Taliban say U.S agreed in 'candid' talks to send relief aid to Afghanistan
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Afghanistan’s
ruling Taliban said Sunday that two days of “candid” discussions with the
United States “went well” in Qatar, the first direct meeting at a senior level
since the Islamist group took control of the country following the American
withdrawal in late August.
“Detailed
discussions were held during the meeting about all relevant issues, and efforts
will be made to improve diplomatic relations,” Taliban spokesman Suhail Shaheen
said in a post-meeting statement.
U.S. State
Department spokesperson Ned Price agreed in a statement released late Sunday
that the talks with the Taliban were “candid and professional,” adding that the
“Taliban will be judged on its actions, not only its words.”
Other issues that
were discussed included “security and terrorism concerns and safe passage for
U.S. citizens, other foreign nationals and our Afghan partners, as well as on
human rights, including the meaningful participation of women and girls in all
aspects of Afghan society,” the statement said.
The meeting started
Saturday in the Qatari capital, Doha.
Price’s statement
said the U.S. and Taliban “discussed the United States’ provision of robust
humanitarian assistance, directly to the Afghan people.”
Shaheen, the Taliban
spokesman who is based in Doha and the group's representative-designate to the
United Nations, said, “U.S. representatives stated that they will give
humanitarian assistance to Afghans, will provide facilities for other
humanitarian organizations to deliver aid.”
He added that
Taliban leaders hailed the U.S. decision and promised they would cooperate with
charitable groups in “transparently” delivering the humanitarian assistance to
Afghans in need. He said the Taliban team, led by Foreign Minister Amir Khan
Muttaqi, stressed that the humanitarian assistance “should not be linked to
political issues.”
The United Nations
has warned that about 1 million children in Afghanistan are at risk of
starvation, more than 18 million need urgent humanitarian assistance, and
deepening drought and the approaching harsh winter are only going to make
matters worse.
In the run-up to
the meeting, officials in Washington said the high-level U.S. delegation would
press the Taliban to ensure continued safe passage out of Afghanistan for
American and other foreign nationals as well as Afghan allies. They also would
urge the Islamist group to uphold commitments to form an inclusive government,
respect the rights of Afghan women and minorities, fight terrorism and
facilitate access for humanitarian aid to Afghans.
Shaheen said the
Taliban assured U.S. interlocutors that Kabul “will facilitate principled
movement of foreign nationals.” He concluded the two sides “agreed that such
meetings will continue to be held in the future if required.”
U.S. officials had
also made clear that the Doha meeting was not about granting diplomatic
recognition to the Taliban. They said that action would depend on whether the
group delivers on its public commitments.
The American
delegation included representatives from the U.S. Agency for International
Development, State Department and the intelligence community.
American and allied
troops pulled out of Afghanistan on August 30, ending their 20-year military
occupation.
Speaking after the
opening session of the dialogue on Saturday, Muttaqi said that he had urged the
U.S. to unfreeze Afghanistan’s central bank reserves.
Washington has
frozen nearly $10 billion in Afghan assets, mainly deposited in the U.S.
federal reserve since the Taliban took over the country. The World Bank and the
International Monetary Fund also have halted financial assistance and lending
programs for Kabul, citing human rights concerns under the Taliban rule.
The departure of
U.S.-led forces and many international donors deprived Afghanistan of grants
that financed 75% of public spending, according to the World Bank. This has
left millions of Afghans without means of income and made it difficult for the
Taliban to pay salaries to government employees, as well as fund development
activities.
The financial
restrictions have raised concerns about an economic meltdown in Afghanistan
that critics say could worsen the humanitarian crisis.
“We clearly told
them [Americans] that nobody benefits from an unstable Afghanistan, so no one
should try to weaken the current government of Afghanistan or fuel problems for
our Afghan people who already are struggling economically,” Muttaqi said.
The Taliban team,
he added, reassured U.S. officials that Afghan soil will not be allowed to be
used to threaten other countries. Senior security officials, including Taliban
acting intelligence director Abdul Haq Wasiq, also accompanied Muttaqi at the
meeting.
The United States
remains concerned about what it sees as a growing threat of terrorism in
Afghanistan in the wake of increased attacks by Islamic State’s regional
offshoot, known as Islamic State Khorasan or IS Khorasan. The terror group has
carried out nearly 40 bombings and other attacks across several provinces since
the Taliban takeover of Kabul in mid-August, killing and injuring hundreds of
people.
The deadliest of
the strikes took place on Friday in northeastern Kunduz province, where an
Islamic State suicide bomber detonated his explosives inside a packed Shiite
Muslim mosque, killing more than 50 worshippers and wounding 150 others, though
local media put the death toll at 150.
Washington has
vowed to watch and use “over-the-horizon” capabilities from outside Afghanistan
to conduct future counterterrorism operations in the country. The Taliban,
however, have ruled out the possibility of working with the U.S. to fight IS
Khorasan, saying their forces are capable of suppressing the threat and have
already taken out some of the group’s bases and fighters in recent operations.

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