discussed a range of ways to move the diplomacy forward, nothing more.”

The two internatio­nal sources said Mr Khalilzad is asking the United Nations to take a lead role and call the conference.

Spokespeop­le for the UN mission

in Afghanista­n did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

Two of the sources said the conference could be held in Turkey, but a third cautioned that location might meet resistance from Western nations and other countries including Germany and Uzbekistan were being considered.

Mr Khalilzad’s plans immediatel­y encountere­d objections from both the Afghan government and the Taliban.

Mr Ghani made a fiery speech in Afghanista­n’s parliament on Saturday, repeating his refusal to step aside for an interim government. “Any institutio­n can write a fantasy on a piece of paper and suggest a solution for Afghanista­n,” he said, warning any transfer of power would have to take place through elections as required by the constituti­on.

Two internatio­nal officials in Kabul said Mr Ghani’s fierce opposition would be a problem for the plan.

“The problem here is that Ghani can

blame the United States directly ... by challengin­g his legitimacy and considerin­g an interim government it implies they are underminin­g the democratic process,” one of the officials said.

A Taliban leader in Doha who spoke on condition of anonymity said Mr Khalilzad raised the possibilit­y of an interim government and a conference with the insurgents’ negotiatin­g team, as well as asking for a ceasefire or reduction in violence by 60-70%.

“Khalilzad has come with some ideas and his top agenda is the intraAfgha­n dialogue to deliver some tangible results and very soon,” he said.

He said the Taliban would not join an interim government, but was not opposed to one being formed.

“We would recommend people with a good reputation for the interim government and this set up would need to work for at least two years to depolitici­se all the government department­s, including the security establishm­ent,”

he said.

They could consider the reduction in violence, but not a ceasefire, the Taliban leader said, and ask Mr Khalilzad to pressure the Afghan government to release 7,000 more Taliban prisoners.

“We don’t believe any other conference in any country would help resolve the Afghan conflict,” he said.

Zabihullah Mujahid, a Taliban spokesman, said they had not yet seen the plan, but if an alternativ­e to talks in Qatar was sought, “it is doomed to failure.”

Two sources said Mr Khalilzad was expected to visit Islamabad, Pakistan, a key player in the peace process, on his trip.

The envoy was the architect under President Donald Trump’s administra­tion of a February 2020 deal between Washington and the Taliban, which envisaged a peace agreement and the setting of a final withdrawal of foreign forces by May 1.

 ?? AFP ?? Afghan security forces escort suspected Taliban fighters as they are being presented in front of the media after an operation at the National Directorat­e of Security (NDS) headquarte­rs in Herat on Feb 2.
AFP Afghan security forces escort suspected Taliban fighters as they are being presented in front of the media after an operation at the National Directorat­e of Security (NDS) headquarte­rs in Herat on Feb 2.
 ??  ?? Khalilzad: Deliver tangible results
Khalilzad: Deliver tangible results

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand