Latest News Pakistan Biden criticised for ignoring Pakistan over Afghan drawdown
In a series of tweets, ahead of this week’s talks at the White House between Biden and Afghan President Ashraf Ghani and Kabul’s top negotiator Abdullah Abdullah, the ranking Republican senator from South Carolina criticised the Biden administration for believing that the US problems in Afghanistan were over.
تازہ ترین خبریں under a deal with the Taliban, the US agreed to withdraw its troops in exchange for a Taliban promise to denounce terrorist groups and enter negotiations with the Afghan government aimed at restoring peace to the war-battered country.
Biden said in April that the US would leave Afghanistan by
September 11, the 20th anniversary of the terrorist attacks in New York and
Washington. The Pentagon said on Monday that it will complete its full
withdrawal by September 11, but the pace of the pullout could be slowed given
the Taliban’s gains.
On Friday, Biden will meet with Ghani and Abdullah, the head of the country’s High Council for National Reconciliation, which oversees the government’s negotiation team with the Taliban, to discuss the troop withdrawal amid a surge in fighting between Afghan forces and the Taliban across the country.
In his tweet, Senator Graham questioned how the US drawdown
from Afghanistan could be effective with coordinating with Pakistan. “Stunning
to hear that President Biden hasn’t reached out to the Prime Minister of
Pakistan Imran Khan regarding the US-Pakistan relationship and Afghanistan,” he
wrote.
“How do we expect our withdrawal from Afghanistan to be
effective without coordinating with Pakistan?” he added.
“I believe that this decision by the Biden Administration to
withdraw all forces and not stay engaged with Pakistan is a major disaster in
the making, even worse than the blunder in Iraq.”
The tweets came as the US State Department called for an end
to violence in Afghanistan, blaming Taliban for much of the bloodshed there.
“The violence must cease,” spokesman Ned Price told reporters. “We urge the
sides to engage in serious negotiations that determine a political roadmap for
Afghanistan’s future,” he added.
Since early May, the Taliban have launched major offensives
targeting government forces across the rugged countryside, and claim to have
seized at least 87 of the country's 421 districts. Many of their claims are
disputed by the government.
The head of the United Nations Afghanistan aid operation
expressed strong concerns on Tuesday over military gains by the Taliban
insurgents. “The Taliban’s recent advances are even more significant and are a
result of an intensified military campaign,” Deborah Lyons told the UN Security
Council.
“All of the major trends – politics, security, the peace
process, the economy, the humanitarian emergency, and Covid – all of these
trends are negative or stagnant,” Lyons, who leads the UN Assistance Mission in
Afghanistan, said via a video conference.
In the latest incident, the Taliban captured Afghanistan's
main border crossing with Tajikistan, officials said, with security forces
abandoning their posts, about 50 kilometres from Kunduz city, and some fleeing
across the frontier.
Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid confirmed the group had
seized the border post, on the south bank of the Pyanj River. Shir Khan Bandar
is marked by a 700-metre US-funded bridge that opened to great fanfare in 2007
with the aim of boosting trade between the Central Asian neighbours.
At the UN, Afghanistan’s foreign minister accused the
Taliban of carrying out their worst violence in the past two decades and urged
the international community to try to persuade the group to honour the February
2020 agreement with the United States to reduce violence and enter peace
negotiations.
Mohammad Haneef Atmar told the UN Security Council that with
the withdrawal of US and NATO troops “to be completed in the coming weeks,” the
international community should also establish a “mechanism” to monitor
implementation of the agreement reached in Doha.
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