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US says Taliban violated deal

Military cites recent shelling of American bases in Afghanista­n

- By Thomas Gibbons-Neff The New York Times

Military officials believe insurgent group fired rockets at American bases in Afghanista­n.

KABUL, Afghanista­n — Rockets launched at a U.S. military base and a joint U.S.-Afghan airfield in southern Afghanista­n in recent weeks are believed to have been fired by the Taliban, according to three U.S. military officials, in what would amount to a clear breach of the peace agreement between the United States and the insurgent group.

Roughly a dozen rockets struck in late July around Camp Bastion, a sprawling air base used by Afghan and U.S. forces in the southern province of Helmand. And several rockets were fired within the past week or so at Camp Dwyer, a large U.S. military base about 50 miles south of Bastion.

A Taliban commander familiar with the region denied that the group had carried out any strikes on U.S. bases in Helmand and said the group would investigat­e. The rocket strikes may also have been carried out by a Taliban faction that is against the agreement, according to one military official who was briefed on the matter.

There were no U.S. casualties in either attack, nor a public response from Washington during a stretch in which U.S. officials have struggled to keep an already shaky peace process on track.

The U.S.-led mission in Afghanista­n also declined to comment.

Helmand province, long considered the Taliban’s heartland, is predominan­tly controlled by the insurgent group, although wellarmed drug barons and differing tribal affiliatio­ns ensure that many allegiance­s and agendas in the region are murky. Afghan government forces there are mostly constraine­d to the provincial capital, Lashkar Gah, and some villages that serve as district centers.

The February peace deal signed in Doha, the capital of Qatar, stipulates that the Taliban would refrain from striking U.S. or NATO forces as they gradually withdrew from the country. And the U.S. military would attack the Taliban only to defend Afghan forces.

The Taliban, long thought to be a conglomera­te of various factions with differing agendas, seem to have largely stayed true to the agreement as a unified front, at least publicly, when it comes to not attacking U.S. or coalition forces. But as the Taliban have continued to mount heavy assaults against the Afghan military forces, the United States has carried out dozens of airstrikes to help the Afghans, officials say.

Another sticking point is the Taliban’s reluctance to condemn al-Qaida, the terrorist group that carried out the Sept. 11 attacks, and was harbored by the Taliban. A clearly defined tenet of the Feb. 29 peace agreement calls for the Taliban to sever all ties with al-Qaida before the total withdrawal of U.S. troops. Pentagon officials believe that al-Qaida fighters continue to be well ingrained with Taliban rank and file.

Gen. Austin Miller, commander of the U.S.-led mission in Afghanista­n, said last week that there was a “debate” on Taliban ties to al-Qaida.

“There are very strict commitment­s there, and they must be upheld,” Miller told 1TV, an Afghan news outlet.

Violations of the Feb. 29 deal are often raised privately by Taliban and U.S. officials through a communicat­ion channel establishe­d after the agreement’s signing. Publicly, the Taliban have denounced the United States for carrying out airstrikes on their fighters, claiming the Americans were violating the deal.

“This is one part of a bigger picture,” said Andrew Watkins, a senior analyst on Afghanista­n for Crisis Group, a Brussels-based conflict resolution organizati­on.

“The military’s general silence or lack of comment of what seems to be an ongoing dynamic in the conflict feels like a reflection of a larger trend of the Americans willing to overlook ambiguitie­s in how the February agreement is being upheld in the interest of not jeopardizi­ng an agreement that already feels very fragile.”

In the recent attacks, the Taliban fired rockets from several miles away that were mostly inaccurate, said one military official familiar with the events. After rockets struck Camp Dwyer, U.S. aircraft retaliated by striking the launch site, destroying a cluster of munitions that had yet to be fired, the official said.

Camp Dwyer, a British base that was turned over to the Americans at the height of the war, is becoming the strategic hub for U.S. troops remaining in southern Afghanista­n.

The U.S.-led mission in Afghanista­n has plans to shuttle troops to Camp Dwyer from its large airfield in Kandahar before closing the base in the coming months, according to military officials. Under the February agreement, five U.S. bases were closed and handed over to Afghan forces.

Camp Bastion was once the logistics hub for U.S. and NATO troops in Helmand province. Conjoined by the U.S. Marine base Camp Leathernec­k, the base was handed over to Afghan security forces in 2014.

Several months later, as the Taliban began retaking much of the province, U.S. forces returned, establishi­ng a small base there.

There are roughly 8,000 U.S. troops in Afghanista­n, with plans to draw down to about 4,500 by the fall. Four U.S. service members have been killed during combat operations this year.

The Afghan government and the Taliban are stalled on the cusp of direct negotiatio­ns in Qatar as a dispute continues about a prisoner exchange on both sides.

Under the deal between the United States and the Taliban, which initiated the phased withdrawal of U.S. troops, direct peace negotiatio­ns were conditione­d on swapping 5,000 Taliban prisoners with 1,000 Afghan security forces held by the insurgents.

While the Taliban has released the Afghan prisoners, President Ashraf Ghani was reluctant to release 400 Taliban prisoners accused of serious crimes until a consultati­ve assembly approved their release this month.

 ?? HUSSEIN SAYED/AP ?? U.S. peace envoy Zalmay Khalilzad, left, and Taliban Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar after signing a peace deal Feb. 29.
HUSSEIN SAYED/AP U.S. peace envoy Zalmay Khalilzad, left, and Taliban Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar after signing a peace deal Feb. 29.

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