Taliban kill 26 pro-government militia men in Afghanistan

Attack in Baghlan province comes as US, Taliban negotiators start seventh round of peace talks in Qatar


Reuters June 29, 2019
Taliban claim killing 26, injuring 12 pro-government militia members in attack in Baghlan province. PHOTO: REUTERS/FILE

KABUL: Taliban militants killed at least 26 members of a pro-government militia in north Afghanistan on Saturday, government officials said, the same day the militants and US government officials are due to start a new round of peace talks in Qatar.

Taliban officials claimed responsibility for the attack on the militiamen in Baghlan province. The militants said their fighters had killed 28 of the militia members and wounded 12.

The attack came as negotiators for the US and the Taliban started a seventh round of peace talks on Saturday to end the war in Afghanistan.

Pompeo hopes for Afghan peace deal 'before September 1'

US and Taliban officials privy to the talks said they will seek to finalise a schedule to withdraw foreign troops in return for a Taliban commitment to keep militant groups from using the country as a base to attack the US and its allies.

Saturday's talks will be led by Zalmay Khalilzad, the US peace envoy for Afghanistan, who has held six rounds of talks with the Taliban in Qatar's capital of Doha since October.

"There is a genuine sense of expectation on both sides. It's a make-or-break moment," said a senior US official, who declined to be identified as he was not authorised to speak to media.

The pace of talks between the US and Taliban has sped up as Afghanistan heads for presidential elections on September 28.

"This is one of the crucial meetings," a senior Taliban leader in Qatar said on condition of anonymity. "If we fail to find any solution to the Afghan conflict then we would like to negotiate with the elected representatives of the American people."

On a trip to Kabul this week, US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said Washington was close to finishing a draft agreement with the militants on counter-terrorism assurances, and he hoped a peace pact could be reached by September 1.

About 20,000 foreign troops, most of them American, are in Afghanistan as part of a US-led NATO mission to train, assist
and advise Afghan forces. Some US forces carry out counter-terrorism operations.

The Taliban, who control or contest half the country, more
than at any time since they were ousted by the US invasion in
2001, do not support the election process.

They want to form an interim government, but Afghan President Ashraf Ghani and leaders of opposition political parties have rejected the demand.

Two US soldiers killed in Afghanistan: NATO

Ghani, who has been sidelined from the talks, hopes the seventh round will open the door for an intra-Afghan meeting.

Germany, a key ally of the United States in Afghanistan, is trying to organise a meeting of the Taliban and civilian representatives.

Some Afghan officials fear the United States and the Taliban will strike a deal allowing the US to leave the country, leaving government forces to battle on alone.

On Friday, the Afghan defence ministry said a senior Taliban governor was killed in an airstrike in the eastern province of Logar, and a commander was killed in clashes with Afghan security forces in northern Balkh province.

The Taliban dismissed the report about the death of the Logar governor as government propaganda, however.

Days earlier, on Wednesday, two US service members were killed in Afghanistan. The Taliban claimed they killed the two American soldiers in an ambush in Sayed Abad district of southern Wardak province, but there was no immediate confirmation from NATO.

The deaths bring to nine the number of US service members killed in Afghanistan so far this year, compared to 12 killed in all of 2018.

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