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US begins military pullout from Afghan bases

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KABUL: American forces have started pulling out of two bases in Afghanistan, a US official said on Tuesday, the day peace talks between Kabul and the Taliban were due to start despite widespread violence and a political crisis.


The United States is keen to end its longest-ever conflict, and under the terms of a deal signed in Doha last month has said all foreign forces will quit Afghanistan within 14 months — provided the Taliban stick to their security commitments.


Under the accord, the US is initially supposed to cut its troop presence from about 12,000 currently to 8,600 by mid-July, and close five of its roughly 20 bases across the country.


Troops have started leaving one base in Lashkar Gah, the capital of Helmand province in the south, and another base in Herat in the west, a US official said.


Even with the drawdown, US forces retain “all the military means and authorities to accomplish our objectives”, Colonel Sonny Leggett, spokesman for US Forces-Afghanistan, said, referring to American counterterrorism operations and support for Afghan forces.


Helmand, which along with neighbouring Kandahar province is considered a Taliban stronghold, is where US and British forces fought some of the bloodiest campaigns of the 18-year war.


The initial drawdown comes as the Taliban, which see themselves as having achieved “victory” over America, test the Pentagon’s resolve to protect local partners by conducting dozens of low-level attacks against Afghan forces. The US has only responded to a few of these attacks.


PRISONER SWAP


Under the terms of the withdrawal deal, the Taliban are supposed to tackle extremists such as the IS group and Al Qaeda, as well as hold talks with the Afghan government that were due to start on Tuesday.


But Kabul is in disarray and appears unable to present a unified front to negotiate with the Taliban.


On Monday, President Ashraf Ghani was inaugurated for a second term following an election that was marred by fraud allegations while his rival, former chief executive Abdullah Abdullah, also declared himself winner and swore himself in as president in a parallel ceremony.


Washington has denounced Abdullah’s self-inauguration, urging unity in Kabul ahead of negotiations with the Taliban.


“Prioritising an inclusive government and unified Afghanistan is paramount for the future of the country and particularly for the cause of peace,” Secretary of State Mike Pompeo has said.


Peace talks were supposed to start on Tuesday but have been thrown into limbo by a dispute over the release of Taliban prisoners — something the insurgents have demanded as a prerequisite ahead of negotiations, but which Ghani has so far refused to do. He was expected to announce a decree on the issue later in the day and reveal details of the negotiating team.


A member of the Taliban’s leadership council — the Quetta Shura — said the insurgents had delivered a list of the 5,000 captives they wanted freed to the Afghan government.


But he accused Kabul of acting in bad faith, alleging that “the government (planned) to release only those prisoners who are elderly, very ill, or those whose sentences have expired”.


The Taliban’s political spokesman Suhail Shaheen tweeted on Tuesday that any prisoners “handed over to us... will be accepted (only) after verification by our delegation”.


“They should be the people whose names are in the list,” Shaheen wrote.


— AFP


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