When Afghan President Ashraf Ghani proposed negotiations with the Taliban earlier this year, it was assumed that he meant secret talks since neither side had actually spoken to the other in any capacity owing to their individual policies forbidding formal and direct dialogue. Backchannel talks are critical to the struggle for finding a lasting settlement in Afghanistan. This will lay the groundwork for peace and incrementally set the parameters for how future negotiations unfold. The challenge is to accomplish the unthinkable within the framework of the conflict in the zero-sum game politics in Afghanistan.
A visible development in the Afghan conflict came in February 2018 when President Ghani, unlike his predecessor, Hamid Karzai, decided to accept the Taliban as a legitimate stakeholder who could be taken as a full negotiating partner — provided it accepted a ceasefire and recognised the country’s Constitution. The next step is to find a ripe moment to break the chain of tit-for-tat violence. After that it is important for the belligerents to work towards an intermediate agreement.
Published in The Express Tribune, June 1st, 2018.
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