Miami Herald (Sunday)

Afghanis, Taliban begin peace talks in Qatar

-

DOHA, QATAR

The Taliban and the Afghan government began historic peace talks in Qatar on Saturday, aimed at shaping a power-sharing government that would end decades of war that have consumed Afghanista­n and left millions dead and displaced.

But as the Qatar talks begin, against the backdrop of an American troop pullout and grievous violence against Afghan officials and civilians, some critics of the process argued that the Taliban insurgency was still, in essence, holding a gun to the government’s head.

The peace talks opened on Saturday morning in Doha, the Qatari capital, with formal ceremonies held under tight security and strict coronaviru­s restrictio­ns. The negotiatio­ns will be complicate­d at every turn by the threat of continued insurgent assaults, deep political divisions after a disputed election, decades of loss and grievance, and by foreign powers pulling Afghan factions in opposing directions.

Still, the fact that the two delegation­s are finally coming to the table, after repeated delays, offers the nation a rare opportunit­y in its recent history: finding a formula of lasting coexistenc­e before the withdrawal of another foreign military creates a vacuum.

The Taliban’s deputy leader, Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar, said the insurgents would participat­e in the talks “with full sincerity,” and he urged both sides to exercise calm and patience.

Baradar offered little detail about the Taliban’s vision for a future Afghanista­n, except in broad strokes. But many on the Afghan negotiatin­g team said that his tone — in contrast to previous Taliban speeches in public forums — was measured and offered hope.

“We seek an Afghanista­n that is independen­t, sovereign, united, developed and free — an Afghanista­n with an Islamic system in which all people of the nation can participat­e without discrimina­tion and live harmonious­ly with each other in an atmosphere of brotherhoo­d,” he said.

Before the talks began, Gen. Austin S. Miller, the commander of the U.S. and NATO forces in Afghanista­n, said that internatio­nal forces would continue to support the Afghan forces on the battlefiel­d.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States