US, Taliban resume push for peace at Doha talks

By AFP
August 25, 2019

DOHA: The US and the Taliban met in Doha on Saturday, an American source close to the negotiations said, resuming potentially decisive talks to allow Washington to drawdown militarily in Afghanistan.

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"Talks resumed this afternoon," the US source said.

The second day of the two sides’ ninth round of dialogue had been due to begin Friday but "both sides decided to postpone it until Saturday", the Taliban’s Doha spokesman Suhail Shaheen said, citing "other engagements".

"We have made progress and are now discussing the implementation mechanism and some technical points," he told AFP on Saturday, referring to discussions that took place on Thursday.

"The agreement will be completed after we agree on these points," he said.

Any deal would be announced before the media as well as representatives from neighbouring countries and China, Russia, and the United Nations, he added.

The US, which invaded Afghanistan and toppled the Taliban from power in 2001, wants to withdraw thousands of troops but only in return for the insurgent group renouncing al-Qaeda and curbing attacks. Washington is hoping to strike an agreement with the Taliban by September 1 – ahead of Afghan polls due the same month, and US presidential polls due in 2020. The Taliban claimed on Saturday to have killed seven members of the US military in an attack on a convoy near Bagram airfield north of Kabul. Colonel Sonny Leggett, a spokesman for US forces in Afghanistan, said some local businesses had been damaged in the attack but denied coalition or US troops were hurt.

"Rather than taking responsibility for, and apologising for, the harm they bring to innocent Afghans and their businesses, the Taliban spread lies about the attack," Leggett told AFP.

Shaheen, the Taliban spokesman, had said the deaths should have a "positive" impact on the talks in Doha.

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