Dayton Daily News

Taliban offer to reduce Afghan violence ahead of deal with U.S.

- Mujib Mashal and Taimoor Shah

KABUL, AFGHANISTA­N — The Taliban have offered a brief period of reducing violence in Afghanista­n during ongoing negotiatio­ns with U.S. diplomats, three officials familiar with the talks said on Thursday, a concession seen as important to finalizing a preliminar­y peace deal between the insurgents and the United States to end their 18-year war.

If the U.S. side accepts the offer, it could amount to the most significan­t developmen­t in the yearlong negotiatio­ns since talks resumed after President Donald Trump had scuttled the peace process on the eve of a deal in September.

Though the pledge to reduce violence falls short of the overarchin­g longterm cease-fire sought by the Afghan government, Western diplomats had said getting the Taliban to agree to more than a modest reduction in attacks would be difficult before the withdrawal of foreign forces gets underway.

Details of the offer, confirmed by Western and Taliban officials familiar with the negotiatio­ns, were unclear, though the Taliban have said in the past that a reduction in violence would mean scaling back attacks on major cities and highways.

Also unclear was duration of any reduction — though one Taliban official suggested it was between seven and 10 days — and whether the American side had agreed to the Taliban proposal, which was made on Wednesday. The two sides continued to talk on Thursday.

In a sign that the talks may have reached an important stage, the top commander of U.S. and NATO forces in Afghanista­n, Gen. Austin Miller, joined the U.S. negotiatin­g team in Doha, officials said.

The issue of whether to agree to a cease-fire before the departure of the roughly 13,000 U.S. forces and thousands more NATO troops has been an existentia­l one for the Taliban, who see violence as their most important leverage. The insurgents spent more than a month deliberati­ng Washington’s demand.

Members of the Taliban negotiatin­g team repeatedly traveled from Doha, Qatar, where the talks are taking place, to consult with the group’s leaders and commanders in Pakistan, where they enjoy havens. In the end, they came back to the Americans with a proposal of reducing violence for a brief period. Some officials suggested the arrangemen­t could essentiall­y amount to a cease-fire — in which no attacks are carried out — without explicitly using the term, which some Taliban leaders believe would divide their ranks.

The Taliban’s willingnes­s to reduce violence is likely to lead to the signing of the deal between the insurgents and the United States that includes a gradual withdrawal of U.S. troops from Afghanista­n in return for a Taliban pledge that Afghan soil will not be used by internatio­nal terrorist groups to launch attacks against the United States and its allies. The signing of a deal would then move the peace process to its next stage, in which the insurgents would sit with the Afghan government, so far excluded in the talks, and other political factions to negotiate future power-sharing.

In the past, the Taliban have refused to talk with the Afghan government, calling it an American puppet. But in September, before Trump scuttled a nearly signed peace deal, a round of negotiatio­ns that was to include some members of President Ashraf Ghani’s administra­tion had been planned in Oslo for soon after the signing of a deal between the Taliban and the United States. The Afghan government still seemed to be pushing for an extensive ceasefire. Hamdullah Mohib, the national security adviser, said at a conference in New Delhi on Wednesday that Afghan leaders saw a cease-fire as a sign of the Taliban’s seriousnes­s for genuine peace, and that the group — which the government has long seen as a proxy of the Pakistani military — can deliver on what they sign.

“Peace for our people means the end of violence,” Mohib said. “This is why we insist that a cease-fire is necessary to create a conducive environmen­t for talks.

“A cease-fire, he added, “will prove to the Afghan people and government that our enemies are not only serious about peace, but that it is within their control to maintain their part of a future deal.”

Trump’s scuttling of the talks threw into confusion U.S. policy on Afghanista­n, and raised fears that Trump, long public about his weariness with the war, might pull troops from the country even without a deal. But it also provided a window of reflection over a peace process that many saw as too rushed.

Afghan leaders, which had worried that their U.S. allies were selling them out, saw an opportunit­y for course correction and urged a complete reset that emphasized a cease-fire as a condition for any resumption of talks.

 ?? JIM HUYLEBROEK PHOTOS / THE NEW YORK TIMES 2019 ?? Afghan forces last September. The Taliban have offered a brief period of reducing violence in Afghanista­n during ongoing negotiatio­ns with U.S. diplomats, three officials familiar with the talks said on Thursday.
JIM HUYLEBROEK PHOTOS / THE NEW YORK TIMES 2019 Afghan forces last September. The Taliban have offered a brief period of reducing violence in Afghanista­n during ongoing negotiatio­ns with U.S. diplomats, three officials familiar with the talks said on Thursday.
 ??  ?? American military personnel in Afghanista­n last September. If the U.S. side accepts the Taliban’s offer, it could amount to the most significan­t developmen­t in the yearlong negotiatio­ns.
American military personnel in Afghanista­n last September. If the U.S. side accepts the Taliban’s offer, it could amount to the most significan­t developmen­t in the yearlong negotiatio­ns.

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