Doha (Agencies):US-Taliban talks, scheduled to hold in Islamabad today (Monday), has been cancelled after most members of Afghan Taliban delegation are unable to travel due to “US and UN travel restrictions”.
A delegation was scheduled to arrive in Islamabad but most of the members of its negotiating team are unable to travel because they are subject to US and UN sanctions, says a statement issued by the Afghan Taliban.
The delegation was scheduled to meet with Prime Minister Imran Khan, US Special Representative for Afghanistan Reconciliation Zalmay Khalilzad and other officials.
On Feb 11, Zalmay Khalilzad left Washington on a six-nation tour, including Pakistan, to boost the peace process and bring “all Afghan parties together in an intra-Afghan dialogue”.
Khalilzad, leading an inter-agency delegation to Belgium, Germany, Turkey, Qatar, Afghanistan and Pakistan from February 10-28, will meet with US allies and partners to discuss mutual efforts to advance that goal and will consult with the Afghan government throughout the trip.
The US Department of State said in a statement that Khalilzad’s trip is part of an overall effort to facilitate a peace process that protects US national security interests and brings all Afghan parties together in an intra-Afghan dialogue through which they can determine a path for their country’s future.
Khalilzad has made several trips to regional countries in quest for Afghan peace after being appointed US special envoy for Afghan peace in September last year.
He has held talks with the Taliban with the latest round in Qatar in January. The next round of talks is expected to be held in the same venue on February 25.
Khalilzad has said that the sides agreed to a framework of a peace deal that would require the Taliban to prevent use of Afghanistan by terrorists and US to withdraw its troops from the country.
Meanwhile, Acting Pentagon chief Patrick Shanahan on Monday arrived in Afghanistan on an unannounced visit.
Shanahan will meet Afghan President Ashraf Ghani, who has warned against rushing into a deal after Washington held major talks with Afghan Taliban officials in Qatar last month that negotiators hope could herald a breakthrough in the grinding 17-year conflict.
Shanahan, who is also due to meet General Scott Miller, the top US and Nato commander in Afghanistan, told reporters aboard his flight to Kabul that he had no instructions from Washington to begin a withdrawal, however.
United States President Trump is pushing to end US involvement in Afghanistan, where 14,000 American troops are still deployed. President Trump's announcement has raised fears in Afghanistan that the American troops could exit before securing a lasting peace between the Afghan Taliban and the Kabul government.