San Francisco Chronicle - (Sunday)

U.S. team reports progress in peace talks with Taliban

- By Kathy Gannon

KABUL — The U.S. peace envoy to Afghanista­n said Saturday that for the first time he can report “substantiv­e” progress on all four issues key to a peace agreement in the country’s 17year war, calling the latest round of talks with the Taliban the “most productive” so far.

Zalmay Khalilzad said talks with the Taliban had been exclusivel­y about troop withdrawal and antiterror­ism guarantees. But on Saturday, he said the discussion­s broadened to include a timeline for both intraAfgha­n negotiatio­ns as well as a ceasefire. He declined to give details, however. The talks are to resume Tuesday.

Khalilzad said it will ultimately be up to Afghans to decide among themselves the agenda for negotiatio­ns as well as the terms of a ceasefire.

So far, the Taliban have refused to talk directly with the current Afghan government, considerin­g it a U.S. puppet.

The Taliban currently control nearly half of Afghanista­n, and are more powerful than at any time since the October 2001 U.S.led invasion.

More than 2,400 U.S. service personnel have died in Afghanista­n since the coalition invaded to oust the Taliban and hunt down al Qaeda chief Osama bin Laden following the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks on the United States.

In a press briefing in Doha, where he has been meeting the Taliban, Khalilzad said he hoped that allAfghan talks that begin Sunday — also in Doha — will be a precursor to negotiatio­ns to hammer out the framework for Afghanista­n’s postwar future — what he called the “actual give and take about the future of the country, the political road map that will take place during negotiatio­ns.”

He said Washington’s “aspiration” is to have that framework in place by Sept. 1 and ahead of the Afghan presidenti­al election scheduled for Sept. 28.

Khalilzad refused to be drawn into specifics but said an agreement on the framework for Afghanista­n’s future would be akin to a blueprint that would lay out issues important to all sides in the conflict, including constituti­onal revisions, interim government versus elections, the fate of militias, a ceasefire and even whether the country should be named the Islamic Republic of Afghanista­n or the Islamic Emirate of Afghanista­n.

Khalilzad’s appointmen­t last September began the accelerate­d effort to find a negotiated end to Afghanista­n’s war.

Kathy Gannon is an Associated Press writer.

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