The United States agreed on Sunday to transfer important Taliban figures from Guantanamo Bay to Qatar, The New York Times said in a report. Several former Taliban officials told the Times on Saturday that Taliban negotiators had begun meeting American officials in Qatar, where they were discussing preliminary trust-building measures, including a possible prisoner transfer. The former officials said four to eight Taliban representatives had traveled to Qatar from Pakistan to set up a political office for the exiled Afghan insurgent group. The comments suggested that the Taliban, who have not publicly said they would engage in peace talks to end the war in Afghanistan, were gearing up for preliminary discussions.
American officials would not deny that meetings had taken place, and the discussions seemed to have at least the tacit approval of Pakistan, which has thwarted previous efforts by the Taliban to engage in talks.
The Afghan government, which was initially angry that it had been left out, has accepted the talks in principle but is not directly involved, a potential snag in what could be a historic development.
The former Taliban officials, interviewed on Saturday in Kabul, were careful not to call the discussions peace talks.
“Currently there are no peace talks going on,” said Maulavi Qalamuddin, the former minister of vice and virtue for the Taliban who is now a member of the High Peace Council here. “The only thing is the negotiations over release of Taliban prisoners from Guantánamo, which is still under discussion between both sides in Qatar. We also want to strengthen the talks so we can create an environment of trust for further talks in the future,” he added.
US State Department Spokeswoman Victoria Nuland has said only that Marc Grossman, the Obama administration’s special representative for Afghanistan and Pakistan, had “a number of meetings” related to Afghanistan when he visited Qatar last week.
The Taliban’s announcement this month that they would open an office in Qatar, which could allow for direct negotiations, drew fire from some Afghan factions as well as some American policy makers, who fear the insurgents would use negotiations as a ploy to gain legitimacy and then continue their efforts to reimpose an extremist Islamic state in Afghanistan.
Grossman, at a news conference in Kabul last week, said that real peace talks could begin only after the Taliban renounced international terrorism and agreed to support a peace process to end the armed conflict.
The Afghan government and the Qataris must also come to an agreement on the terms under which the Taliban would have an office. Grossman has been regularly briefing the Afghan government but Afghan officials have complained that they were being kept out of the loop.
The Taliban officials now in Doha, Qatar, include a former secretary to the Taliban’s leader, Mullah Muhammad Omar, as well as several former officials of the Taliban government that ruled Afghanistan from 1996 to 2001, according to Qalamuddin and Arsala Rahmani, a former Taliban minister of higher education.
The former Taliban officials here described fairly advanced discussions in Qatar about the transfer of prisoners. One former official, Syed Muhammad Akbar Agha, who had been a Taliban military commander, said that five Taliban prisoners were to be transferred in two phases, two or three in one group and then the remainder.
There has also been discussion in Qatar of removing some Taliban members from NATO’s “kill or capture” lists, the former Taliban officials told the Times.
Grossman, in his comments last week, played down talk of detainee releases, saying the United States had not yet decided on the issue. “This is an issue of United States law first of all, that we have to meet the requirements of our law,” he said.
He said the Obama administration would also consult with Congress. Under American law, the defence secretary must certify to Congress that the transfer of any Guantánamo prisoner to a foreign country would meet certain requirements, including that the country maintained control over its prisons and would not allow a transferred detainee to become a future threat to the US.
If any detainees were released, Western and Afghan officials said, they would likely be transferred to Qatar and held there, perhaps under house arrest.
The former Taliban officials said they were most surprised by Pakistan’s decision to allow the Taliban delegates to obtain travel documents and board a plane to Qatar. The former officials had long contended that Pakistan has obstructed talks. “This is a green light from Pakistan,” Rahmani told the Times.
Pakistan “definitely supported this and is also helping”, Qalamuddin added. He said if Pakistan did not approve of the talks, it would have arrested the Taliban delegates to Qatar, just as it did with Mullah Baradar, a senior Taliban official, after he began secret talks with the Afghan government in 2010.
Meanwhile, the Afghan and Pakistani governments are seeking peace talks with the Taliban in Saudi Arabia separate from the US-brokered talks with the insurgents in Qatar, officials said on Sunday.
Afghan and Taliban officials indicated in response to a British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) report about plans for talks in Saudi Arabia that both Kabul and Islamabad were looking for their own talks with the insurgents. The Taliban have refused previously to recognise the government of President Hamid Karzai.
Asked for his response to the BBC report, Afghan Foreign Ministry spokesman Janan Mosazai said: “Of course we support any steps towards the Afghan peace process.” He refused to comment further.
But a senior Afghan government official, speaking on condition of anonymity, told AFP: “We will always pursue all roads towards peace in Afghanistan, including contacts with the Taliban that are not limited to the Qatar office.”
He acknowledged the accuracy of the BBC report but said he did not know of any timetable for the talks in Saudi Arabia to begin.
A member of the Taliban’s leadership council, the Pakistan-based Quetta Shura, also backed the report of talks in Saudi Arabia. “The idea that the Taliban should have a point of contact in Saudi Arabia is pushed by the Pakistan and Afghan governments,” he said on condition of anonymity. “This is because they think they have been sidelined. They want some control over peace talks.”
Supporting this theory, Kabul announced Sunday that Pakistani Foreign Minister Hina Rabbani Khar would visit Kabul on Wednesday. Mosazai told a news conference the visit would mark a “new phase” in cooperation between the two countries, adding that Khar would hold talks with Afghan Foreign Minister Zulmai Rasoul and President Hamid Karzai.
When we talk about Taliban how can we forget the important issue of IED's? The Taliban have been using these devices for a long time in Pakistan and Afghanistan. And still we don't pay attention these issues that have creating violence for a long time.
@saba what does IED's stand for and what kind of devices are these???
I totally agree with Saba on this note. When a person is sick one has to sterilize the disease. if the making of improvised explosive devises is curtailed, it will in return help us protect the innocent lives.
It should also be noted here that the production of improvised explosives is difficult to prevent, as these can be developed even in households, with readily available raw material in the market.
I hope this step will be a step forward in bringing peace to the region. Both Pakistan and Afghanistan has seen worst form of violence in the country. These homegrown miscreants proved to be more destructive because they had learned to use make IEDs, explosives and mines, so they were hard to control. However this news step is apparently in the right direction. There is a dire need to bring all the stakeholders on negotiations table, so that those who were previously fighting against the state must now be brought into the mainstream, so that violence and destruction could seize.
The manufacturing of IEDs should be monitored and stopped, and market should be banned to sell material which is used in made of IEDs.
EU should have taken this step of providing Pakistan with robotic technology way
earlier. Thousands of lives lost could have been saved. However, it is never too
late.
Improvised explosive devices are easy to produce and therefore extremely lethal.
EU will be handing Pakistan 10 robots and 10 equipped vehicles that would help
the bomb disposing squads in spotting the improvised explosive devices. Good
job
Terrorism is a cancer that is eating our country. To stop it, Government needs
to come with clear cut policies on how to stop the production of improvised
explosive devices.
Bomb disposal scored should be trained to dispose IEDs
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