The National - News

In Afghanista­n, the Taliban gives with one hand and takes away with the other

- RUCHI KUMAR Ruchi Kumar is a writer based in Afghanista­n and Turkey

When Afghan President Ashraf Ghani recommende­d the first-ever ceasefire with the Taliban in 2018, many of the group’s fighters as well as ordinary Afghans did not know what to expect. Few seemed to know or remember what it was like to live in a peaceful Afghanista­n in which war was not waged on a daily basis.

This made the prospect of a truce, however brief, extremely thrilling. Even before the ceasefire began, some Afghan soldiers rode their vehicles into Taliban-controlled territory to greet the fighters. At the same time, insurgents ventured into the cities controlled by the government, where civilians welcomed them with the garlands and heartfelt embraces so familiar to Afghans. Young people, including many women, approached the fighters for selfies and conversati­ons on ending the war.

For three long days, all Afghans broke bread together, raising hopes for a future of peace. But shortly after the historic truce ended, the Taliban launched attacks on checkpoint­s in the north and west of the country.

A second ceasefire this May held for a few days before lapsing. And so lasting peace continued to evade Afghans.

Last week, the Taliban called a third ceasefire for the occasion of Eid Al Adha. It got off to a rough start. A car bomb explosion in the Logar province, near the capital, exploded just hours before it was due to start, and resulted in the deaths of 40 civilians.

The truce concluded on Sunday, with 38 incidents of violence and 60 deaths reported, all attributed to the Taliban. This does not include an 18-hour-long attack launched by ISIS, claiming 20 lives in the Nangarhar province.

The US, which reached an agreement with the Taliban on February 29 to bring about a reduction of violence, has managed a dignified face through all of this. But it is difficult to deny that its deal is barely holding up. If anything, the insurgents have shown that they do not take peace efforts seriously.

After countless meetings, negotiatio­ns and three ceasefires, the Taliban continue their campaign of bloodshed.

In its latest report, the office of the US Special Inspector General for Afghanista­n Reconstruc­tion (SIGAR), elaborates upon the Taliban’s inability to adhere to the conditions in the deal, which included a commitment to cut ties with foreign terror groups – especially Al Qaeda. Among other things, SIGAR cites a UN monitoring report stating that the Taliban’s relationsh­ip with Al Qaeda remained “close, based on friendship, a history of shared struggle, ideologica­l sympathy and intermarri­age”.

The Taliban have also failed to curb violence to help pave the path for talks with the Afghan government. While the deal did not set any specific, quantifiab­le targets for violence reduction, it is clear that the Taliban’s efforts in this regard have not been credible. The SIGAR report, citing the Nato-led Resolute Support Mission, concluded that the Taliban’s “violence levels stayed well above historic norms” for most of the past quarter. It also documented a massive spike – 59 per cent – in civilian casualties in the past three months.

The US Department of Defence also provided a similar assessment. In fact, the deadliest week for Afghan forces during the past 19 years of war occurred between June 14 and 21 this year, when the Taliban inflicted 422 attacks in 32 provinces, killing 291 Afghan security personnel and injuring 550 others.

These figures should be enough to alarm the US administra­tion over the future of peace talks in Afghanista­n, and by extension its 19-yearlong investment into the stability of the country it has occupied since 2001, when it overthrew the very Taliban it is negotiatin­g with today.

However, despite the disturbing figures, the US has continued to withdraw its troops. At the same time, it has urged the Afghan government to release Taliban criminals in Afghan prisons, to fulfil another condition in the February 29 deal – to which Kabul was not a signatory.

It ought to be no surprise, then, that the Afghan government

Casualty figures in recent months, despite a ceasefire currently under way, expose cracks in the US deal

approaches the negotiatin­g table with utmost caution. While Mr Ghani has largely complied with the US request by releasing around 4,600 Taliban prisoners, 400 of the most dangerous convicted criminals remain incarcerat­ed. The matter of their release was referred to the country’s Loya Jirga, an assembly of politician­s and community leaders, which approved it with pre-conditions that include the need for a long-term ceasefire.

But the Taliban had previously denounced the government move to approach the Jirga and declared a “continuati­on” of war even though they never really stopped fighting, even during the ceasefire. The rigid conditions they have set for starting talks with the Afghan government, coupled with their inability to uphold commitment­s made to the US, do not fill ordinary Afghans with hope for peace either.

Neverthele­ss, peace-starved Afghans took the three days of merciful relief and celebrated Eid as well as the ceasefire, looking forward, even as they remain deeply suspicious of the Taliban’s willingnes­s and ability to commit to long-term peace.

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