KABUL, Afghanistan -- The Taliban offered to free a U.S.
soldier held captive since 2009 in exchange for five prisoners at
Guantanamo Bay, while Afghan President Hamid Karzai eased his opposition
Thursday to joining planned peace talks.
The idea of releasing some of the Taliban's most senior operatives has been controversial over fears they would simply
The
proposal to trade U.S. Army Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl for the Taliban
detainees was made by senior Taliban spokesman Shaheen Suhail in
response to a question during an exclusive phone interview with The Associated Press from his newly opened political office in Doha, the capital of the Gulf nation of Qatar.
The
prisoner exchange is the first item on the Taliban's agenda before even
opening peace talks with the U.S., said Suhail, a top Taliban figure
who served as first secretary at the Afghan Embassy in the Pakistani
capital of Islamabad before the Taliban government's ouster in 2001.
"First has to be the release of detainees," Suhail said Thursday when asked about Bergdahl. "Yes. It would be an exchange. Then step by step, we want to build bridges of confidence to go forward."
Bergdahl,
27, of Hailey, Idaho, is the only known American soldier held captive
from the Afghan war. He disappeared from his base in southeastern
Afghanistan on June 30, 2009, and is believed held in Pakistan.
Suhail said Bergdahl "is, as far as I know, in good condition."
Col.
Tim Marsano with the Idaho National Guard said Bergdahl's parents, Bob
and Jani Bergdahl, plan to speak at an event honoring the soldier in
Hailey on Saturday.
"They're aware that the possibility of a transfer or exchange is on the table and they're encouraged by it," Marsano said.
Bergdahl's
parents earlier this month received a letter from their son through the
International Committee of the Red Cross. They did not release details
of the letter but renewed their plea for his release. The soldier's
captivity has been marked by only sporadic releases of videos and
information about his whereabouts.
The
reconciliation process with the Taliban - seen by most as the only way
to end the nearly 12-year war - has been a long and bumpy one. It began
nearly two years ago when the U.S. opened secret talks that were later
scuttled by Karzai when he learned of them.
It
was then that the U.S. and Taliban discussed prisoner exchanges and for
a brief time it appeared that the five Guantanamo Bay prisoners would
be released and sent to Doha to help further the peace process. But
Karzai stepped in again and demanded they be returned to Afghanistan
over Taliban objections.
Since then, the U.S. has been trying to jumpstart peace talks and the Taliban have made several offers - including sharing power
in Kabul. The Taliban have also attended several international
conferences and held meetings with representatives of about 30
countries.
Afghan and U.S. officials have said the Taliban being considered for any exchange deal are:
- Mohammad Fazl , a former Taliban chief of army staff and the deputy
-
Abdul Haq Wasiq, former Taliban deputy minister of intelligence, who
was in direct contact with supreme leader Mullah Mohammed Omar during
the Taliban rule, according to military documents.
-
Mullah Norullah Nuri , who has been described as one of the most
significant former Taliban officials held at Guantanamo. He was a senior
Taliban commander in Mazar-e-Sharif and previously was a Taliban
governor in two provinces in northern Afghanistan,
-
Khairullah Khairkhwa, a former Taliban minister of the interior and
military commander. According to military documents, he had direct ties
to Mullah Omar and Osama bin Laden and was also a friend of Karzai.
- Mohammed Nabi, former chief of security for the Taliban in Qalat, the capital of the southern province of Zabul.
If
the Taliban hold talks with American delegates in the next few days,
they will be the first U.S.-Taliban talks in nearly 1 1/2 years.
U.S.
Secretary of State John Kerry was expected in Doha ahead of a
conference there scheduled for Saturday on the Syrian civil war. He was
not expected to meet with the Taliban although other U.S. officials
might in coming days.
On Wednesday in
Washington, State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki said the U.S. had
"never confirmed" any specific meeting schedule with Taliban
representatives in Doha.
Prospective peace
talks were again thrown into question Wednesday when Karzai became
infuriated by the Taliban's move to cast their new office in Doha as a
rival embassy.
The Taliban held a
ribbon-cutting ceremony Tuesday in which they hoisted their flag and a
banner that evoked the name they used while in power more than a decade
ago: "Political Office of the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan." Later,
the Taliban replaced the sign to read simply: "Political office of the
Taliban."
At the ceremony, the Taliban
welcomed dialogue with Washington but said their fighters would not stop
fighting. Hours later, the group claimed responsibility for a rocket
attack on Bagram Air Base outside the Afghan capital, Kabul, which
killed four American service members.
The U.S.
expectation had been that U.S.-Taliban talks would be followed several
days later with direct talks between the Taliban and a Karzai peace
delegation.
But on Wednesday, Karzai announced
that his government would not participate, apparently also angered by
the way Kabul had been sidelined in the U.S.-Taliban bid for
rapprochement.
The Afghan president also
suspended negotiations with the United States on a bilateral security
agreement that would cover American troops who will remain behind after
the final withdrawal of NATO combat troops at the end of 2014.
That
left U.S. officials scrambling to save the talks, and Kerry spoke with
Karzai in phone conversations in an effort to bring him back on board.
On
Thursday, Karzai spokesman Fayeq Wahidi said the Afghan president is
willing to join peace talks with the Taliban if the U.S. follows through
with promises he said were made by Kerry over the phone.
Wahidi
said Kerry promised Karzai that the Taliban flag and a nameplate with
their former regime's name would be removed and that the U.S. would
issue a formal written statement supporting the Afghan government and
making clear that the Taliban office would not be seen as an embassy or
government-in-exile.
"If all those assurances
and commitments the U.S. had given, if we are assured that they will be
fully put in place on the issue of talks in Qatar," Wahidi said, "we
would see no problem in entering into talks with the Taliban in Qatar. "
A
decision on whether to restart the U.S. security agreement talks would
be made after those assurances, he added, referring further questions to
the foreign ministry.
On Thursday, the
"Islamic Emirate" nameplate had been removed from the Taliban office.
The flagpole inside the compound was apparently shortened and the
Taliban flag - dark Quranic script on a white background - was still
flying but not visible from the street. Journalists gathered at the
office shot images of the flag through the gaps in the walls.
The
Taliban have long refused to talk to Karzai's representatives but the
opening of the office was seen as a first step toward those meetings.
Suhail
said the Taliban are insistent that they want their first interlocutors
to be the United States. "First we talk to the Americans about those
issues concerning the Americans and us (because) for those issues
implementation is only in the hands of the Americans," he said.
"We
want foreign troops to be pulled out of Afghanistan," he added. "If
there are troops in Afghanistan, then there will be a continuation of
the war."
Suhail indicated the Taliban could
approve of American trainers and advisers for the Afghan troops, saying
that "of course, there is cooperation between countries in other things.
We need that cooperation."
He said that once the Taliban concluded talks with the United States, they would participate in all-inclusive Afghan talks.
Suhail
ruled out exclusive talks with Karzai's High Peace Council, which has
been a condition of the Afghan president, who previously said he wanted
talks in Doha to be restricted to his representatives and the Taliban.
Instead, the Taliban would talk with all Afghan groups, Suhail said.
"After
we finish the phase of talking to the Americans, then we would start
the internal phase ... that would include all Afghans," he said. "Having
all groups involved will guarantee peace and stability."
----
|
Biodun Iginla, BBC News
Thursday, June 20, 2013
Taliban offer to free US soldier
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