Taliban to meet US officials in Qatar for peace talks on Afghanistan, say sources
Kandahar: Taliban representatives are to meet US officials in Qatar soon for possible peace talks on Afghanistan, sources from the militant group said on Thursday.
There have been several fruitless attempts at dialogue in recent years between the Taliban and the US, the Kabul government's chief supporter, aimed at ending the 13-year conflict in Afghanistan.
The time frame for the latest round of meetings was not immediately clear, with one source suggesting it could begin as early as Thursday and another that it would more likely be in the coming week.
The Taliban opened an office in Qatar in June 2013 as the first move towards a possible peace deal, but it shut a month later after enraging the then-Afghan president Hamid Karzai by styling it as the unofficial embassy for a government-in-exile.
The election last year of President Ashraf Ghani, who pledged to make peace talks a priority, as well as supportive signals from Pakistan, which has influence over the Taliban, has boosted hopes for possible dialogue.
"Five former members of the supreme council of the Afghan Taliban, headed by Tayyab Agha, will hold talks with the US," a senior Taliban cadre based in Pakistan told AFP.
A senior member of the Quetta Shura, the Taliban's governing council, confirmed the news, saying Karzai's departure as president had helped clear the way.
"This time the Taliban will speak to Americans face to face in Qatar, this is what Karzai was afraid of, he did not want Americans to represent the Afghan government," the commander told AFP.
An Afghan Taliban commander recently told AFP the militants thought Ghani was doing a "good job" in moving matters towards negotiations.
The Quetta Shura member stressed that the preliminary contacts announced Thursday did not mean the top Taliban leadership and its chief Mullah Omar had fully agreed to peace talks yet.
Agha, Omar's former private secretary, is the head of a political branch of the Taliban that has been open to talks for several years.
But his is only one part of the Taliban's supreme council, which makes strategic decisions for the movement and has previously said it was against talks with the Americans as long as US soldiers remained on Afghan soil.
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