How Trump upended US-Taliban peace talks
With a series of tweets, President Donald Trump has
upended nearly a year of U.S.-Taliban negotiations on ending America’s longest
war. He has “called off” the talks and asserted that a planned secret meeting
between him and Taliban leaders at Camp David, set for Sunday just days before
the 9/11 anniversary, is now canceled. The Taliban have not immediately
commented, raising questions about whether Trump’s dramatic move was a
face-saving attempt after the deal his envoy said had been reached “in
principle” faced serious challenges in recent days.
Here’s a look at the negotiations on a deal that
Trump had wanted quickly, calling it “ridiculous” that the U.S. was still in
Afghanistan after nearly 18 years and billions of dollars spent.
The Taliban, who ruled Afghanistan with a harsh
version of Islamic law from 1996 to 2001 and hosted Osama bin Laden as he
masterminded the 9/11 attacks, say they no longer seek a monopoly on power. But
militant group now controls or holds sway over roughly half of the country.
Many fear a full withdrawal of some 20,000 NATO troops would leave the weak and
corrupt Afghan government vulnerable to collapse, or unleash another round of
fighting in a war that has killed tens of thousands.
A DEAL WITH FEW DETAILS
The talks between Afghan-born U.S. envoy Zalmay
Khalilzad and Taliban leaders in Qatar, where the insurgent group has a
political office, have been so closely guarded that last week Afghan President
Ashraf Ghani was shown — not given — the final draft. The Afghan government has
been sidelined because the Taliban refuse to negotiate with what they call a
U.S. puppet.
The Taliban negotiators have been led by Abdul Ghani
Baradar, one of the group’s founders who was released by Pakistan last year
after eight years in prison, apparently upon a U.S. request. He is believed to
command enough respect to sell a deal to tens of thousands of fighters.
The deal once final would begin a U.S. troop
withdrawal with the first 5,000 leaving within 135 days, Khalilzad announced on
Monday. That would leave 8,600 troops who train and support Afghan forces after
their combat role ended in 2014. In return the Taliban would guarantee that
Afghanistan would not be a launching pad for global terror attacks by groups
including a local affiliate of the Islamic State organization and the remains
of al-Qaida.
But problems quickly emerged. Even as Khalilzad
explained the deal to the Afghan people during a nationally televised
interview, the Taliban detonated a car bomb targeting a foreign compound in
Kabul. Ghani’s office then raised loud objections, agreeing with several former
U.S. ambassadors who warned that a hasty U.S. withdrawal without Taliban
guarantees on ending violence could lead to “total civil war.” Far from guaranteeing
a ceasefire, the deal includes only a reduction in violence in Kabul and
neighboring Parwan province, where the U.S. has a military base.
Then on Thursday, a second Taliban car bomb exploded
in Kabul and killed 12 people including a U.S. service member — which Trump
blamed for his decision to cancel the talks. Khalilzad abruptly returned to
Qatar for at least two days of negotiations. One Afghan political analyst,
Waheed Muzhda, said he believes Khalilzad invited the Taliban to Camp David to
sign the agreement but they rejected that location, angering Trump.
More than 2,400 U.S. service members have been
killed in nearly 18 years of fighting in Afghanistan, and some observers are
asking why the latest death would derail the U.S.-Taliban negotiations on the
apparent brink of a deal. The Taliban have said the attacks strengthen their
negotiating position.
“A difficulty created by announcing that the
U.S.-Taliban deal was completed in advance of actually announcing the terms of
the deal or being ready to sign is that space has been created for those
unhappy with it — in Kabul or Washington — to try to modify or disrupt it,”
Laurel Miller, Asia director for the International Crisis Group, said shortly
before Trump’s announcement.
WHAT HAPPENS NOW?
It is not clear. It seems no one had anticipated a
Camp David meeting between Trump and the leaders of an insurgent group that
just months ago Secretary of State Mike Pompeo had described as “Taliban
terrorists.”
The Taliban seemed just as bewildered, with
spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid telling The Associated Press he could not
immediately confirm the U.S. president’s account. “We are waiting for our leaders
and will update you,” he said. On Saturday night the Taliban spokesman in
Qatar, Suhail Shaheen, made no indication the process had collapsed, tweeting
about possible locations on the intra-Afghan talks on the country’s political
future that were meant to follow a U.S.-Taliban deal.
The Afghan government did not directly comment on
Trump’s announcement but repeated its plea for an end to violence and said it
believed the U.S.-Taliban talks had stopped at least for now. “We have always
said that a real peace will come when the Taliban stop killing Afghans and
implement a ceasefire and start direct negotiations with the Afghan
government,” it said in a statement.
That prospect still looks challenging, as Trump’s
tweets noted he had planned to meet “separately” with Taliban and Afghan
leaders at Camp David.
President Ashraf Ghani now might see a clear path to
a Sept. 28 presidential election that he has insisted must go forward despite
the U.S. pressure for the intra-Afghan talks, including the Taliban, to begin
as soon as possible. Those talks were thought to carry the possibility of
forming an interim government instead. The Taliban have urged Afghans to
boycott the vote and said polling stations would be targets.
Afghans would welcome any agreement that brings
improved security and governance. But many have feared the U.S. would settle
for an agreement that breaks down as soon as the last American soldier leaves.
The prospect of a Taliban return has especially worried Afghan women, who
secured new freedoms after 2001 but are still heavily restricted in the deeply
conservative country.
“At the end of the day, this is a bilateral accord
between the U.S. government and the Taliban. The Afghan government is not a
party to it,” said Michael Kugelman, deputy director of the Asia program at the
Wilson Center, ahead of Trump’s announcement. “This suggests the Trump
administration may reach a point where it decides to sign off on the deal even
if it still faces opposition from Kabul.”
But the Trump administration walking away from a
deal is a development that all parties are now hurrying to digest.