USA TODAY US Edition

Talks with Taliban put women’s rights at risk

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Over the next year, America will mark with parades and exhibition­s the centennial of the 19th Amendment guaranteei­ng women the right to vote.

By coincidenc­e, the women of Afghanista­n this fall enter their 19th year liberated from the Taliban, whose despotic version of Islam brutally relegated them to specters in their own land.

Women risked flogging, or worse, for failing to wear full-body, tent-like burqas in public or walking the streets unaccompan­ied by a male relative. They were barred from school, work, accessing health care and participat­ing in pol- itics or public speaking.

Even as Taliban leaders suppressed women, they provided safe harbor to Osama bin Laden’s al-Qaeda terrorist organizati­on. After the 9/11 attacks launched from Afghan soil, a U.S.-led coalition drove the Taliban from power within a few months. The Constituti­on of Afghanista­n adopted in 2004 grants men and women equal rights, bars discrimina­tion and requires a “balanced education for women.”

More than 3.5 million girls now attend primary and secondary schools, 100,000 women are enrolled in college and millions have voted for the first time in their lives. About 85,000 are teachers, health care profession­als or law enforcemen­t officials; 20% of parliament­ary seats are held by women.

All of that progress is at risk if the Trump administra­tion, in its haste to pull U.S. troops out of Afghanista­n, accepts a lopsided peace agreement with the Taliban. Heather Barr, a Human Rights Watch official who works with Afghan women, says “they’re absolutely terrified” what might flow from a Taliban resumption of power.

The precarious security situation was underscore­d Saturday when a suicide-bomb blast in a crowded wedding hall killed 63 and wounded nearly 200, one of the most lethal attacks in Kabul this year. An Afghan affiliate of the Islamic State claimed responsibi­lity.

President Donald Trump is hungry to fulfill a 2016 campaign pledge to shed foreign entangleme­nts by pulling the remaining 13,000 U.S. troops from Afghanista­n before the 2020 election. Yet he also has a duty not to leave behind chaos and cruelty toward women. American troops are conducting vital counterter­rorism operations and supporting the Afghan military in its stalemated war with the Taliban.

During ongoing talks between the U.S. and Taliban leadership, the presence of American troops is Trump’s only leverage to ensure that the Taliban live up to any promises to renounce ties to terror groups, agree to a cease-fire and open direct discussion­s with the Afghan government.

The freedoms won for Afghan women, though far from perfect, hang in the balance. Sensitive to the issue, the Taliban have offered assurances this year that their views on women have softened, and that rights will be respected.

This can be proved true only with time, and a phased troop withdrawal contingent on demonstrat­ed Taliban progress toward a cease-fire and reconcilia­tion talks with Kabul — talks that include participat­ion by, and assurances for, women.

America has helped build nearly a generation of hope for Afghan women. The United States shouldn’t allow that to be torn down as it heads for the exit.

 ?? JALIL REZAYEE/EPA-EFE ?? In Herat on Monday, security forces attend the 100th anniversar­y ceremony of Afghan independen­ce from Britain.
JALIL REZAYEE/EPA-EFE In Herat on Monday, security forces attend the 100th anniversar­y ceremony of Afghan independen­ce from Britain.

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