US envoy forges ahead with troubled Taliban peace deal
Washington’s envoy to Afghanistan stressed
Saturday the economic benefits of the peace deal with the Taliban, forging
ahead with an agreement that has run into new political obstacles both in the
US and regionally.
Zalmay Khalilzad was wrapping up a week-long
trip that included stops in Uzbekistan, Pakistan and the Gulf state of Qatar,
where the Taliban negotiators are headquartered.
The US signed a peace deal with the Taliban in
February to end 19 years of war in Afghanistan.
Khalilzad has sought to stress the economic
benefits of the peace deal throughout his tour. In a series of tweets early
Saturday, the US envoy said he had met with the Qatar Investment Authority and
the Taliban’s chief negotiator Mullah Abdul Ghani, in the tiny Gulf state’s
capital of Doha.
“We agreed development plans in support of
peace can never start too early,” Khalilzad tweeted.
However, Washington has recently become
embroiled in a controversy over intelligence reports that Russia was paying
money to insurgents with links to the Taliban to kill American and NATO
soldiers.
The identity of the insurgents who took the
bounty money is still vague but the payments have been traced to an Afghan drug
lord Rahmatullah Azizi, who is living in Moscow, according to Afghan officials
who spoke with The Associated Press.
The officials said the money was delivered
through Azizi’s brother Wahidullah, who was the go-between for those
facilitating the attacks on US troops.
The New York Times first reported the US
intelligence claiming the payment of bounties as well as Azizi’s involvement.
Added to the uncertainty and delays swirling
around the US-Taliban peace deal, the Pentagon released a report on Wednesday
that questioned the Taliban’s commitment to end its ties with Al-Qaeda. The
peace deal calls for the Taliban to fight against terrorist organizations and
ensure Afghanistan would not be used again to attack US interests or its
allies. Critics of the deal say the militants can’t be trusted.
Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid denied
contacts with Al-Qaeda in the Indian Subcontinent, saying the insurgents were
committed to the peace deal.
Khalizad embarked on his tour of the region
last weekend, even as the rate of coronavirus infections in the United States
soared and countries worldwide struggled with the dangers of re-opening. He did
not travel to Afghanistan citing the dangers of the pandemic and instead held
video conference calls with both Afghan President Ashraf Ghani and his
government partner, Abdullah Abdullah.
Pakistan’s Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood
Qureshi tested positive for COVID 19, just 48 after meeting with Khalilzad.
Both had been pictured wearing masks during their meeting on Wednesday in the
Pakistani capital of Islamabad
Qureshi said he developed a fever on Friday
and tested positive to the virus. But he promised to “carry on” his official
duties from home.
Even as Khalilzad winds up his latest
diplomatic mission, there was no date for crucial intra-Afghan negotiations
that bring the Taliban together with the Afghan government and other local
actors. Khalilzad called for a quick resolution of outstanding issues so those
negotiations could begin.
Until now the biggest hurdle has been the
release of prisoners. The peace deal called for the Afghan government to free
5,000 Taliban prisoners, in exchange for the Taliban releasing 1,000 government
personnel. So far the government has freed 3,500 and the Taliban around 700.
Ghani earlier this week suggested that his
government had a problem with some of the names on the Taliban’s list of
prisoners to be released and said alternative names would be given.
It seems unlikely that the Taliban will accept
anyone not on the list agreed upon during negotiations with the US
Suhail Shaheen, the Taliban’s political
spokesman in Doha, called the Afghan government reasons for delaying prisoner
releases “phony excuses” and the reason for the delay in beginning intra-Afghan
talks.
As of Saturday, Afghanistan recorded 32,600
coronavirus infections, but international NGOs say the rate is much higher and
have warned that the country’s war-ravaged health care system risks collapsing.
Seemingly indicative of the lack of health
care facilities in Afghanistan to deal with the virus, Ghani’s special envoy
for economic development, Yosuf Ghaznafar, went to Turkey when he became ill
with COVID-19. On Friday he died of the disease, according to a statement from
the presidency. Ghaznafar is the senior most Afghan official to die of the
virus.
Afghanistan has so far recorded 826 deaths
from the virus.




