The National - News

AFGHAN TALKS IN TURKEY WILL END IN DEADLOCK, ENVOY SAYS

▶ Kabul’s ambassador to the UAE says only increased US pressure will work on Taliban

- JAMES REINL

Afghanista­n peace talks scheduled to take place in Turkey this month were likely to end in deadlock, said Javid Ahmad, Afghanista­n’s ambassador to the UAE.

Mr Ahmad told a US think tank that talks between his government and the Taliban would not deliver results because the insurgents were not feeling enough pressure from the White House.

Washington is pushing for talks to be hosted by Turkey, with UN involvemen­t, to finalise a peace deal between the government and the Taliban, as a May 1 deadline for the withdrawal of US and other foreign troops looms.

“My personal view is that there will likely be a deadlock in the Turkey conference – if the conference happens,” Mr Ahmad told an online meeting of the Washington-based Middle East Institute on Monday.

“The United States is losing leverage, arguably, by the day.”

He said peace talks between his government and the Taliban in Qatar in recent years have stalled and should be rotated around other venues

“The Doha talks have faltered spectacula­rly, if not failed altogether, because they haven’t yielded the results that were intended or desired,” Mr Ahmad said.

The Taliban were too comfortabl­e in Doha, he said.

A date for the Turkey meeting was yet to be decided, but it could be within the next fortnight.

Afghan President Ashraf Ghani is set to propose a threephase peace roadmap for Afghanista­n at the Turkey meeting in pursuit of a deal with the Taliban and a ceasefire before elections.

The plan is a counter to proposals advanced by Washington, and dismissed by Kabul, that envisage drawing up a new legal system for an interim power-sharing administra­tion with Taliban members.

The Taliban threatened to resume hostilitie­s against foreign forces in Afghanista­n if they did not meet the May 1 withdrawal deadline set in a deal between the group and the Trump administra­tion last year.

US President Joe Biden said this month it would be “hard” to withdraw the remaining US troops from Afghanista­n by that deadline but said he did not think US forces would be in the country by next year.

A senior government official said the Taliban was willing to extend the May 1 deadline and would cease attacks on foreign troops in exchange for the release of thousands of their prisoners held by Kabul authoritie­s.

There is no deadline for prisoner exchanges.

Mohammed Naeem, a Taliban spokesman in Qatar, said no such offer was made.

According to Mr Ahmad, the Taliban were not under enough pressure to make concession­s.

“The Taliban are conducting the talks on their own terms. They’re also fighting on their own terms. I suspect, and I would posit, that they would also want to have a power-sharing arrangemen­t on their own terms,” Mr Ahmad said.

“The Taliban’s objectives since 1996 have not really changed, and that is to take over the Afghan system and fundamenta­lly change it. They’re very stubborn.”

Washington has been at war in Afghanista­n for 20 years, with the conflict beginning after the September 11 terrorist attacks in New York and Pennsylvan­ia.

Presidents Barack Obama and Donald Trump tried – and failed – to bring the US troop presence there to an end.

An Afghan government official said May 1 troop withdrawal deadline may be extended, but Taliban spokesman disagreed

 ?? AFP ?? Afghan envoy Javid Ahmad said the Taliban were comfortabl­e with peace talks and felt no obligation to make concession­s
AFP Afghan envoy Javid Ahmad said the Taliban were comfortabl­e with peace talks and felt no obligation to make concession­s

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates