The United States has said its landmark deal with the Taliban has entered the “next phase”
The United States has said its landmark deal with the
Taliban has entered the “next phase” while urging the militants to reduce
rising violence to allow Afghan peace talks to begin.
The two sides signed an agreement in
February that saw Washington pledge to withdraw all troops from Afghanistan by
the middle of next year, in return for the insurgents promising to hold
negotiations with the Afghan government to end the decades-old war.
Under phase one, the US said it would reduce troops to
8,600 within 135 days, while completely removing forces from five military
bases.
On the 135th day, US Special Representative on
Afghanistan, Zalmay Khalilzad, who negotiated the deal for Washington, tweeted
that both sides had reached a “key milestone”.
“The US has worked hard to carry out
1st phase of its commitments under the agreement, including to reduce troops
& depart five bases,” he said on Monday.
As the deal entered its “next phase”, Washington's
approach will be based on certain conditions, Khalilzad warned. “We will press
for completion of prisoner releases, reduction of violence [...] & start of
& progress in intra-Afghan negotiations,” he said.
Talks between the Taliban
and Kabul hinge on a nearly completed prisoner exchange agreed in the deal.
Kabul pledged to free
some 5,000 Taliban prisoners in a swap that would see the insurgents release
around 1,000 Afghan security force captives. The government has so far released
more than 4,000 Taliban inmates, while the insurgents have freed more than 600
Afghan security personnel.
Since the deal was
signed, the Taliban have stepped up attacks across much of Afghanistan killing
hundreds.
Khalilzad too condemned
the violence, saying “large numbers” of Afghans continued to die without a
reason, while acknowledging that no American had been killed since the deal.
“Violence has been high,
especially in recent days and weeks,” Khalilzad said, condemning a Taliban
attack on Monday on a rural office of Afghanistan's
intelligence agency that killed 11 security personnel.
“The Taliban's attack contradicts their commitment to reduce
violence until a permanent ceasefire is reached in intra-Afghan talks.“
time to think
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