The Pak Banker

Daunting path to Afghan peace

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It was never going to be simple or easy. But the impediment­s encountere­d at every step of the way to launch intra-Afghan talks have been far more challengin­g than expected.

This has not only delayed a process that was planned to begin on March 10 under the Feb 29 Doha agreement between the US and the Afghan Taliban. It has also underlined the long and grinding road that lies ahead for the parties to reach any semblance of agreement on the country's future once negotiatio­ns do begin.

The prisoner exchange between Kabul and the Taliban continues to be the immediate obstacle. The Taliban have insisted that before intra-Afghan talks can begin what was agreed by the Doha accord should first be implemente­d - the commitment by the Afghan government to release up to 5,000 Taliban prisoners. After freeing the detainees in several tranches, a prolonged impasse on releasing the remaining 400 has followed, with President Ashraf Ghani claiming that they were dangerous militants who he was averse to release. However, under immense pressure from the Americans Ghani was urged to call a Loya Jirga to find a political cover and face-saver for the prisoner release.

Winning the peace remains a formidable challenge even though the stakes are so high.

Once the Jirga cleared the way for the release by its Aug 8 declaratio­n, the Taliban signalled readiness for talks to begin as soon as Aug 10. That is what they conveyed to US special representa­tive Zalmay Khalilzad. Preparatio­ns got into swing to convene the inaugural meeting in Doha. Discussion also took place about whether that meeting should be held virtually or in person on Aug 16 for which the Qataris wanted Khalilzad's attendance. Tentative informatio­n about a Doha meeting was conveyed to many countries including Pakistan, the plan being to invite 22 states, mostly virtually.

But then Kabul again demurred despite the fact that Ghani signed an order for the release following the Jirga's decision. His justificat­ion for refusing to free the remaining 320 Taliban prisoners was the same - they would pose an 'internatio­nal' security threat and confront Western countries with a "new wave of drugs". Rejecting this argument, the Taliban in a statement on Aug 15, declared that the accusation­s against these detainees were unfounded and merely an attempt by Kabul to create hurdles in the peace process and stoke internatio­nal concerns.

The latest impasse has further vitiated the environmen­t for the peace talks. But it has also fuelled some media speculatio­n that the Afghan government may be dragging its feet and deliberate­ly delaying the talks until the US presidenti­al election, just over two months away now. The aim may be to try, if Joe Biden wins, to persuade his administra­tion to change course or to at least slow down the US military withdrawal from Afghanista­n. If true, this represents a grievously mistaken assumption. Apart from banking on an uncertain electoral outcome it also presuppose­s that Biden would reverse course on a process well underway, especially with Washington's recent announceme­nt that by election time American troops would go down to less than 5,000 in Afghanista­n. This suggests that any delay-tillelecti­ons tactic would leave the Ghani government in an even weaker position than it is in now.

US officials can be expected to mount renewed pressure on Ghani to relent even as the Afghan president continues to stir up concerns among European countries about the release of so-called hardcore Taliban fighters. Washington has already made it evident that it wants to speedily get intra-Afghan talks going given President Trump's desire to bring the bulk of US troops home by the November election and deliver on his previous campaign promise.

Developmen­ts over the past several months, since the Doha agreement, have magnified the challenges intra-Afghan talks will face considerin­g the obstacles that have been encountere­d to initiate them. Even on who the Taliban say they are prepared to negotiate with is a source of contention. On several occasions the Taliban have said they will not negotiate with the Kabul government but with the wide spectrum of 'all parties to the conflict'. It reiterated recently that "The Islamic Emirate does not recognise the Kabul administra­tion as a government but views it as [a] Western imported structure. We only accept negotiatio­ns that were described in the historic Doha agreement … that cover all parties to the Afghan conflict".

On the two big agenda items in future negotiatio­ns a framework agreement and a ' comprehens­ive and permanent ceasefire' the positions of the two parties are as far apart as they can be. So also, is mutual mistrust. The Afghan government has already set a number of pre-negotiatio­ns 'redlines' for the talks.

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pressure from the Americans Ghani was urged to call a Loya Jirga to find a political cover and face-saver for the prisoner release. Winning the peace
remains a formidable challenge even though the
stakes are so high.
However, under immense pressure from the Americans Ghani was urged to call a Loya Jirga to find a political cover and face-saver for the prisoner release. Winning the peace remains a formidable challenge even though the stakes are so high.

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