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NATO reducing military presence in Afghanistan: Stoltenberg

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As part of the peace process, NATO is reducing its military presence in Afghanistan, chief of the alliance said on Wednesday.

"By the summer, we should have around 12,000 forces in the country," Jens Stoltenberg said addressing a press conference ahead of NATO Foreign Ministerial meeting.

He said that no decision for a further reduction has been taken, adding all of NATO's steps will be conditions-based.

"NATO will maintain its commitment to long-term peace and stability in Afghanistan," Stoltenberg said. "The situation remains difficult."

He said that now is the time for the Taliban and all political actors to play their part.

"All parties need to engage constructively honour their commitments, and ensure intra-Afghan negotiations can start."

He said that the Afghans have to take responsibility for their own future.

http://www.1tvnews.af/en/news/afghanistan/41707
 
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Afghanistan- Taliban to cease fire in areas only affected by coronavirus: Mujahid

(MENAFN - Khaama Press) The Taliban group has said it would cease fire in areas which would be affected by the novel coronavirus (COVID-19) in a bid to allow the medical teams provide healthcare services.

Zabiullah Mujahid, a Taliban spokesperson, said in a Twitter post that the Taliban group would cease fire in the areas which are under the control of the group, provided that those areas areas are affected by coronavirus.

He also added that the move should not be interpreted as an act of ceasefire.

Mujahid made the remarks as efforts are underway to find a negotiated political settlement to end the war in Afghanistan.

Reduction in violence was among the main conditions included in the U.S.-Taliban peace deal which was signed late in the month of February.

However, the latest trend shows that the Taliban group has not only reduced violence but is attempting to carry out coordinated attacks in the remote areas of the country despite the Afghan forces are in a full defense posture.

https://menafn.com/1099954932/Afgha...in-areas-only-affected-by-coronavirus-Mujahid
 
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Afghan Govt, Taliban Set to Swap First Batch of Prisoners
Up to 100 Taliban prisoners will be swapped with 20 government forces, said the sources.

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The Afghan government and the Taliban are set to swap the first batch of their prisoners on Thursday, sources within the Afghan government said on Wednesday. A three-member delegation from the Taliban arrived in Kabul on Tuesday to discuss the issue of the Taliban’s prisoners. This follows two meetings by video conference about the release. The move is expected to pave the way for the start of intra-Afghan talks.

Up to 100 Taliban prisoners will be swapped with 20 government forces, said the sources.

Meanwhile, the National Security Council of Afghanistan in a tweet said that a technical committee of the Peace Initial Contact Group (PICG) hosted a Taliban technical delegation in Kabul yesterday to “hold in-person discussion on matters related to prisoners release.”

“A technical team from the Afghan government yesterday (Tuesday) hosted a Taliban delegation in Kabul and discussions were held on the issue of release of the prisoners and it was decided that talks should move on regarding the matter today as well. Officials from the ICRC were also present at the discussion,” said Jawed Faisal, a spokesman for the National Security Advisor.

Sources close to the Taliban, speaking on condition of anonymity, named the Taliban’s delegates in Kabul:

“The Taliban delegates are named Maulavi Abdul Fatah, Maulavi Ibrahim and Akhtar Mohammad, these Taliban delegates belong to the Taliban’s committee on the prisoner release,” said Sayed Akbar Agha, a former Taliban commander.

“The three-member delegation will prove helpful in addressing the issue of the prisoners,” said Mohib Sharifi, a political analyst in Kabul.

This comes days after the Afghan government announced the formation of a 21-member peace negotiating team intended to undertake direct talks with the Taliban once the prisoners are released.

“The government has created the delegation based on article 60 of the parliamentary law. The house (parliament) will monitor the process. First, the government will conduct the talks and the parliament will decide on it once a document is signed,” said Mir Rahman Rahmani, speaker of the parliament.

https://tolonews.com/afghanistan/afghan-govt-taliban-set-swap-first-batch-prisoners
 
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Taliban Says US ‘Violating’ Deal, US Calls Claims ‘Baseless’

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The Taliban says US has violated the agreement with prisoner release delays, and breached the deal with attacks.

The Taliban in a statement on Sunday said the deal that they signed with the US on Feb. 29 has been "violated" in clear instances by the United States and its allies.

In their statement, the group connected the violation of the deal to the delay in the release of 5,000 prisoners from the Afghan government’s custody and claims of attacks on Taliban targets even in non-combat areas, operations on civilian areas by Afghan and US forces, airstrikes on inappropriate and on civilian areas, attacks on Taliban members in areas where they are not engaged in fighting, and some violations in Kandahar, Helmand, Farah, Kunduz, Nangarhar, Paktia, Badakhshan, Balk and other parts.

The group called on the US to abide by the agreement and to ask its allies to fully implement the accord.

The Taliban in the statement claimed that it has reduced its attacks in cities and has abided by the agreement.

The group says they can attack any outpost of the Afghan government until there is a separate agreement on a ceasefire as a result of intra-Afghan negotiations.

The Taliban in February agreed to a one-week reduction in violence leading up to the signing of the peace deal, during which time attacks by the group were significantly reduced. However, violence increased after a delay in the prisoner release, which was mentioned in the US-Taliban deal.

The Afghan government has agreed on freeing some of the prisoners through a gradual process, and based on other conditions.

In reaction to the Taliban statement, Col. Sonny Leggett, the US forces spokesman in Afghanistan, said in a tweet that “The Taliban must reduce violence. A reduction in violence is the will of the Afghan people and necessary to allow the political process to work toward a settlement suitable for all Afghans. We once again call on all parties to focus their efforts on the global pandemic of COVID-19.”

He added: “USFOR-A has upheld, and continues to uphold, the military terms of the US-Taliban agreement; any assertion otherwise is baseless. USFOR-A has been clear- we will defend our ANDSF partners if attacked, in compliance with the agreement.”

Meanwhile, the National Security Council's spokesman Javid Faisal in a tweet said "the Afghan govt is hosting talks in Kabul with a Taliban delegation on the release of ANDSF and Taliban prisoners & "remaining committed to implementing President Ghani's decree of March 11."

"The Taliban must cease its violent provocation and demonstrate directly to the Afghan nation that it is sincere about peace. The govt has an inclusive team and is ready to give the group the historic opportunity to negotiate sustainable peace," Faisal said.

https://tolonews.com/afghanistan/deal-us-has-been-‘violated’-taliban
 
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Taliban Seeks Release of 15 Key Commanders: Official

IDLG chief Matin Bek says the Taliban is seeking the release of its 15 commanders who are involved in “big attacks.”

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The head of the Independent Directorate of Local Governance (IDLG), Matin Bek, who is also a member of the negotiation team, said the reason for the delay in the release of Taliban prisoners is that the Taliban are demanding the release of their 15 senior commanders who are involved in “big attacks.”

The release of 5,000 Taliban prisoners is part of deal signed by the US and the Taliban in Doha on Feb. 29.

Bek said demands reveal the Taliban’s "stubbornness" and it is "not acceptable" as it will lead to the fall of provinces and the continuation of violence in the country.

“We are ready to release 400 (prisoners) in the first phase. It is the Taliban who do not want this. They are asking for the release of the 15 (commanders). If we release the 15 individuals, their hands are stained with people’s blood,” Bek told a press conference on Monday.

This comes as a Taliban statement on Sunday said the US-Taliban agreement had been violated, citing the delays with the prisoner release.

“Americans have fallen short in addressing their responsibilities, and one of them is the prisoner issue,” said Sayed Akbar Agha, a former Taliban regime member.

In reaction to the Taliban statement, Col. Sonny Leggett, the US forces spokesman in Afghanistan, said in a tweet that “The Taliban must reduce violence.

A reduction in violence is the will of the Afghan people and necessary to allow the political process to work toward a settlement suitable for all Afghans. We once again call on all parties to focus their efforts on the global pandemic of COVID-19.”

He added: “USFOR-A has upheld, and continues to uphold, the military terms of the US-Taliban agreement; any assertion otherwise is baseless. USFOR-A has been clear- we will defend our ANDSF partners if attacked, in compliance with the agreement.”

“The agreement did not mention anything on reduction in violence but it was said that violence should be reduced,” said Khalid Asad, an MP.

“It would be better if the Afghan government considers its national interests and ends of the war,” said Tahir Yarghal, a former military analyst.

Meanwhile, Fraidoon Khwazoon, a spokesman for Abdullah Abdullah, said the Presidential Palace is seeking advantages from releasing Taliban prisoners.

“They are not thinking about any other thing except seeking advantages. This is not in favor of the process and the country,” he said.

Three Taliban representatives are in Kabul to discuss the release of prisoners with the Afghan officials.

The release of 5,000 Taliban prisoners is part a deal signed between the US and the Taliban in Doha on Feb. 29.

https://tolonews.com/afghanistan/taliban-seeks-release-15-key-commanders-official
 
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(1/2)
We are the technical team of the Prison Commission of Kabul
We were sent to confirm and confirm the detainees because the release of the prisoners was initiated according to the signed agreement and promise, but the release of the prisoners has been suspended on one side and the other till now.

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Therefore, from tomorrow our technical team will not attend any other random meetings with relevant flights.
 
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Pompeo to Afghan leaders: Make a deal with the Taliban or risk full U.S. troop pullout

The stern message, delivered two weeks ago, underscores Trump’s concern that the absence of a unified government in Kabul threatens to unravel his tenuous Taliban peace deal.

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Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, left, stands with Afghan President Ashraf Ghani at the Presidential Palace in Kabul, Afghanistan, on March 23,2020.

April 7, 2020, 11:00 AM UTC
By Carol E. Lee, Courtney Kube, Andrea Mitchell and Dan De Luce

WASHINGTON – While President Donald Trump remains fixated on the widening coronavirus pandemic, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo traveled to Kabul two weeks ago with a harsh message from his boss to try to save one of the only major foreign policy achievements he has after more than three years in the White House: a peace deal in Afghanistan.

Pompeo delivered a message from Trump to the feuding leadership of the Afghan government, telling them they should resolve their differences and broker a deal with the Taliban or the president could not only cut $1 billion in financial aid to Afghanistan but also could pull all U.S. troops out of the country, according to two current senior officials, one former senior official and a foreign diplomat.


The previously unreported troop withdrawal threat underscores Trump’s growing concern that the inability of Afghan leaders to form a unified government threatens to unravel his already-tenuous peace deal with the Taliban, which is the first step toward ending America’s longest war. Negotiations between the Afghan government and the Taliban were supposed to follow on March 10, but divisions in Kabul have delayed the effort.

Washington and its allies fear the absence of those talks will scuttle the peace deal, and that the Taliban will take advantage of the internal divisions in Kabul to bolster their position at the negotiating table and on the battlefield, officials said.

The State Department did not respond to a request for comment.

Officials said the impasse in Kabul has frustrated Trump, who has hoped to highlight an Afghanistan peace deal as an example of a 2016 campaign promise he kept when he faces voters this November. Before the coronavirus pandemic became a myopic focus for the president, Trump had privately pushed aides to come up with a high-profile way for him to showcase the deal that could end the war and even mused that it should win him a Nobel Peace Prize, according to two current and two former senior U.S. officials familiar with the president's comments.

But even then, a senior administration official said, some of the president’s advisers were “telling him that this is a slow, winding and ugly road” and he does not want to be the face of the fragile deal.

Trump personally signed off on the new hardline message during a meeting with Pompeo before the latter arrived in Kabul on March 23, officials said.

The secretary of state delivered the message in small meetings with Afghan President Ashraf Ghani and the country’s former Chief Executive Officer Abdullah Abdullah, who are trying to stand up parallel governments. In February, Ghani was declared the winner of the September election, but Abdullah disputed the results, claiming widespread fraud. Both men now claim the right to lead Afghanistan and even held separate, simultaneous inaugurations in Kabul on March 9.

Pompeo told Abdullah that he must support Ghani, according to officials. He said the president expects “one team, one fight” out of Kabul, according to the former senior U.S. official. Pompeo also said Ghani and Abdullah would be held responsible if the president’s peace deal fails, and noted that Trump has followed through on other threats to withdraw troops and pull financial aid.

A senior administration official said the White House is “hopeful” the president’s message that Pompeo delivered is effective.

But the two Afghan political rivals remain locked in a feud and have refused Washington’s suggestions for a possible compromise, according to a U.S. official and a foreign diplomat from the region. Afghan officials and the Taliban also have struggled to agree on the release of prisoners from both sides.

Last Tuesday, Pompeo said there has been some progress in Kabul since his visit, particularly on the formation of a team to negotiate with the Taliban and on the planned release of prisoners.

“So it’s good news,” he said.

On March 27, Ghani announced a 21-member delegation to negotiate with the Taliban. But the Taliban rejected the team. And after denouncing it as not inclusive, Abdullah on Tuesday embraced the team as “an important step toward facilitating intra-Afghan negotiations."

“Although we have reached no satisfactory agreement to resolve the political crisis in the wake of the rigged presidential election, we are committed to making sure that it does not overshadow peace efforts,” Abdullah wrote on Twitter.

Yet, a U.S. official briefed on the Afghan political discussions said, “It looks like they are still far apart.”

The National Security Council declined to comment. The White House did not respond to requests for comment.

Officials said the president’s expectations have been tempered in the weeks since the deal was signed.

At one point, Trump suggested to aides a possible rally with U.S. troops to mark the beginning of the drawdown, officials said, but the idea never gained traction.

“He likes the pomp and circumstance,“ a senior administration official said. But some officials disagreed, with another senior administration official saying a troop rally would have been “tone deaf” because “Afghanistan is still a very volatile place.”

The officials said Trump began talking about a Nobel Prize before a deal was even reached. His mentions of it picked up after a deal was reached in January. In one Oval Office meeting at the time, Trump complained that he hasn’t been awarded a Nobel Prize yet, and said if he’s not given one for ending the war in Afghanistan then the Norwegian Nobel Committee’s process is rigged, according to officials.

The Afghanistan peace deal joins a list of efforts for which the president has publicly said he should receive a Nobel Peace Prize. He’s pointed to his North Korea diplomacy, an Israeli-Palestinian peace plan, his Syria policy and even a peace agreement in Africa that the U.S. had a minimal role in brokering.

The deal with the Taliban was different, officials said, because it was seen as having more potential for success than other initiatives, such as the denuclearization of North Korea.

Trump spoke with the Taliban’s chief negotiator Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar on the phone last month, which one senior administration official said was a “good will” step to encourage the Taliban to adhere to the deal.

His dispatching of Pompeo to Kabul to deliver blunt threats is seen as a sign of how much the president wants the deal to succeed.

Pompeo said in a statement two weeks ago that the U.S. was “disappointed” in Ghani and Abdullah and that “their failure has harmed U.S.-Afghan relations.”

His threat to cut $1 billion in aid if the Afghan leaders couldn’t reach a governing agreement would essentially mean cutting the lifeline for the Afghan government’s security forces. Pompeo also said he told the Afghan leaders that plans under the administration’s deal with the Taliban to reduce the number of troops in Afghanistan to 8,600 in coming months would continue.

That drawdown began in early March. Several weeks later, Secretary of Defense Mark Esper announced a 60-day freeze on all Department of Defense personnel movements from overseas, but troops coming back from Afghanistan are exempt from the order.

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Carol E. Lee is an NBC News correspondent.

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Courtney Kube is a correspondent covering national security and the military for the NBC News Investigative Unit.

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Andrea Mitchell, NBC News' chief foreign affairs correspondent, is the host of "Andrea Mitchell Reports," an hour of political news and interviews with top newsmakers on MSNBC.

Dan De Luce is a reporter for the NBC News Investigative Unit.

Abigail Williams contributed.

https://www.nbcnews.com/news/world/pompeo-afghan-leaders-make-deal-taliban-or-risk-full-u-n1174161

According to the signed agreements, prisoners of the Islamic Emirate should have given way to more immediate release and inter-Afghan negotiations, but the parties on the other hand delay the release of our prisoners and violate the peace agreement. Get your technical team back.

According to the signed agreement, the prisoners of the Islamic Emirate should have been released earlier and the ground for favorable negotiations between the Afghans should have been provided, but the relevant directions of the release of our prisoners are deliberately postponed from the peace agreement. Therefore, the Islamic Emirate will withdraw its technical team from Kabul as soon as possible.
 
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Release of Taliban Prisoners Takes Time: Afghan Govt.

The prisoner release is a step outlined in the US-Taliban deal signed in Doha on February 29 in the deal.

The release of Taliban prisoners is a time-consuming process and there is no need to panic, said Waheed Omar, a top advisor to Afghan president Ashraf Ghani on Tuesday.

He said that the Afghan government remains committed to the prisoners’ swap with the Taliban, but in order to make this happen, there is a need for good intentions from both sides about the issue.

“This process is a lengthy process, there is no need to be hasty. Of course no prisoner will be released unconditionally within the span of ten days as it was stated before. Our position regarding this issue is very clear on how to do this job and under what conditions,” said Omar.

This comes a few days after a three-member delegation from the Taliban arrived in Kabul to discuss the issue of the Taliban’s prisoners.

On Monday, the Taliban strongly criticized the delay of the prisoners’ release.

“We sent a technical team of the Prisoner’s Commission to Kabul for verification and identification of our prisoners as release of prisoners was to start as per the signed agreement and the promise made (to us). But, unfortunately, their release has been delayed under one pretext or another till now. Therefore, our technical team will not participate in fruitless meetings with relevant sides starting from tomorrow,” tweeted Suhail Shaheen, a spokesman for the Taliban in Doha.

The prisoner release is a step outlined in the US-Taliban deal signed in Doha on February 29 that is intended to be a confidence-building measure to pave the way for the intra-Afghan talks.

“Up to 5,000 prisoners of (the Taliban) and up to one thousand (1,000) prisoners of the other side will be released by March 10, 2020, the first day of intra-Afghan negotiations, which corresponds to Rajab 15, 1441 on the Hijri Lunar calendar and Hoot 20, 1398 on the Hijri Solar calendar,” part of the agreement reads.

On March 1 Afghan President Ashraf Ghani said his government had not pledged to free Taliban prisoners, as stated in the deal between the US and the militants. The Afghan government had not been included in the deal.

“There is no commitment on the release of the 5,000 prisoners” of the Taliban,” Ghani said at the time.

But on March 11, President Ashraf Ghani signed an order to pardon and release Taliban prisoners in order for the peace talks between Afghanistan's government and the Taliban to start. However, he said the release would be gradual, and would have conditions.

But following repeated international calls from the US and others to keep the peace process on track, meetings were arranged between both groups to allow the swap to begin. However, at the moment they are once again stalled.

https://tolonews.com/afghanistan/release-taliban-prisoners-takes-time-afghan-govt
 
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Taliban, Govt Forces Engaged in 'Silent,' Unreported War: MoD

The Taliban resumed their attacks on the Afghan forces only a few days after the group signed a peace deal with the US in Doha.

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The Taliban continue their attacks on Afghan security forces across the country, the Afghan Ministry of Defense said on Tuesday.

Sometimes, the Afghan security forces counter-attack, said the MoD.

“Within the parameters of the active defense mode, these Taliban attacks were repelled and massive casualties were inflicted on the Taliban. The group suffered massive casualties in Arghandab district of Zabul province,” said Rohullah Ahmadzai, a spokesman for the Afghan Ministry of Defense.

The Taliban in recent days has not said anything officially about their attacks on the Afghan forces, and Afghan security officials have said that the government forces are still in "active defense position."

But, the security experts say that the two sides are engaging in a ‘silent war’ against each other.

“This situation has caused the Taliban to be more greedy for power, so they have expanded the war, nothing can deter the Taliban from war unless there is a change in the political situation in Kabul,” said Assadullah Nadiom, a military expert in Kabul.

The Taliban resumed their attacks on the Afghan forces only a few days after the group signed a peace deal with the US in Doha on February 29.

But the Taliban’s spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid, who recently tweeted about the Taliban’s military activities, now tweets about other issues, including the delayed peace process, and about allegations that government forces are causing civilian casualties.

“We lost a number of our soldiers in Zabul and Takhar provinces, including the fall of a district to the Taliban in Badakhshan which was retaken by the security forces later,” said Nazifa Zaki, a member of parliament.

This comes after eighteen months of negotiations in Doha, after which the United States and the Taliban officially signed a peace deal on February 29 intended to pave the way for the withdrawal of US forces from Afghanistan in exchange for a number of solid assurances by the Taliban to the US and its allies.

The US-Taliban deal initially caused hope among Afghans that this time there would be peace, but on the ground, the Taliban and the Afghan government forces are still fighting.

https://tolonews.com/afghanistan/taliban-govt-forces-engaged-silent-unreported-war-mod
 
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