Taliban Hails Reception Of US Humanitarian Aid, But No Formal Political Recognition Yet
The Taliban for the first time announced Sunday that it will receive humanitarian aid for the people of Afghanistan directly from the United States. It comes after the latest round of talks with Washington officials in Doha which Taliban negotiators said "went well" - the first such talks since the US evacuation and pullout in August.
It appears the two sides came to agreement over the humanitarian assistance based on reception of the funds not being linked to formal political recognition. The US side gained confirmation that the Taliban would allow US citizens and permanent residents, and other foreign nationals still stuck in Afghanistan the freedom to leave the country:
The statement said the US agreed to provide humanitarian aid to Afghanistan, while the Taliban said they would "facilitate principled movement of foreign nationals." Jet-setting Taliban is apparently slowly gaining some level of Washington recognition...
There was also agreement that the Taliban would commit to fighting terrorism, which further comes after ISIS-K attacks on mosques and the mass killing of civilians, resulting in Taliban assaults on what are said to be ISIS hideouts.
The American side's statement on the foreign aid directed to Kabul was more vague, saying only that "The two sides also discussed the United States’ provision of robust humanitarian assistance, directly to the Afghan people."
"The US delegation focused on security and terrorism concerns and safe passage for U.S. citizens, other foreign nationals and our Afghan partners, as well as on human rights, including the meaningful participation of women and girls in all aspects of Afghan society," the US State Department readout of the proceedings in Doha indicated.
U.S. in talks with Taliban to deliver aid to Afghanistan https://t.co/HoHfDKWJn2 — Peoples Gazette (@GazetteNGR) October 11, 2021
Last month the Biden administration appeared to leave open for future consideration the questions of counter-terror cooperation with the Taliban, foreign aid to the country, and formal recognition of Taliban rule. All of these remain hugely controversial, given any of these would be taken as a glaring Washington admission of defeat after two decades of war. It would also effectively bring the US government into 'partnership' with a de facto terrorist organization which the US and NATO allies spent many years fighting.
Over the weekend Taliban leaders reaffirmed their unwillingness to accept any level of US cooperation to fight ISIS-K or other terrorists in the country. Tyler Durden Mon, 10/11/2021 - 15:05
http://dlvr.it/S9Kp9b
No comments:
Post a Comment