As U.S. outlines draft Taliban deal, Pentagon chief provides few details
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[September 05, 2019]
By Idrees Ali
STUTTGART (Reuters) - U.S. Defense
Secretary Mark Esper said on Wednesday he would limit his comments on
talks between the United States and Taliban as negotiations were still
ongoing "in some ways," even as details of a draft deal have been
publicly announced by President Donald Trump and a senior U.S. diplomat.
The United States would withdraw almost 5,000 troops from Afghanistan
and close five bases within 135 days under a draft peace accord agreed
on with the Taliban, the chief U.S. negotiator Zalmay Khalilzad said on
Monday.
The deal, reached after months of negotiations with representatives from
the insurgent movement, must still be approved by Trump before it can be
signed.
However, the distance that must still be covered before peace is
achieved was underlined by a Taliban attack on a housing complex used by
international organizations in the Afghan capital Kabul late on Monday
that killed at least 16 people.
"Ambassador Khalilzad is still obviously making his way around the
region, talking to folks, and I haven't gotten the latest update from
him, but negotiations in some ways are still ongoing, so I don't want to
say anything that gets in front of that or upsets that process," Esper
told reporters traveling with him to Europe.
The future of U.S. forces in Afghanistan is likely to be a topic of
discussion during Esper's brief trip, which will include stops in London
and Paris.
Privately, U.S. officials have told Reuters there is concern any deal
could easily be violated by the Taliban.
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U.S. troops wait for their helicopter flight at an Afghan National
Army (ANA) Base in Logar province, Afghanistan August 7, 2018.
REUTERS/Omar Sobhani/File Photo
"The best way forward is through a political agreement through all
sides and to get on that type of trajectory, because right now we've
been in 18 years of conflict and if we stay on this continued path
it doesn't look like it's ending anytime soon," Esper said when
asked what his message to his European counterparts would be on
Afghanistan.
He declined to provide any details of the talks, despite being asked
multiple times.
Esper said he would be meeting NATO Secretary-General Jens
Stoltenberg in Stuttgart later on Wednesday and would reiterate the
importance of allies in Afghanistan, adding, "if we come out, we'll
come out together."
Esper is also likely to be asked about tensions with Iran. On
Wednesday, Iranian state television said Tehran will free seven crew
members of the detained British-flagged tanker Stena Impero.
Esper said he had not heard the news about the Stena Impero crew,
but if they were going to be released that would be a positive
thing. He reiterated that while the crisis with Iran was not over,
it did seem to have stabilized.
(Reporting by Idrees Ali; Editing by Tom Brown and Bill Berkrot)
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