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Afghanistan's Abdullah Says Taliban Using Peace Talks For 'Propaganda,' Urges U.S. To Keep Troops


Afghan Chief Executive Abdullah Abdullah told RFE/RL that foreign troops are still needed in Afghanistan "until the war is over."
Afghan Chief Executive Abdullah Abdullah told RFE/RL that foreign troops are still needed in Afghanistan "until the war is over."

The Taliban is using peace talks with the United States for "propaganda purposes,” Afghan Chief Executive Abdullah Abdullah told RFE/RL, urging Washington to keep troops in the country until a formal settlement that includes Kabul has been signed with the militants.

Abdullah also said Afghans were "concerned" that the Kabul government has been sidelined from the U.S.-Taliban talks in Qatar, but insisted it had not caused a rift with Washington.

"Unless the Afghan government has direct negotiations with the Taliban, Afghan people have the right to be concerned," Abdullah, who is the de facto prime minister in the national unity government, said in an interview with RFE/RL in Kabul on March 12.

"The Taliban wants to use these peace talks for political and propaganda purposes instead of using this as a step towards peace," he added.

His remarks came as U.S. and Taliban negotiators are holding talks in the Qatari capital, Doha, to end the nearly 18-year war. The current round of talks started on February 25.

U.S. President Donald Trump wants to pull out the roughly 14,000 American troops in Afghanistan and has tasked U.S. peace envoy Zalmay Khalilzad with reaching a settlement with the militants.

During a round of talks in Doha in January, U.S. and Taliban negotiators reached the basic framework of a potential peace deal in which the militants would prevent international terrorist groups from basing themselves in Afghanistan in exchange for the withdrawal of American forces from Afghanistan.

But Abdullah urged Washington to keep U.S. forces in Afghanistan until a comprehensive peace settlement is reached between the United States, the Taliban, and Kabul.

"The Taliban wants foreign troops to leave Afghanistan," he said. "It’s also the demand of the Afghan people. But our opinion, and that of the Afghan people, is that until the war is over and peace is restored, there is a need for the presence of these troops."

The Taliban has refused to negotiate with the government in Kabul, saying it is a U.S. "puppet" which the militant group wants to topple.

The Western-backed government in Kabul has been angered and frustrated at being sidelined at the peace talks.

Abdullah said the government's absence at the talks had prompted fears in the country that "there will be a deal in which the interests of Afghans will not be considered," but denied a fallout with the country’s international allies.

"The relationship between the Afghan government and our international partners is not so strained that we suspect there might be a conspiracy against Afghanistan, [especially] after so many years of [mutual] sacrifice and cooperation," he said.

Abdullah also questioned the Taliban's commitment to peace, accusing the militant group of "dragging out the process."

"The Taliban is propagating that they have made progress during these talks and have come to certain agreements with the United States," he said. "But then they say they need more time [before they sign a formal deal]."

U.S. and Taliban negotiators are currently attempting to hammer out the details of the framework agreement reached in January.

But there are disagreements over four interconnected issues, including the Taliban breaking off ties with groups designated as terrorists by Washington, the timetable of a U.S. military withdrawal, a cease-fire in Afghanistan, and an intra-Afghan dialogue that would include the Taliban and government representatives.

U.S. and other foreign troops have been in Afghanistan since an October 2001 invasion that brought down the Taliban government after it refused to hand over Al-Qaeda terrorists, including Osama bin Laden, blamed for launching the September 11, 2001, attacks in the United States.

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