Baltimore Sun Sunday

Taliban deal looks promising despite the risks, Esper says

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MUNICH — U.S. Defense Secretary Mark Esper said Saturday that a truce agreement between the United States and the Taliban that could lead to the withdrawal of American troops from Afghanista­n is not without risk but “looks very promising.”

Ahead of a formal announceme­nt of the sevenday “reduction in violence” deal, Esper said it was time to give peace a chance in Afghanista­n through a political negotiatio­n. He spoke a day after a senior U.S. official said the deal had been concluded and would take effect very soon.

Expectatio­ns are that agreement will be formally announced Sunday and that the reduction in violence will begin Monday, according to people familiar with the plan.

“So we have on the table right now a reduction in violence proposal that was negotiated between our ambassador and the Taliban,” Esper told an audience at the Munich Security Conference. “It looks very promising.”

“It’s my view as well that we have to give peace a chance, that the best if not the only way forward in Afghanista­n is through a political agreement and that means taking some risk,” he said. “That means enabling our diplomats and that means working together with our partners and allies on the ground to affect such a thing.”

Esper and Secretary of State Mike Pompeo met on Friday in Munich with Afghan President Ashraf Ghani, who has been skeptical of the scheme, which, if successful, would see an end to attacks for seven days and then the signing of a U.S.-Taliban peace deal. All-Afghan peace talks would then begin within 10 days as part of the plan, which envisions the phased withdrawal of U.S. forces over 18 months.

In remarks later to a group of reporters, Esper declined to say whether the U.S. had agreed to cut its troop levels in Afghanista­n to zero. He said if the seven-day truce is successful and the next step toward Afghan peace talks begins, the U.S. would reduce its troop contingent “over time” to about 8,600. There currently are about 12,000 U.S. troops in the country.

Ghani also refused to comment on many specifics of the plan but said the time had come “find a political solution to stop the war.”

He said it was impossible to know whether the Taliban might take advantage of a drawdown in American military power in Afghanista­n to reassert its own presence, but said the only way to find out was to “engage in the peace process.”

“The critical test is going to be: will the Taliban accept an election?” Ghani said.

The president rejected the idea that the Taliban could be granted greater influence in certain regions of Afghanista­n, saying it was “antithetic­al to the Afghan vision because we are a unified country.”

“The scope of the peace must be national. It cannot be subnationa­l because otherwise it will be a recipe for another round of conflict,” he said.

The United States has not agreed to suspend or end its counterter­rorism operations in Afghanista­n, which have been focused mainly on an Islamic State affiliate, known as ISIS-K, and al-Qaida, said Pentagon spokeswoma­n Alyssa Farah, who was traveling with Esper.

“Under any agreement, General Miller retains the authoritie­s necessary to protect U.S. national security interests, including the authoritie­s and capabiliti­es to strike ISIS-K and alQaida,” she said, referring to U.S. Gen Scott Miller, the commander of American and coalition forces in Afghanista­n.

Separately on Saturday, NATO chief Jens Stoltenber­g told the security conference that he also supported the plan but stressed that the alliance’s mission in Afghanista­n would continue in the short- and medium-term.

“We are not leaving Afghanista­n but we are prepared to adjust our force level if the Taliban demonstrat­es the will and the capability to reduce violence and make real compromise­s that could pave the way for negotiatio­ns among Afghans for sustainabl­e peace,” he said.

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