The Americans suffered their biggest blow for many months when a Taliban suicide bomber killed six soldiers on a foot patrol at the Bagram air base close to Kabul. Against this background of activity, the Chief of Army Staff General Raheel Sharif is likely to visit before December 30 and there is hope on the Afghan side that the battered peace process can somehow be revived. There can be no peace process — or agreement — unless the Taliban in their many iterations are at the table where final positions are decided. They will want to negotiate from a position of strength and a push to ‘take and hold’ makes strategic sense for them.
The most optimistic Afghan officials are anticipating a resumption of talks within two weeks, with meetings being held in Pakistan that include American and Chinese representatives, and we wish them well. General Raheel Sharif once again finds himself as point-man for a crucial foreign policy task. If he can bring the Taliban to the table, there may just be a chance of pausing action on the battlefield, but as things stand now, prospects of Helmand staying in control of the Afghan government are looking dim.
Published in The Express Tribune, December 23rd, 2015.
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