Springfield News-Sun

Pentagon chief wants ‘responsibl­e end’ to war

- By Lolita C. Baldor and Rahim Faiez

Lloyd Austin made his first visit to Afghanista­n as U.S. Defense Secretary, saying violence must be reduced for diplomacy to work.

KABUL, AFGHANISTA­N — U.S. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin, on his first visit to Afghanista­n as Pentagon chief, said Sunday that the Biden administra­tion wants to see “a responsibl­e end” to America’s longest war, but the level of violence must decrease for “fruitful” diplomacy to have a chance.

With questions swirling about how long U.S. troops will remain in the country, Austin said that “in terms of an end date or setting a specific date for withdrawal, that’s the domain of my boss.” He said his stop in Kabul, the capital, where he met with military commanders and senior Afghan government officials, including President Ashraf Ghani, was intended to let him “listen and learn” and “inform my participat­ion” in reviewing the future of the American force.

President Joe Biden said last week in an ABC News interview that it will be “tough” for the U.S. to meet a May 1 deadline to withdraw troops from Afghanista­n. But Biden said that if the deadline, which is laid out in an agreement between the Trump administra­tion and the Taliban, is extended, it wouldn’t be by a “lot longer.”

Austin, who arrived after a visit to India, said: “There’s always going to be concerns about things one way or the other, but I think there’s a lot of energy focused on, you know, doing what’s necessary to bring about a responsibl­e end, a negotiated settlement to the war.”

The Taliban on Friday warned of consequenc­es if the United States doesn’t meet the deadline. Suhail

Shaheen, a member of the Taliban negotiatio­n team, told reporters that if American troops were to stay beyond May 1, “it will be a kind of violation of the agreement. That violation would not be from our side. ... Their violation will have a reaction.”

A statement released by the presidenti­al palace on the Ghani-Austin meeting said both sides condemned the increase in violence in Afghanista­n. There was no mention of the May 1 deadline. Washington is reviewing the agreement the Trump administra­tion signed with the Taliban last year and has been stepping up pressure on both sides in the protracted conflict to find a swift route to a peace agreement.

“It’s obvious that the level of violence remains pretty high in the country,” Austin said. “We’d really like to see that violence come down and I think if it does come down, it can begin to set the conditions for, you know, some really fruitful diplomatic work.”

In a sharply worded letter to Ghani earlier this month, U.S. Secretary of State Antony

Blinken said it was urgent to make peace in Afghanista­n and that all options remained on the table. He also warned that it was likely the Taliban would make swift territoria­l gains if U.S. and NATO troops withdrew. The United States spends $4 billion a year to sustain Afghanista­n’s National Security Forces.

The Taliban warned America against defying the May 1 deadline, at a news conference in Moscow, the day after meeting with senior Afghan government negotiator­s and internatio­nal observers to try to jumpstart a stalled peace process to end Afghanista­n’s decades of war.

Washington has given both the Taliban and the Afghan government an eight-page peace proposal, which both sides are reviewing. It calls for an interim “peace government” that would shepherd Afghanista­n toward constituti­onal reform and elections.

Ghani has resisted an interim administra­tion causing his critics to accuse him of clinging to power. He says elections alone would be acceptable to bring a change of government.

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 ?? PRESIDENTI­AL PALACE ?? U.S. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin (center) with Acting Afghan Minister of Defense Yasin Zia on Sunday. Austin arrived on his first trip to Afghanista­n as Pentagon chief amid swirling questions over U.S. troops.
PRESIDENTI­AL PALACE U.S. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin (center) with Acting Afghan Minister of Defense Yasin Zia on Sunday. Austin arrived on his first trip to Afghanista­n as Pentagon chief amid swirling questions over U.S. troops.

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