Millennium Post

Taliban name negotiatin­g team ahead of new peace talks with US

Includes 5 former inmates of the US prison in Guantanamo Bay who were released in 2014

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KABUL: The Taliban have announced a 14-member negotiatin­g team ahead of talks this month with US envoy Zalmay Khalilzad, who has been meeting with the insurgents to try to end America’s longest war.

Mullah Abbas Stanikzai heads the Taliban team announced Tuesday, which includes five former inmates of the US prison in Guantanamo Bay who were released in 2014 in exchange for a captured American soldier.

The team also includes Anas Haqqani, the jailed younger brother of the leader of the Haqqani network, a powerful Taliban faction.

Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid said Haqqani, who is being held in Kabul, “should be released to start work on the negotiatin­g team.”

The Taliban refuse to meet with the Us-backed government in Kabul.

Meanwhile, The Trump administra­tion wants to ensure that Afghanista­n is never used as a safe haven for terrorists, Acting US Defense Secretary Patrick Shanahan has told President Ashraf Ghani during his surprise visit to the war-torn country to lead a push for peace talks with the Taliban.

Shanahan held talks with Ghani at the Presidenti­al Palace on Monday to reaffirm his commitment to Afghanista­n through implementa­tion of President Trump’s South Asia strategy.

“The leaders discussed a broad range of defence issues, including the importance of Taliban political chief Mullah Abbas Stanikzai

the Us-afghanista­n security relationsh­ip and of achieving a political settlement to the war that ensures Afghanista­n is never again used as a safe haven from which terrorists can plan and launch terrorist attacks against the United States, our interests, and our allies,” said Pentagon Spokespers­on Cmdr Sean Robertson.

During the meeting, Shanahan praised the sacrifices made by Afghan and Coalition troops, and reaffirmed America’s continued support to Afghan forces as they lead the fight to defend their country.

Shanahan made a surprise trip to Afghanista­n on Monday, his first-ever visit to the country where US troops have been stationed for 17 years.

President Donald Trump reportedly wants to cut in half the 14,000 American troops in Afghanista­n, and the Taliban

leaders have made a US withdrawal a key condition in peace negotiatio­ns.

Shanahan told reporters on Monday that he had no orders to reduce the American troop presence. He said that while the US had a key role to play, it is ultimately up to Afghans to find peace.

“The Afghans have to decide what Afghanista­n looks

like. It’s not about the US, it’s about Afghanista­n,” he said.

The Acting Defense chief ’s visit comes after the US held major talks with the Taliban officials in Qatar last month in an attempt to end the 17-year conflict.

US special envoy Zalmay Khalilzad, who is leading the talks, has expressed hope of finding a deal before Afghan presidenti­al elections scheduled for July.

In a series of tweets after six days of talks with the Tali- Afghanista­n President Ashraf Ghani ban representa­tives in Doha last month, Khalilzad said the US has made “significan­t progress” in its peace talks with the Taliban.

“We have a draft of the framework that has to be fleshed out before it becomes an agreement. The Taliban have committed, to our satisfacti­on, to do what is necessary that would prevent Afghanista­n from ever becoming a platform for internatio­nal terrorist groups or individual­s,” Khalilzad said at the time.

Since being appointed in September, Khalilzad has met with all sides in an attempt to end America’s longest war in which the US has lost over 2,400 soldiers.

The US is expected to start a second round of talks with Taliban officials on February 25 in Qatar, where they have their political office.

The Afghan Taliban, however, has said that despite the ongoing talks with the US and other regional powers, it had “not yet reached” any conclusion that would entail an immediate end to hostilitie­s against America and its allies.

The Taliban are holding talks with the United States “on their own initiative”, Taliban spokesman Zabiullah Mujahid was recently quoted as saying by a TV channel.

The Taliban control nearly half of Afghanista­n, and are more powerful than at any time since the 2001 Us-led invasion after the 9/11 terror attacks in 2001.

Meanwhile, Indian-american Congressma­n Ro Khanna said that the US should continue supporting the Afghan government financiall­y and diplomatic­ally after leaving and include them in the peace process.

“We should continue supporting the Afghan government financiall­y and diplomatic­ally after leaving and include them in the peace process. The Afghans must eventually earn domestic legitimacy themselves, though,” he said in an op-ed in USA Today.

Khanna said the biggest threat to democracy was not the Taliban, but staying economical­ly competitiv­e with authoritar­ian superpower­s like China.

Responding to critics who argue that after the US withdrawal the Taliban might steamroll the Afghan government and then harbour terrorists, Khanna said preventing that outcome did not require a permanent US troop presence.

“Deterrence works. The Taliban should understand that the United States will use overwhelmi­ng force again if they harbour terrorists who directly threaten our homeland. Moreover, other ‘ungoverned territorie­s’ exist where terrorists can operate. There, we conduct counterter­rorism from the air without troop deployment,” Khanna said.

The team also includes Anas Haqqani, the jailed younger brother of the leader of the Haqqani network, a powerful Taliban faction

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