The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Afghanista­n peace deal has its obstacles

- By Kathy Gannon

U.S. negotiator­s are in a hurry to find a peace deal for Afghanista­n that would allow America to bring home its troops after 17 years of war, but the road ahead is littered with obstacles.

What is happening now?

After years of the U.S. insisting on talks between the Afghan government and the Taliban, U.S. negotiator Zalmay Khalilzad began meeting with the insurgents shortly after his appointmen­t in September, giving into a key demand from the Taliban, who view the Kabul government as an American puppet.

President Donald Trump’s frustratio­n with the costly and interminab­le war, as well as reports of a U.S. plan to withdraw half of its roughly 15,000 troops by the summer, has lent a sense of urgency to Khalilzad’s mission.

The Taliban, who ruled Afghanista­n according to a harsh version of Islamic law from 1996 to 2001 and hosted Osama bin Laden as he mastermind­ed the Sept. 11 attacks, say they no longer seek a monopoly on power and would not pose a threat to other countries.

But many fear a full NATO withdrawal would leave the weak and corrupt Afghan government vulnerable to collapse, or unleash yet another round of fighting in a war that has already killed tens of thousands of Afghans.

Who is negotiatin­g?

While the U.S. says it is committed to an “Afghan-led” process, the main talks are between Khalilzad and the Taliban’s political leadership, which is based in the Gulf nation of Qatar and includes several veteran battlefiel­d commanders.

The Taliban came to the table from a position of strength, having taken over nearly half the country. Their daily attacks on Afghan forces are so deadly the government and the U.S. have classified Afghan casualty figures. On a few occasions, the Taliban have seized entire cities, only withdrawin­g in the face of Afghan counteroff­ensives and NATO air assaults.

The Taliban negotiator­s are led by Abdul Ghani Baradar, a veteran commander released by Pakistan last year after eight years in prison, apparently upon a U.S. request. He is believed to command enough respect within the movement to sell a peace deal to frontline fighters. The team also includes two of the five Taliban leaders freed from Guantanamo Bay in 2014 in exchange for a captured U.S. soldier.

Khalilzad is also meeting with Pakistan, which is widely believed to harbor the Taliban’s top leadership, as well as China, India and Russia, which have an interest in stabilizin­g the region — and in expanding their influence.

What have they agreed to?

The two sides are reportedly closing in on a deal in which the U.S. would withdraw from Afghanista­n in return for a Taliban promise not to allow it to be used as a launchpad for terrorist attacks. They are also reportedly discussing a ceasefire and the formation of an interim government.

Khalilzad has said the U.S. remains committed to women’s rights, the rule of law and freedom of the press, but says it will be left to the Afghans to negotiate those rights.

What about the Afghan government?

The government is rife with corruption and deeply divided along ethnic and factional lines. Its authority is largely confined to major cities, with the Taliban effectivel­y controllin­g much of the countrysid­e. The U.S. and NATO formally ended their combat mission in 2014 but still provide air support and crucial aid to Afghan forces.

Afghan President Ashraf Ghani, who will seek re-election in July, is vehemently opposed to an interim government or further delays in elections.

But he appears to have been largely sidelined in the talks. His peace envoy, Omer Daudzai, has been following Khalilzad across the region and meeting with the same people, apparently to keep tabs on him.

What if the Taliban take over?

Memories are still fresh of the Taliban’s hard-line rule, when they forbade girls’ education and women working outside the home. But the group has struck a more conciliato­ry tone in recent years, and last week the Taliban called upon Afghans to “forget their past and tolerate one another.”

The Taliban are militarily formidable, but it’s not clear they have the numbers to overthrow the government, and the group has said it does not want a monopoly on power.

The Western-backed government, meanwhile, is widely seen as corrupt and inefficien­t. Afghans complain of poor public services, insecurity and widespread graft. Women secured new freedoms after 2001, but their lives are still heavily restricted in the deeply conservati­ve country.

What are the prospects for peace?

Afghanista­n has been mired in war for decades, and while the U.S. and the Taliban have claimed significan­t progress in the latest talks, they have yet to pen a deal.

It’s unclear whether the Taliban are willing or able to crack down on other armed groups. Afghanista­n is home to a vicious Islamic State affiliate that has survived clashes with both the Afghan government and the Taliban, and which might be able to recruit even more disgruntle­d Taliban fighters if the group is seen as caving to U.S. demands.

The U.S. says it has largely eradicated al-Qaida in Afghanista­n and Pakistan, but senior figures, including the group’s leader, Ayman al-Zawahri, and bin Laden’s son, Hamza, are believed to be based in the region. Without knowing the militants’ location, or who is protecting them, it would be difficult to verify any agreement to root them out.

That would leave the U.S. in more or less the same position it was nearly two decades ago, when a small group of foreign fighters in Afghanista­n plotted the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001.

 ?? SERGEY PONOMAREV / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Afghanista­n President Ashraf Ghani (above), who will seek re-election in July, is vehemently opposed to an interim government or further delays in elections. But he appears to have been largely sidelined in the talks between the Taliban and U.S. negotiator Zalmay Khalilzad.
SERGEY PONOMAREV / THE NEW YORK TIMES Afghanista­n President Ashraf Ghani (above), who will seek re-election in July, is vehemently opposed to an interim government or further delays in elections. But he appears to have been largely sidelined in the talks between the Taliban and U.S. negotiator Zalmay Khalilzad.
 ?? Source: maps4news.com/©HERE STAFF ??
Source: maps4news.com/©HERE STAFF

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