Pompeo cautions on Afghan talks

They’re necessary but likely to be contentious, secretary says

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, seen on video Thursday speaking during an online meeting with Association of Southeast Asian Nations foreign ministers, said Friday that talks beginning today between Afghanistan’s warring factions are the only way to end decades of conflict in the country.
(AP/VTV)
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, seen on video Thursday speaking during an online meeting with Association of Southeast Asian Nations foreign ministers, said Friday that talks beginning today between Afghanistan’s warring factions are the only way to end decades of conflict in the country. (AP/VTV)

ISLAMABAD -- U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo warned Friday that the much-anticipated negotiations between Afghanistan's warring parties are likely to be "contentious" but stressed that they are the only way forward if Afghans are to find peace after decades of conflict.

Pompeo made his comments en route to Qatar in the Middle East, where the Taliban maintain a political office and where historic intra-Afghan negotiations are to begin today.

The start of the talks will be mostly ceremonious, before the negotiating teams of the Taliban and the Afghan government sit down to begin the task of hammering out a road map for a postwar Afghanistan.

The intra-Afghan negotiations were laid out in a peace deal the United Sates and the Taliban signed Feb. 29 in Qatar's capital of Doha, aimed at ending the war and bringing U.S. troops home.

[Video not showing up above? Click here to view » https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=odYLXiEDnGQ]

"It's taken us longer than I wish that it had to get from Feb. 29 to here, but we expect Saturday morning, for the first time in almost two decades, to have the Afghans sitting at the table together prepared to have what will be contentious discussions about how to move their country forward to reduce violence and deliver what the Afghan people are demanding -- a reconciled Afghanistan with a government that reflects a country that isn't at war," Pompeo said Friday on the plane taking him to Doha.

"It's their country to figure out how to move forward and make a better life for all Afghan people," he said.

President Donald Trump made the withdrawal of U.S. troops from Afghanistan a promise before the 2016 presidential election. In the countdown to November's presidential vote, Washington has ramped up pressure to get the intra-Afghan negotiations started.

At a news conference Thursday, Trump called the talks "exciting" and said Washington expected to be down to 4,000 troops by November. Even though delays have plagued the start of talks, Washington began withdrawing some of its 13,000 troops after the deal was signed in February.

The withdrawal of the remaining troops does not hinge on the success of intra-Afghan negotiations, but rather on the commitment made by the Taliban to fight other militant groups that could threaten the U.S. and its allies.

Pompeo stressed that the U.S. was ready to return soldiers to Afghanistan if it saw a threat emerging and the Taliban reneged on their commitments. The White House and its peace envoy, Zalmay Khalilzad, have refused to give specifics on commitments made by the Taliban, citing security concerns.

"Our commitment to reduce our forces to zero is conditioned on them executing their obligations under the agreement [that is] so very clear about their responsibilities with respect to terrorist activity taking place in Afghanistan," Pompeo said.

But he warned of spoilers to peace, citing recent targeted killings in Afghanistan and the attempted assassination this week of Afghan Vice President Amrullah Saleh. "It's very clear that the violence levels have to come down to acceptable levels," Pompeo said.

Khalilzad described the start of the talks as a "new phase in the diplomacy for peace" in Afghanistan. "This is Afghan-led and Afghan-owned, there will be no mediators," he said.

The Afghan delegation departed from Kabul, heading to Qatar later Friday. The delegation is led by Abdullah Abdullah, who heads the High Council for National Reconciliation, a powerful umbrella group that will oversee the Kabul negotiating team, led by former intelligence chief Mohammed Masoom Stanikzai.

Even as Afghans prepared for negotiations, the violence continued Friday.

At least two civilians and two soldiers were killed by a bomb hidden on a motorcycle in eastern Khost province, a Defense Ministry statement said. The bomb exploded near a wedding.

Separately, six Afghan soldiers were killed when their outpost in eastern Afghanistan was targeted, another ministry statement said.

​​​​​Information for this article was contributed by Rahim Faiez of The Associated Press.w

Abdullah Abdullah, Chairman of the High Council for National Reconciliation, talks with the media at Kabul International Airport in Kabul, Afghanistan, Friday, Sept. 11, 2020. Officials on both sides of Afghanistan's protracted conflict say efforts are ramping up for the start of intra-Afghan negotiations, a critical next step to a U.S. negotiated peace deal with the Taliban. (Sapidar Palace via AP)
Abdullah Abdullah, Chairman of the High Council for National Reconciliation, talks with the media at Kabul International Airport in Kabul, Afghanistan, Friday, Sept. 11, 2020. Officials on both sides of Afghanistan's protracted conflict say efforts are ramping up for the start of intra-Afghan negotiations, a critical next step to a U.S. negotiated peace deal with the Taliban. (Sapidar Palace via AP)

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