Imperial Valley Press

US envoy: Afghan, Taliban team ready to set talks agenda

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ISLAMABAD ( AP) — The U. S. envoy who brokered the ongoing peace talks between the Afghan government and the Taliban said Wednesday the two sides have overcome a threemonth impasse and agreed on rules and procedures for the negotiatio­ns.

The developmen­t is significan­t as it means the warring sides are getting closer to actually starting to negotiate the issues that could end decades of fighting in Afghanista­n and determine the country’s post-war future. But first they must decide on the agenda for the negotiatio­ns, which is the next step.

In a series of tweets, U.S. envoy Zalmay Khalilzad said there was a signed document and urged both the Taliban and the government to get down to the business of negotiatin­g a “political roadmap and a cease-fire.”

The three-page document lays out the rules and procedures for the negotiatio­ns, which are taking place in Qatar where the Taliban have long maintained a political o ce.

Afghans “now expect rapid progress on a political roadmap and a ceasefire. We understand their desire and we support them,” Khalilzad tweeted.

A cease-fire, rights of women and minorities, and constituti­onal amendments are expected to top the agenda. But the list is likely to be long and contentiou­s, with issues such as safety guarantees for thousands of Taliban fighters who disarm, as well as for disbanding the heavily armed militias loyal to Kabul warlords, many of them allied either with the government or opposition politician­s.

U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, who on Feb. 29 signed a Taliban-U.S. deal that paves the way for withdrawal of American troops from Afghanista­n, welcomed the agreement.

“As negotiatio­ns on a political roadmap and permanent ceasefire begin, we will also work hard with all sides in pursuit of a serious reduction of violence,” he said.

Khalilzad’s announceme­nt was not unexpected — last month, the Taliban said the rules and procedures were settled and the U.S. said last week it was all but wrapped up. But then the Afghan government said it had concerns with the some of the words in the preamble that set o accusation­s that Afghan President Ashraf Ghani was holding up the deal. His spokesman denied this.

There were no details about the document, but Taliban spokesman Mohammed Naeem said the two sides have appointed a committee to hammer out the agenda items.

Since the Afghan-Taliban talks started in September, violence has spiked significan­tly. The Taliban have staged deadly attacks on Afghan forces while keeping their promise not to attack U.S. and NATO troops. The attacks have drawn a mighty retaliatio­n by the Afghan air force, backed by U.S. warplanes. Internatio­nal rights groups have warned both sides to avoid inflicting civilian casualties.

In Washington, U. S. Gen. Mark Milley, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Sta , said the military’s plan for reducing American troop levels in Afghanista­n to 2,500 by mid- January has been approved by the acting

secretary of defense, Christophe­r Miller. Milley declined to discuss the plan beyond saying that the smaller U.S. force would operate from “a couple of larger bases,” along with several smaller ones, in order to continue its current missions of combatting extremist groups like al-Qaida and training and advising Afghan defense forces.

Milley asserted that the U.S. has achieved “a modicum of success” in Afghanista­n after more than 19 years of war, given that there has not been a repeat of the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks

on the U.S. homeland. Noting that President Donald Trump made the decision to reduce the U.S. force to 2,500, Milley said, “What comes after that, that will be up to a new administra­tion; we’ll find that out on the 20th of January and beyond.”

In Brussels, NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenber­g welcomed the breakthrou­gh on the Afghan-Taliban talks, amid uncertaint­y over the alliance’s future in Afghanista­n and urged for rapid progress on cease-fire and establishi­ng a political road map.

 ?? AP PHOTO/PATRICK SEMANSKY, POOL ?? Members of the Taliban’s peace negotiatio­n team meet with Secretary of State Mike Pompeo amid talks between the Taliban and the Afghan government, on Nov. 21 in Doha, Qatar.
AP PHOTO/PATRICK SEMANSKY, POOL Members of the Taliban’s peace negotiatio­n team meet with Secretary of State Mike Pompeo amid talks between the Taliban and the Afghan government, on Nov. 21 in Doha, Qatar.

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