Skip to main content
Latest news
Thumbnail

US Envoy Seeks Peace Deal Before July Vote

US Special Representative for Afghanistan Reconciliation Zalmay Khalilzad, who addressed a gathering at the US Institute for Peace on Friday, said the United States is hoping Afghanistan can strike a peace agreement including the Taliban before the presidential elections scheduled for July. 

"It will be better for Afghanistan if we could get a peace agreement before the election, which is scheduled in July," Khalilzad said, adding that there remained "a lot of work" to do.

"We are after a peace agreement, not a withdrawal agreement. A peace agreement can allow withdrawal," Khalilzad during his speech at the US Institute for Peace.

He added that "elections make the peace agreement more complicated". 

Khalilzad, who held talks with Taliban representatives four times in the last four months, has expressed cautious optimism about the prospect of a deal, and even announced a draft framework, but stressed nothing had been finalized.

His remarks come days after Afghan politicians and Taliban representatives held talks on Afghan peace in Moscow which was described as "constructive" by some participants of the meeting.

The talks come as US President Donald Trump pushes to end the Afghan conflict, where about 14,000 US troops are still deployed and which has seen countless thousands of civilian and military deaths, as well as an infusion of more than $1 trillion in US cash into the country.

In his annual State of the Union speech on Tuesday, Trump said the time has come "to at least try for peace."

US Envoy Seeks Peace Deal Before July Vote

Khalilzad says "elections make the peace agreement more complicated".

Thumbnail

US Special Representative for Afghanistan Reconciliation Zalmay Khalilzad, who addressed a gathering at the US Institute for Peace on Friday, said the United States is hoping Afghanistan can strike a peace agreement including the Taliban before the presidential elections scheduled for July. 

"It will be better for Afghanistan if we could get a peace agreement before the election, which is scheduled in July," Khalilzad said, adding that there remained "a lot of work" to do.

"We are after a peace agreement, not a withdrawal agreement. A peace agreement can allow withdrawal," Khalilzad during his speech at the US Institute for Peace.

He added that "elections make the peace agreement more complicated". 

Khalilzad, who held talks with Taliban representatives four times in the last four months, has expressed cautious optimism about the prospect of a deal, and even announced a draft framework, but stressed nothing had been finalized.

His remarks come days after Afghan politicians and Taliban representatives held talks on Afghan peace in Moscow which was described as "constructive" by some participants of the meeting.

The talks come as US President Donald Trump pushes to end the Afghan conflict, where about 14,000 US troops are still deployed and which has seen countless thousands of civilian and military deaths, as well as an infusion of more than $1 trillion in US cash into the country.

In his annual State of the Union speech on Tuesday, Trump said the time has come "to at least try for peace."

Share this post