Taliban threaten to pull out of peace talks with US

'America must pursue the peace talks with sincere intentions'

PHOTO: REUTERS

KABUL:
The Taliban on Tuesday threatened to stall peace talks with the United States if they deflect from the issue of foreign force withdrawal from Afghanistan.

In a statement, the Taliban said America must pursue the peace talks with "sincere intentions" or it "will be forced to stall all talks and negotiations until America ends her unlawful pressures and manoeuvring and steps forward towards true peace."

The warning comes a day after Taliban fighters blew up a car-bomb outside a highly fortified compound killing at least five people and wounding more than 110 Afghans and expatriates in Kabul city.

Last week senior leaders of the Taliban cancelled the fourth round of peace talks with Zalmay Khalilzad, the US special envoy for peace in Afghanistan over an "agenda disagreement."

Khalilzad arrived in Kabul on Tuesday after meeting officials in India, the United Arab Emirates and China, the US Embassy in Kabul said.

The Afghan-born former US ambassador to Kabul was named to  oversee Washington's peace efforts last year. He has met the Taliban leaders at least three times to discuss foreign troop withdrawal and a timeline for a ceasefire.

The United States has also insisted that any final settlement must be led by Afghans themselves.


"The US goal is to promote dialogue among Afghans about how to end the conflict, and to encourage the parties to come together at the negotiating table to reach a political settlement in which every Afghan citizen enjoys equal rights and responsibilities under the rule of law," the embassy said in a statement.

Diplomatic push to end Afghan conflict

But the leaders of the insurgent group have rejected requests from the United States and regional powers to deal directly with the government in Kabul, which it considers an illegitimate foreign-imposed regime.

The Taliban have been pushing to shift the venue for the talks from Saudi Arabia to Qatar in an attempt to fend off Riyadh's bid to include the Afghan government in them.

The insurgents, seeking to reimpose strict Islamic law after their 2001 ouster by US-led troops, insist that the United States is their main adversary in the war and demand bilateral talks.

"The United States agreed during the Doha meeting in the month of November 2018 about discussing the withdrawal of foreign forces from Afghanistan and preventing Afghanistan from being used against other countries in the upcoming meeting," the Taliban said.

The United States "is now backing away from that agenda and is unilaterally adding new subjects."
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