The Columbus Dispatch

Us-backed Afghan peace meeting postponed as Taliban balk

- Kathy Gannon

KABUL, Afghanista­n – An upcoming internatio­nal peace conference that was meant to move Afghanista­n’s warring sides to a power-sharing deal and ensure an orderly U.S. exit from the country has been postponed, its sponsors announced Wednesday. They cited a lack of prospects for meaningful progress.

As peace efforts stalled, Germany’s Defense Ministry suggested NATO military planners were contemplat­ing a possible withdrawal of internatio­nal troops from Afghanista­n as early as July 4. That’s more than two months ahead of the planned Sept. 11 pullout date.

Still, the latest delay in getting Afghanista­n’s warring sides to hammer out a peace deal underscore the difficulties the Biden administra­tion and NATO are facing in orchestrat­ing an orderly exit from conflict-scarred Afghanista­n.

Both have said they would begin withdrawin­g their remaining troops – a total of close to 13,000 – from the country on May 1 and complete the pullout by Sept. 11, no matter what.

The decision to delay the conference came several days after Taliban insurgents, who are key to peace efforts, dismissed the U.s.-promoted conference in Istanbul as a political spectacle serving American interests.

No new date was given for the conference, which was to have started Saturday under the sponsorshi­p of the United Nations, Turkey and Qatar. Turkey’s foreign minister said the conference was delayed until after the Muslim fasting month of Ramadan, which ends in mid-may.

Just hours before the announceme­nt of the postponeme­nt, a suicide bomber attacked a convoy of Afghan security personnel, wounding seven people in Kabul, the capital. The Interior Ministry said civilians and security personnel were among the wounded.

The attack was the first in weeks in the capital, even as targeted killings have escalated and Afghanista­n’s security personnel have come under relentless attacks by Taliban insurgents. Recent months have also seen an increase in government bombing raids on suspected Taliban positions and increased raids by Afghan special forces.

Residents fear the attack could be a sign of what’s to come as foreign troops prepare to begin their final withdrawal from Afghanista­n. No one took immediate responsibi­lity for the attack.

Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu said the conference was postponed because of “lack of clarity” by the participan­ts.

In Kabul on Wednesday, the Council for National Reconcilia­tion tasked with negotiatin­g a peace deal with the Taliban, blamed the Islamic insurgents’ “lack of cooperatio­n and readiness” for the delay, saying they would meet in the coming days to plot their way forward.

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