Four-country talks seek path to Afghanistan peace

Four-country talks seek path to Afghanistan peace

February 07, 2016
afghan
afghan


ISLAMABAD — China, the United States, Afghanistan and Pakistan launched their third round of talks on Saturday aimed at finding a way to get the warring Taliban to sit and talk peace with the Afghan government.

At the start of talks in the Pakistani capital of Islamabad, Sartaj Aziz, Pakistan’s special adviser on foreign affairs, said there should be no preconditions to negotiations yet the Taliban have already said they would not hold direct talks with the Afghan government until they first held talks with US officials.

Previous rounds of the four-country talks have ended with a promise to meet again but Aziz said this time he wants to see the roadmap to peace emerge by the end of Saturday’s meeting.

Kabul too expressed its eagerness for results. “We are desperately waiting to see the immediate effects and results of our quadrilateral meetings and the progress we have made in the two previous meetings,” Javed Faisal, deputy spokesman for Afghanistan’s Chief Executive Abdullah Abdullah, said.
A diplomat attending the peace talks said one of the biggest bumps on the road to peace is identifying those Taliban who aren’t interested in peace or with whom the Afghan government considers “irreconcilable” — their crimes too offensive to be part of a peace process.

Another challenge is coming up with a set of confidence-building measures that will be good enough to lure Taliban to the table. The diplomat asked that neither his name nor nationality be used because he was not authorized to talk to the media.

Aziz expressed annoyance during the first round of talks held last month when Faisal issued public statements saying Pakistan was to produce a list of Taliban representatives willing to talk peace. The list never materialized and Aziz chastened officials participating in the talks about speaking to the media.

Aziz said whatever roadmap the four-country meeting agrees upon, it will have to clearly lay out each phase of what is certain to be a multi-phase process. He said there also has to be a way to gauge progress “We believe our collective efforts at this stage ... have to be aimed at the persuading maximum number of Taliban groups to join the peace talks,” said Aziz. — AP


February 07, 2016
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