Implications of halting negotiations between Taliban, Washington
The scene in Afghanistan is
still unstable, as the terrorist Taliban movement continues its violent attacks
against US and Afghani targets in parallel with the return of negotiations with
Washington.
These talks recently stopped
following an armed escalation by the movement with an aim for more internal
consultations and talks.
On December 15, Taliban
declared responsibility for an attack in the western city of Herat, which
killed three Afghan police officers.
Moreover, as Taliban sat for
talks with the U.S. special representative for Afghanistan reconciliation,
Zalmay Khalilzad, at the intra-Afghan talks in the Qatari capital of Doha, the
group orchestrated a suicide bombing that targeted an under-construction
medical facility near Bagram Air Base, the main American base north of the
Afghan capital, the U.S. military said. Two civilians were killed and more than
70 people wounded.
Khalilzad had renewed talks
with the Taliban earlier this month on steps that could lead to a ceasefire and
a settlement of the 18-year-long war in Afghanistan.
"I met Talibs today, I
expressed outrage about attack on Bagram," Khalilzad wrote on Twitter,
referring to the attack on Bagram air base.
"We're taking a brief
pause for them to consult their leadership on this essential topic," he
added.
Peace negotiations began
earlier this year, though US President Donald Trump unexpectedly suspended
talks in September citing an attack in Kabul.
And through the mutual
statements between the parties concerned in this file, the main item was a
complete cease-fire as a prerequisite for real negotiations between
politicians, which has not been achieved so far.
Statements between the
parties concerned in this file, the main condition was a complete cease-fire as
a prerequisite for real negotiations, which has not been achieved so far.
Accordingly, the scene is
likely to continue unchanged in conjunction with negotiations due to two
parties, the first of which is the Taliban's pressure point at the expense of
American interests for greater political gain.
Researcher Ali Bakr told The
Reference in an interview that military operations exchanged by the main
parties in the negotiations are aimed at demonstrating power and control on the
ground.
He also pointed out to
Taliban’s actual authority on the ground and its control over lands, which
allows them to continue to impose their conditions on the American and Afghan
side as well, to achieve more of their ambitions for power.
Political science professor
Nourhan Al-Sheikh told The Reference that Taliban have a lot of ideologies
within the group, and the most hardline ones are the dominant majority.
Taliban has released a
statement attributed to its leader, Mawlawi Hibatullah Akhundzada, on the
occasion of Eid-ul-Fitr. Akhundzada boasts that the Taliban’s “rightful jihad
and resistance against the occupation is nearing the stage of success.”
“No one should expect us to
pour cold water on the heated battlefronts of Jihad or forget our forty-year
sacrifices before reaching our objectives,” Akhundzada added.
Al-Sheikh added, when
talking about this hypothesis, it is important not to lose sight of what was
agreed upon by the group in August 2019 in terms of not firing during Eid
al-Adha as a pledge to keep the feast safe, which is what actually happened.