NATO defence ministers to discuss future of Afghan mission

The 30 NATO defence ministers are due to discuss via videoconference on Thursday whether to withdraw international troops from Afghanistan by the end of April as per an agreement with the Taliban despite the precarious security situation there.
NATO seems poised to stay put in
Afghanistan, with the alliance's Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg arguing
that the radical Islamist militant group has failed to stick to their side of
the bargain.
"The Taliban has to reduce violence, the Taliban
has to negotiate in good faith, and the Taliban has to break all ties, has to
stop supporting international terrorist groups like al-Qaeda," Stoltenberg
said Wednesday.
But scrapping the deadline risks
confrontation with the Taliban which has already threatened reprisals if the
withdrawal doesn't go ahead.
Germany - which has the second
largest share of the roughly 10,000 NATO and partner-country troops in
Afghanistan - has spoken out in favour of staying in the country for now.
A formal decision is not expected
at Thursday's meeting, as new US President Joe Biden reviews the policy course
set out by his predecessor Donald Trump.
Under the Trump administration,
the US signed an agreement with the Taliban that provides for the gradual
withdrawal of all NATO forces from the country by the end of April. In return,
the Taliban committed to renouncing violence and entering peace talks with the
government.
The United States invaded
Afghanistan in the wake of the September 11, 2001 attacks in order to stop the
country serving as a haven for international terrorists. NATO allies and
partners followed after.
Close to two decades of bloody
conflict have claimed the lives of more than 40,000 Afghan civilians, and cost
hundreds of billions of dollars.
The Taliban has continued carrying
out attacks in various parts of the country despite the start of direct peace
talks between the internationally-backed Afghan government and the militants in
Qatar in mid-September.
The NATO defence ministers are
also scheduled to discuss the Iraq mission on Thursday, which is due to be
beefed up to prevent the resurgence of the Islamic State group.