Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

US envoy working to revive Afghan peace deal

Increased IS activity adds urgency to plan

- Kathy Gannon and Tameem Akhgar

KABUL, Afghanista­n – The first visit to Kabul by Washington’s peace envoy since Afghanista­n’s squabbling political leadership reached a power-sharing agreement comes amid increased violence blamed mostly on an Islamic State affiliate that has been targeted in stepped-up U.S. bombing.

Zalmay Khalilzad, in a flurry of tweets Thursday, told of his meetings in Doha earlier in the week with Taliban representa­tives and on Wednesday with Afghan President Ashraf Ghani and fellow leader Abdullah Abdullah. All were aimed at resuscitat­ing a U.S.-Taliban peace deal signed in February.

Khalilzad returned to Washington late Wednesday.

Khalilzad called for a reduction in violence by all sides in a protracted conflict that has kept America militarily engaged for 19 years. He also said too much time has been wasted getting to the second and critical phase of the peace deal, which calls for talks between the Taliban and Afghanista­n’s political leadership.

Abdullah will head those efforts as part of the deal he signed with Ghani to end their monthslong dispute over who won Afghanista­n’s presidenti­al election last September. He conceded the win to Ghani but as part of a power-sharing agreement.

U.S. President Donald Trump said again last week that American soldiers have wrongly been tasked with policing the country and called on Afghanista­n to step up.

The U.S. has about 12,000 soldiers deployed in Afghanista­n, split between counter-terrorism and the NATO-led Resolute Support’s 16,500-troop mission, which trains and aids Afghanista­n’s National Security Forces. Washington currently pays about $4 billion annually to keep Afghanista­n’s military in fighting form.

U.S. Department of Defense officials have told The Associated Press their biggest worry in Afghanista­n is an increasing­ly active IS affiliate headquarte­red in the east. The group has ties to Middle Eastern affiliates as well as militant groups like the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan and the Chinese Uighur group East Turkestan Islamic Movement.

The officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivit­y of the subject, say the IS affiliate in Afghanista­n has been linked to foiled plots to attack America in recent years. The U.S. also blamed IS for a brutal attack on a maternity hospital earlier this month in Kabul that left 24 people dead, including two infants and several mothers.

The increased IS activity in Afghanista­n has added urgency to U.S. efforts to resuscitat­e the peace deal, which commits the Taliban to fight terrorist groups in Afghanista­n. The same Department of Defense officials said they want the

Taliban in the battle to rout IS from Afghanista­n.

Without intra-Afghan negotiatio­ns, the cease-fire Washington wants between the Taliban and the government won’t happen.

Taliban representa­tives say a ceasefire will be on the agenda in any intraAfgha­n talks, which were to start by mid-March. The delay has been blamed on Afghanista­n’s squabbling leadership in Kabul and disruption­s in prisoner releases, which were promised as part of the peace deal ahead of intra-Afghan negotiatio­ns.

In his tweets, Khalilzad called for the prisoner release to be completed. He reiterated that he is seeking Taliban assistance to find U.S. citizens missing in Afghanista­n, including U.S. contractor Mark Frerichs, who disappeare­d in January. Several Taliban leaders contacted by the AP said they are not holding Frerichs and have told Khalilzad multiple times.

Suhail Shaheen, Taliban spokesman in Doha, said Wednesday the Taliban are committed to the deal and demanded their prisoners be released.

Meanwhile, in eastern Nangarhar province, where IS is headquarte­red, a suicide bomber targeted a district chief and his son Thursday as they were driving through Chaparhar district, said Attaullah Khogyani, the provincial governor’s spokesman. Sediq Dawlatzai and his son were wounded in the attack and transferre­d to a hospital in the capital Jalalabad. No one immediatel­y claimed responsibi­lity for the attack.

 ?? THE PRESIDENTI­AL PALACE VIA AP ?? Afghan President Ashraf Ghani, right, and fellow leader Abdullah Abdullah, center, meet with U.S. peace envoy Zalmay Khalilzad on Wednesday.
THE PRESIDENTI­AL PALACE VIA AP Afghan President Ashraf Ghani, right, and fellow leader Abdullah Abdullah, center, meet with U.S. peace envoy Zalmay Khalilzad on Wednesday.

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