Categories: Afghanistan

Negotiating sides await Biden call for progress in talks

KABUL (Pajhwok): Afghan peace negotiators are on hold awaiting US President-elect Joe Biden to signal whether he will stick to Donald Trump’s aggressive schedule to pull out troops, a media report said on Thursday. After a month-long break, some negotiators from both sides have yet to return to Doha, the Qatari capital that has served as venue for negotiations between the Afghan government and the insurgents to end decades of war. A diplomatic source in Kabul said expectations were low for progress before Biden takes office on Jan. 20.

The sides “do not want to commit to anything before the 20th. They wanted to have the process going in the meantime because that was one of the requirements of the international community, so they have the process. But it is stagnant,” he said. In an agreement reached last year, Trump, who had long promised to end America’s longest war, signed the United States up to a full withdrawal in coming months. But that depends on the Taliban meeting security conditions which the Afghan government says have not been met. Biden and his advisors have so far given few clues as to their plans.

“We are waiting for the new U.S. administration and their policies towards Afghanistan to see whether they would respect the peace accord,” a Taliban negotiator told Reuters on condition of anonymity as he was not authorised to speak publicly. “If they don’t honour their commitment of withdrawing their forces as promised…then we would need to make tough decisions by appointing hardliners to key positions on the ground.”

After months of little progress, the sides finally agreed ground rules for talks late last year. The talks then broke up in December, in part to allow negotiators to return home for consultations with their leadership. The sides announced last week they would re-start talks on Saturday. But so far only limited meetings between smaller teams called ‘contact groups’ have taken place, three diplomatic and Afghan government sources told Reuters.

Around four top members of the Taliban negotiating team were not yet in Qatar, the group’s spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid said. He said this was due to logistical issues travelling from remote areas where they were visiting family. They would arrive in the next few days and the delay would not affect the talks, he said. Some Afghan government negotiators were also not yet in Doha. One, who has been receiving treatment for cancer, told Reuters she planned to travel there this week.

The Frontier Post

Recent Posts

Russian attacks on Kharkiv and region kill one, injure 17, officials say

KHARKIV, Ukraine (Reuters): Russian attacks on Orthodox Easter Sunday killed a woman buried under rubble…

10 mins ago

CM Sindh pledges to maintain peace in city

KARACHI (APP): Sindh Chief Minister Syed Murad Ali Shah has vowed to maintain peace in…

13 mins ago

Reneging on agreement inviting trouble to region

By repeatedly denying the existence of an agreement on managing the Ren'ai Reef issue with…

29 mins ago

Soliciting WHA for Taiwan exposes US duplicity

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken issued a statement on Wednesday saying the United States…

29 mins ago

Crackdowns on US college protests serve only to disenfranchise youth and miss the point

Hafed Al-Ghwell American universities have historically been bastions of free speech and conduits for great…

32 mins ago

Israel and Hamas are stuck in a dangerous, deliberate stalemate

Yossi Mekelberg Negotiations between Israel and Hamas over a ceasefire, the release of hostages and…

32 mins ago

This website uses cookies.