Taliban attack third Afghan provincial capital in a week

The Taliban attacked a third provincial capital in
Afghanistan in less than a week, killing at least two civilians, an official
said Friday as a U.S. envoy was back in Qatar for unexpected talks on a
U.S.-Taliban deal he had described as complete just days earlier.
Farah provincial governor Mohammad Shoaib Sabet told
The Associated Press that another 15 people were wounded in the latest attack,
citing local hospitals, and that airstrikes had been carried out against the
militant group. Small clashes continued in the city, he said.
This week’s spike in violence, including two
shattering Taliban car bombings in the capital, Kabul, comes after U.S. envoy
Zalmay Khalilzad said he and the insurgents had reached a deal “in principle”
that would begin a U.S. troop pullout in exchange for Taliban counterterror
guarantees.
Khalilzad abruptly returned to Qatar, where the
Taliban have a political office, from Kabul for more talks Thursday evening,
even though earlier in the week he said the deal only needed President Donald
Trump’s approval to be final.
Objections to the agreement raised by the Afghan
government and several former U.S. ambassadors to Afghanistan, and the death of
a U.S. service member in the latest Kabul bombing on Thursday, have increased
pressure on Khalilzad in recent days.
House Foreign Affairs Committee Chairman Eliot Engel
has demanded that the envoy testify before the House committee about the
negotiations, saying that “I do not consider your testimony at this hearing
optional.”
The Taliban have explained their surge in deadly
attacks — including on the capitals of northern Kunduz and Baghlan provinces
last weekend — as necessary to give them a stronger negotiating position in
talks with the U.S., a stance that has appalled Afghans and others as scores of
civilians are killed.
One Farah resident, Shams Noorzai, said the Taliban
on Friday had seized an army recruitment center close to the city’s main police
headquarters and set it on fire. All shops had closed, he said, and some people
were trying to flee. It was at least the third time the Taliban have attacked
the city, the capital of Farah province, in the past four years.
The governor later said security forces had re-taken
the recruitment center.
Fighting resumed in at least one part of Kunduz city
and two outlying districts on Friday, with some residents trying to flee again,
provincial council head Mohammad Yousuf Ayubi said.
Few details have emerged from the nine rounds of
U.S.-Taliban talks over nearly a year. Khalilzad has said the first 5,000 U.S.
troops would withdraw from five bases in Afghanistan within 135 days of a final
deal. Between 14,000 and 13,000 troops are currently in the country.
However, the Taliban want all of the approximately
20,000 U.S. and NATO troops out of Afghanistan as soon as possible.
The U.S. for its part seeks Taliban guarantees that
they will not allow Afghanistan to become a haven from which extremist groups
such as al-Qaida and the local affiliate of the Islamic State group can launch
global attacks.