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US voices disappointment at delay in Afghan talks

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US voices disappointment at delay in Afghan talks
  • ByKATHY GANNON, ASSOCIATED PRESS
KABUL, Afghanistan — Apr 22, 2019, 11:50 AM ET
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Associated Press
Afghan Security personnel arrive outside the Telecommunication Ministry during a gunfight with insurgents in Kabul, Afghanistan, Saturday, April 20, 2019. A suicide blast rocked Afghanistan's capital Saturday during a gun battle with security forces, officials said, killing several people a day after hopes for all-encompassing peace talks collapsed. (AP Photo/Rahmat Gul)more +


U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo called Afghanistans president over the weekend to express Washingtons disappointment over the indefinite postponement of Afghan talks with the Taliban, according to a statement released Monday.

The talks were scheduled to start this coming Friday in Qatar, where the Taliban maintain an office, but were scuttled after a falling-out between the two sides over who should attend.

The gathering would have marked the first time that Taliban and Kabul government officials sat together, a potential milestone in efforts to reach a negotiated end to the war in Afghanistan, Americas longest, and the eventual withdrawal of U.S. troops.

The State Department said that in his call with President Ashraf Ghani on Saturday, Pompeo encouraged both sides to come together to agree on participants, saying the talks are Afghanistans best chance for peace.


U.S. envoy Zalmay Khalilzad, who has met on several occasions with the Taliban and has pressed for Afghan-to-Afghan talks, had expressed hope the Qatar meeting would bring the sides closer to a roadmap for a future Afghanistan.

In a second statement released Monday, the U.S. State Department said Khalilzad would travel to Afghanistan, Pakistan, India and Qatar, as well as Russia and the United Kingdom, for further talks. It said the multi-country trip began Monday and will end May 11.

It said that in Kabul, Khalilzad will consult with the Afghan government and other Afghans to encourage all parties to work towards intra-Afghan dialogue and negotiations to determine a final peace settlement.

In Qatar, Khalilzad will meet again with the Taliban to focus on national security issues, an apparent reference to guarantees Washington is seeking that Afghanistan will not again be used as a staging area for terrorist attacks. The two sides have also been discussing a timetable for the withdrawal of an estimated 14,000 U.S. troops, a longstanding Taliban demand.

Khalilzad has said they reached a draft agreement on both issues, without elaborating.

The statement said Khalilzad will also press the Taliban to participate in inclusive Afghan-to-Afghan talks.

The U.S.-backed government in Kabul has been sidelined for months from the talks with the Taliban because the insurgents refuse to meet with government officials. The Taliban have said they will only meet with Afghans as private individuals and not as government representatives.

Kabul had offered to send a massive delegation of some 250 representatives, including government officials, opposition figures and other prominent Afghans. But the hosts in Doha, at the urging of the Taliban, came back with a revised list that drastically reduced the number of women in the delegation and eliminated all government ministers.

Each side blamed the other for scuttling the talks as violence continued. On the ground, Afghan government forces face not only a resurgent Taliban — who now hold sway over nearly half the country — but also militants from the Islamic State group, who attacked the heavily-guarded Telecommunications Ministry in Kabul on Saturday, killing seven people.

A prominent figure on the Kabul list for the talks in Qatar said several senior participants had received calls from the presidents office warning them not to express personal opinions at the talks with the Taliban, and to only speak on behalf of the state. The individual spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to discuss the sensitive negotiations.

In another bid to project unity, Ghani is organizing a Loya Jirga — a traditional gathering of elders and prominent Afghans — to be held next week in Kabul. But Chief Executive Abdullah Abdullah and others have refused to attend. Both leaders, who have served in a power-sharing government since disputed elections in 2014, are running in presidential elections planned for September.

Ghanis envoy, Omar Daudzai, said the council would lay out the governments negotiating position for future talks with the Taliban. The council will be asked to formulate its position on a host of issues, including womens rights, Daudzai told The Associated Press on Monday.

Whatever the council decides, that will be our position in negotiations with the Taliban, he said.

Some 2,500 people are to attend the Loya Jirga, including lawmakers and others chosen by district and provincial councils.

The elections are non-negotiable and will be held in September, Daudzai said, even though Washington may be worried the vote could further undermine chances of a peace deal with the Taliban.

A sustainable peace deal after presidential elections is very much possible, but it is close to impossible before presidential elections, Daudzai said.
 
President Trump is supposed to be the master of negotiations. He must know how to spice it up circumventing all the roadblocks and bottlenecks, overwhelmingly from the folks close to him...
 
A peace deal between the USA and the Taliban will happen. Part of the Kabul government will make peace with the Taliban. The old northern alliance will never make peace with the Taliban.

What does this mean for the future? The USA will leave...and the Afghan government will fracture. The Northern alliance will either launch a coup and take over or abandon Kabul with as much weapons from the ANA as possible to fortify their ethnic regions.
 
The US needs to put the puppet Ghani govt in line, they are trying everything to avoid the peace talks being successful since day one.

Too much money at stake. Kabul needs the war going so it can skim billions out of the west and have some international legitimacy. Kabul will sabotage any peace deal with the Taliban. The USA has to threaten a pull out with or without an inter-afghan peace deal.
 
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Ghani govt is clearly not serious and doesn't want any talks with Talibans to take place with US. Their decision of sending delegation of more than 250 people clearly depict their intent.
 
A peace deal between the USA and the Taliban will happen. Part of the Kabul government will make peace with the Taliban. The old northern alliance will never make peace with the Taliban.

Before the end of this year, a peace deal will definitely happen. Trump wants to show he has removed US forces from Afghanistan as promised in last elections to his voters for 2020 campaign.

What does this mean for the future? The USA will leave...and the Afghan government will fracture. The Northern alliance will either launch a coup and take over or abandon Kabul with as much weapons from the ANA as possible to fortify their ethnic regions.

A civil war now is definitely on the cards. Without USA support, Kabul will fall within weeks. But this time the civil war won't drag too long imo. Northern Alliance will run to Panjshir like last time and will ask India for help. This time Pakistan shouldn't make the same mistake like last time which ended up in a very long civil war. If a civil war do happen we probably should send our F-16s and bomb Panjshir Valley to the ground. These RAW/NDS scumbags needs to be taught a very painful lesson.
 
Before the end of this year, a peace deal will definitely happen. Trump wants to show he has removed US forces from Afghanistan as promised in last elections to his voters for 2020 campaign.



A civil war now is definitely on the cards. Without USA support, Kabul will fall within weeks. But this time the civil war won't drag too long imo. Northern Alliance will run to Panjshir like last time and will ask India for help. This time Pakistan shouldn't make the same mistake like last time which ended up in a very long civil war. If a civil war do happen we probably should send our F-16s and bomb Panjshir Valley to the ground. These RAW/NDS scumbags needs to be taught a very painful lesson.
Northern Alliance - Taliban war is gonna start back up the way things are looking. USA Deep state has not really accepted this reality. Most USA citizens probably don't care.

The northern alliance....Abdullah Abdullah..... need to be isolated inside Afghanistan as much as possible. He is boycotting the Peace Jirga. Clearly they don't want peace. Factions in Kabul that want peace should be worked with. Northern Alliance will have to be wiped out for peace to be viable.
 
Northern Alliance - Taliban war is gonna start back up the way things are looking. USA Deep state has not really accepted this reality. Most USA citizens probably don't care.

The northern alliance....Abdullah Abdullah..... need to be isolated inside Afghanistan as much as possible. He is boycotting the Peace Jirga. Clearly they don't want peace. Factions in Kabul that want peace should be worked with. Northern Alliance will have to be wiped out for peace to be viable.

True. There are people who think that a national unity government should be made in which Taliban and Northern Alliance will be together. This is a recipe for a disaster. A BS logic.

If a National Unity government is formed in Afghanistan then these Northern Alliance Indian puppets would still be in power. Which would mean they would keep sending TTP/BLA terrorists inside Pakistan from Afghanistan and will still be in cahoots with India.

Best option for Pakistan is to completely remove Northern Alliance from power. Yes, there will be civil war. But in the long run it will pay dividends.
 

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