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Friday, April 19, 2024

Pentagon’s views on new Taliban attacks: non-traditional

Since the Doha Peace Deal, the Taliban has ramped up violence against Afghan forces, ending a partial truce and casting a pall over peace talks between Kabul and the Taliban. The latest statements from the Pentagon on these attacks are unprecedented, and define the future course of US in Afghanistan.

The Pentagon on Wednesday played down the gravity of new Taliban attack in Afghanistan that cast doubts on a four-day old peace deal between the insurgent group and the United States.

Since the signing in Doha on Saturday, the militants have ramped up violence against Afghan forces, ending a partial truce and casting a pall over peace talks between Kabul and the Taliban, due to begin on March 10.

“There were a variety of attacks over the last 24 to 48 hours. And they were all beaten back,” said General Mark Milley, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff for the US military.

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“What is important, though, for the agreement: we’re on day four, this was small, low-level attacks, out on checkpoints, etcetera,” he told the Senate Armed Services Committee.

Afghanistan’s interior ministry spokesman Nasrat Rahimi on Wednesday detailed 30 attacks by the Taliban in 15 provinces over the previous 24 hours that left four civilians and 11 Afghan soldiers, dead, as well as 17 insurgents.

But Milley said “the Taliban have signed up to a whole series of conditions,” and he noted what has not occurred despite the latest violence.

“Of significance: there are no attacks on 34 provincial capitals, there are no attacks in Kabul. There are no high profile attacks, there are no suicide bombers, there’s no vehicle-borne suicide, no attack against the US forces, no attack against the coalition,” Milley said.

“There’s a whole laundry list of these things that aren’t happening,” he added.

Read more: US strikes Taliban minutes after Trump talks to Baradar

Defense Secretary Mark Esper told the same hearing that the Taliban were honoring their pledge under the accord to stop attacking US and coalition forces, but they had not followed through on an obligation to reduce the overall level of violence.

Esper said some of that was the challenge the group has in controlling its rank and file.

“Keeping that group of people on board is a challenge. They have got their range of hard-liners and soft-liners. And so they’re wrestling with that, too, I think,” Esper said.

An American military spokesman said the US launched an airstrike against Taliban fighters in southern Helmand province on Wednesday to defend Afghan forces.

Read more: Unprecedented 35mins: Trump phones Taliban political chief

Under the peace deal, US and other foreign forces will quit Afghanistan within 14 months, subject to Taliban security guarantees and a pledge by the insurgents to hold talks with Kabul.

US forces invaded more than 18 years ago, after the 9/11 attacks on the United States, to overthrow the Taliban government that had sheltered Al-Qaeda.

AFP with additional input by GVS News DeskÂ