Afghan peace process making 'positive headway,' says Pakistan foreign minister

Pakistani Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi talks with media representatives during a ceremony in Multan, on Dec. 22, 2018. (AFP)
Updated 24 December 2018
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Afghan peace process making 'positive headway,' says Pakistan foreign minister

  • Shah Mehmood Qureshi meets Afghan President Ghani and Foreign Minister Rabbani in Kabul
  • Will also visit Iran, China and Russia in the next three days

KABUL: Pakistan’s Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi said on Monday the Afghan peace process was making "positive headway" after a series of meetings in Kabul, the first leg of a four-nation visit that is part of the Pakistan government’s policy of outreach in the neighborhood.

Qureshi was in Kabul for meetings with Afghan President Ashraf Ghani and Foreign Minister Salahuddin Rabbani about bilateral ties and bolstering an Afghan peace process to reach a negotiated settlement to the 17-year-long war. Qureshi then departed for Iran and will also visit China and Russia.

“I’ve had productive meetings with the Afghan leadership this morning," Qureshi tweeted. "The peace process is making positive headway. Next stop is Iran. Regional connectivity and a collective outlook are essential for progress."

He said the region badly needed economic development, which could not happen without joint cooperation, trust and security.

The presidential palace in Kabul said Ghani’s discussions with Querishi revolved around “bilateral ties, Afghan-led and Afghan-owned peace process and subsequent intra-Afghan talks."

The visit, which is Qureshi's second to Kabul in less than a fortnight, follows last week’s talks between Taliban representatives and US officials in Abu Dhabi in which Pakistani officials and diplomats from the UAE and Saudi Arabia also took part. His previous meeting was part of a trilateral visit which involved China and was aimed at mending ties with Kabul and bring the sparring neighbors closer.

At talks last week, US and Taliban officials reportedly discussed proposals for a six-month ceasefire in Afghanistan and a future withdrawal of foreign troops. The Taliban emphasized the pullout of US troops from Afghanistan as the main condition before the group could start talks with President Ashraf Ghani’s embattled government.

An Afghan government delegation traveled to the city and met US special peace envoy Zalmay Khalilzad but the Taliban refused to talk directly with officials from the Kabul government, which they consider an illegitimate, foreign-appointed regime.

In a statement issued last Tuesday, the Taliban said the talks had mainly concentrated on the “US occupation”. “Talks revolved around the withdrawal of occupation forces from Afghanistan, ending the oppression being carried out by the United States and her allies."


Hegseth says he would have ordered second strike on Caribbean vessel

Updated 4 sec ago
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Hegseth says he would have ordered second strike on Caribbean vessel

  • The Trump administration has framed the attacks as a war with drug cartels, calling them armed groups and saying the drugs being carried to the United States kill Americans

WASHINGTON: US Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said on Saturday that he backs a September 2 decision to launch a second strike on a suspected drug boat in the Caribbean.
“I fully support that strike,” Hegseth said at the Reagan National Defense Forum in Simi Valley, California. “I would have made the same call myself.”
A video of the attack was shown to members of Congress on Capitol Hill behind closed doors on Thursday, days after reports surfaced that the commander overseeing the operation ordered a second strike to take out two survivors to comply with Hegseth’s direction that everyone should be killed.
Officials from President Donald Trump’s administration have since said that Hegseth did not order the additional strike, and that Admiral Frank Bradley, who led the Joint Special Operations Command at the time, concluded the boat’s wreckage must be neutralized because it might contain cocaine.
Hegseth on Saturday repeated his account of the day, saying that he had seen the first strike on September 2, but then left the room to attend another meeting. He declined to say whether the administration would release the full video, calling the issue “under review.”
The September 2 attack was the first of 22 on vessels in the southern Caribbean and Pacific carried out by the US military as part of what the Trump administration calls a campaign to stem the flow of illegal drugs into the United States.
The strikes have killed 87 people, with one carried out in the eastern Pacific on Thursday.
Accounts of the September 2 strikes have prompted concerns that US forces carried out a war crime.
The video of the attack shown to lawmakers showed two men clinging to wreckage after their vessel was destroyed, according to two sources familiar with the imagery.
They were shirtless, unarmed and carried no visible communications equipment.
The Defense Department’s Law of War Manual forbids attacks on combatants who are incapacitated, unconscious or shipwrecked, as long as they abstain from hostilities and do not attempt to escape. The manual cites firing upon shipwreck survivors as an example of a “clearly illegal” order that should be refused.
The Trump administration has framed the attacks as a war with drug cartels, calling them armed groups and saying the drugs being carried to the United States kill Americans.