Pakistan a candidate for mediation between Washington and Taliban
The leaders of the Afghan Taliban movement met with the
political leadership in Pakistan to discuss several files in the framework of
preparing for the withdrawal of Washington's military forces from Afghanistan
in accordance with the historic agreement between them. The movement’s
spokesperson, Zabihullah Mujahid, announced on his Twitter account on December
16 that the head of the movement’s political bureau in the Qatari capital,
Doha, Abdulghani Baradar, and his accompanying delegation met with Pakistani
Foreign Minister Shah Mahmoud Qureshi in Islamabad.
Mediation talks
Mujahid pointed out that Baradar and Qureshi discussed the
current situation in Kabul, in addition to talks about the issue of refugees,
education, health, trade exchange, and prisoner issues. In his meeting with the
media, Qureshi said that his country wanted a lasting peace in Afghanistan and
looked forward to a ceasefire and the reduction of violence to advance the
peace process and complete the American consensus with the leaders of the
movement.
Qureshi pointed out that the political delegation of the
Taliban is keen on peace and stability in Afghanistan, pointing out that the
ongoing talks between the Afghan parties are a historic opportunity to settle
the conflict peacefully, calling on the international community to assume its
responsibilities towards the reconstruction of Kabul.
The Pakistani minister announced that the next round of
talks between the Afghan parties will be held on January 5, 2021, but their
location has not yet been determined, and he stressed that his country played a
decisive role in completing the historic agreement between Washington and the
Taliban. It is mentioned that Pakistan was among the countries that strongly
welcomed this agreement for interests that bind between the concerned parties.
Ceasefire
Washington had signed in February 2020 a peace agreement
with the Taliban that includes the military withdrawal of US forces from
Afghanistan, with an internal Afghan dialogue that includes all parties, preceded
by the complete release of detainees from the movement by the government and
vice versa, as well as stopping cooperation between the Taliban and any other
terrorist organizations, especially al-Qaeda, and the country not turning into
a training ground for terrorist groups to plan and carry out attacks against
American interests. But stopping violence remains a demand that has not been
seriously accepted, as everyone agreed on its importance without the Taliban
continuing their violent campaigns against the government's security forces.
Pakistan’s entry came clearly on the mediation line between
Washington and the Taliban in order to establish a permanent and comprehensive
ceasefire after violent operations carried out by the movement in the country
and the exit of opposition statements from within the American camp to what the
movement is practicing despite the agreement. Parallel to the visit of the
Taliban’s political delegation to Pakistan, he met with US Chief of Staff Mark
Milley, who joined the movement's negotiators on October 17 in Qatar in order
to talk about internal negotiations, the completion of the peace process, and
the need for a ceasefire.
But can Pakistan really play a real role in mediating
between Washington and the movement, especially since this matter was
previously raised during Prime Minister Imran Khan’s meeting with US President
Donald Trump in July 2019 and discussed the matter and the possibility of
Islamabad implementing a role in persuading the Taliban to peace with Washington,
albeit the agreement was already signed in February. So will the next phase
witness a ceasefire and commitment to the terms of peace and security calm for
the sake of a handover process that benefits all parties concerned with shares
in managing the country and common interests?



