The Capital

US pushes to broaden Taliban deal

Biden team seeking to reduce violence in Afghanista­n by May

- By Thomas Gibbons-Neff

DOHA, Qatar — U.S. diplomats are trying to build on parts of the peace deal made with the Taliban last year, specifical­ly the classified portions that outlined what military actions — on both sides — were supposed to be prohibited under the signed agreement, according to American, Afghan and Taliban officials.

The negotiatio­ns, which have been quietly underway for months, have morphed into the Biden administra­tion’s last-ditch diplomatic effort to achieve a reduction in violence, which could enable the United States to still exit the country should broader peace talks fail to yield progress in the coming weeks.

If these discussion­s and the separate talks between the Afghan government and Taliban falter, the United States will likely find itself with thousands of troops in Afghanista­n beyond May 1. That is the deadline by which all U.S. military forces are meant to withdraw from the country under the 2020 agreement with the Taliban and would come at a time when the insurgent group likely will have begun its spring offensive against the beleaguere­d Afghan security forces.

Both of these conditions would almost certainly set back any progress made in the past months toward a political settlement, despite both the Trump and the Biden administra­tions’ fervent attempts to end the U.S.’ longest-running war.

“Time is really running out for the Biden administra­tion,” said Asfandyar Mir, an analyst at the Center for Internatio­nal Security and Cooperatio­n at Stanford University. “If there is no breakthrou­gh in the next two to three weeks, Biden will have scored his first major foreign policy failure.”

The proposed agreement specific to two annexes of the 2020 deal, which were deemed classified by the Trump administra­tion, is intended to stave off an insurgent victory on the battlefiel­d during the peace talks by limiting Taliban military operations against Afghan forces, according to U.S. officials and others familiar with the negotiatio­ns. In return, the United States would push for the release of all Taliban prisoners still imprisoned by the Afghan government and the lifting of U.N. sanctions against the Taliban — two goals outlined in the original deal.

These new negotiatio­ns, which exclude representa­tives from the Afghan government, are being carried out amid a contentiou­s logjam between the Taliban and the Afghans, despite pressure from internatio­nal and regional actors on both sides to commit to some form of a path forward.

With May 1 just a few weeks away, there is a growing sense of urgency and uncertaint­y looming over all sides.

The United States has about 3,500 troops in the country, alongside thousands of contractor­s and internatio­nal forces still on the ground. Withdrawin­g those forces and all their equipment by May 1 is, at this point, almost logistical­ly impossible, experts and officials said.

The U.S.’ unilateral negotiatio­ns with the Taliban have drawn ire from Afghan negotiator­s, who see the side discussion­s as a distractio­n from the broader peace talks. Even if the United States and the Taliban reach a deal to reduce violence, it is not likely to result in a full cease-fire, said one of the Afghan government negotiator­s, who spoke on the condition of anonymity.

The United States is pushing for three months of reduced violence and has been for some time — though U.S. diplomats hope that timeline could be extended.

But in recent months, the Taliban submitted their own proposal, first reported by Tolo News, with requests that were not fully accepted by the U.S. negotiator­s and included severe restrictio­ns on U.S. air power.

Many of the delays in securing a new deal to reduce violence stem from the original February 2020 agreement.

That deal loosely called for the Taliban to stop suicide attacks and largescale offensives in exchange for the U.S. forces scaling back drone strikes and raids, among other types of military assaults. But both sides interprete­d those terms differentl­y, officials said, and both have accused one another of violating the deal. The Taliban are also supposed to cut ties with al-Qaida and other terrorist groups, but the U.S. intelligen­ce community has seen little movement toward that goal.

Under the current arrangemen­t, U.S. forces can defend their Afghan allies if they are being attacked, but the Taliban said U.S. airstrikes have been carried out against their fighters who were not attacking

Afghan forces.

Digital spreadshee­ts maintained by the Taliban and viewed by The New York Times detail hundreds of purported U.S. violations. They record in detail the group’s wounded and killed, along with civilian casualties and property damage. However, the Taliban often do not distinguis­h between offensive operations carried out by Afghan security forces from those by U.S. forces, and several of the events the Times was able to independen­tly verify from June 2020 did not involve U.S. troops.

The new terms for a reduction in violence have been a point of contention during the past several months, during meetings frequently held at the Sharq Village and Spa, a resort in Doha, Qatar.

 ?? JIM HUYLEBROEK/THE NEW YORK TIMES 2019 ?? U.S. military personnel in a helicopter swing over Helmand Province in Afghanista­n.
JIM HUYLEBROEK/THE NEW YORK TIMES 2019 U.S. military personnel in a helicopter swing over Helmand Province in Afghanista­n.

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