US hopeful for Afghan, Pakistan side agreement

US hopeful for Afghan, Pakistan side agreement
In this handout picture taken and released by Pakistan's Ministry of Foreign Affairs on January 31, 2020, Pakistan's Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi (R) speaks US envoy Zalmay Khalilzad, the US Special Representative for Afghanistan Reconciliation, at the Foreign Ministry in Islamabad. (AFP)
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Updated 08 October 2020
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US hopeful for Afghan, Pakistan side agreement

US hopeful for Afghan, Pakistan side agreement
  • Zalmay Khalilzad wants Pakistan and Afghanistan to agree that their territory will not be allowed to be used against the other by extremist group
  • Khalilzad says sees economic incentives for Pakistan, which could import power from electricity-rich Central Asia if the Afghan government and Taliban reach a deal

WASHINGTON: US negotiator seeking to end Afghanistan’s war voiced hope Wednesday that the Kabul government can reach a side deal with Pakistan, whose historic support of the Taliban has long tested relations.

The Taliban and Afghan government have opened slow-moving peace talks in Qatar as the United States starts withdrawing its forces from Afghanistan to end its longest-ever war.

Zalmay Khalilzad, the US pointman on Afghanistan, said that both Pakistan’s Prime Minister Imran Khan and its powerful military chief, General Qamer Javed Bajwa, have been “helpful” in the diplomacy.

“We are seeking an agreement between Afghanistan and Pakistan as an adjunct to an internal peace,” Khalilzad told a forum at the University of Chicago’s Pearson Institute by video from Doha.

Both countries would “agree that their territory will not be allowed to be used against the other by extremist groups or groups that would undermine the security of the other,” he said.

Pakistan had hailed the Feb. 29 agreement between the United States and the Taliban, in which Washington declared that it would “facilitate discussions” between Kabul and Islamabad.

Critics, especially in Afghanistan and Pakistan’s historic rival India, see Islamabad as playing both sides and say its military and intelligence apparatus has still backed Taliban violence as a way to exert influence in its neighbor.

But Khalilzad, who visited Islamabad last month, said he saw economic incentives for Pakistan, which suffers severe power shortages and could import power from electricity-rich Central Asia if the Afghan government and Taliban reach a deal.

“There are economic reasons that would be transformative for the region should peace in Afghanistan come,” Khalilzad said.

The upbeat tone by Khalilzad, who has tried to ensure that all key players support Afghan peace, comes after years of on-off tensions between the United States and its Cold War ally Pakistan.

President Donald Trump in 2018 slashed $300 million in US security assistance to Pakistan, saying it was failing to fight extremists.