Trump's peace negotiation with the Taliban could leave Afghanistan worse-off as the US plans for final troop withdrawals, says UNSW Middle East expert Dr Srinjoy Bose. 

“Any clause in any kind of agreement that will somehow bring the Taliban on board as allies in a fight against ISIS, Al-Qaeda or others, is really foolhardy,” Dr Bose, from UNSW Arts and Social Sciences, says.  

US Special Representative Zalmay Khalilzad and Taliban head Abdul Ghani Baradar signed the peace agreement with US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo as a witness on February 29 in Doha, Qatar, following 18 months of negotiations.  

At the signing, Mr Pompeo urged the Taliban to “keep your promises to cut ties with Al-Qaeda”.

But Dr Bose says the connection between Al-Qaeda and the Taliban is “generational – cemented by marriage ties, in some cases – complex, layered and not well understood”. A recent UN report also recognises that the close links between Al-Qaeda and the Taliban remain.

“To assume any Taliban promise of fighting Al-Qaeda will go ahead, and have them hand over whatever remnants of Al-Qaeda remain... well, I’d take that with a big pinch of salt,” he says. 

“How will the US even measure, observe, or find evidence that the Taliban are actually going after Al-Qaeda and Daesh [ISIS]?” Dr Bose says. “Will the US troops fight the Taliban on one day, then ask them to fight Al-Qaeda and Daesh on [the] other days?”

All US troops are set to make an exit from the country within 14 months, as part of the peace agreement. Additionally they will release 5,000 insurgents from Afghan jails in exchange for 1,000 prisoners held by the Taliban.

The US withdrawal will end the American presence in Afghanistan which began when terrorists affiliated with Al-Qaeda attacked New York’s Twin Towers on September 11, 2001, killing nearly 3,000 people.

The “mastermind” behind the 9/11 attacks, Al-Qaeda’s then-leader Osama bin Laden, was shot dead by US Navy Seals in 2011. 

Despite a brief three-day lull in fighting to mark the end of Ramadan, called the Eid-ul-Fitr Festival, on May 24, violence in the region has not abated despite the peace talks. 

Dr Bose says part of the deal to reduce US troops in Afghanistan, was on the basis that the Taliban would decrease their violence. 

However on May 12, armed assailants carried out an attack on a maternity ward in Kabul, run by international aid organisation Medecins Sans Frontieres. About 24 people, including mothers, pregnant women, nurses and two newborns were massacred in the attack.

Gunmen also shot dead eight worshippers, and wounded 12, during their evening prayers in a Mosque in central Afghanistan on May 19.

The Afghan government laid blame with the Taliban but the group has denied involvement in either massacre.  

Dr Bose says the increase in attacks, including a suicide car bombing in the east of the country, and another which killed seven Afghan intelligence officials, coincides with what is known as the ‘Taliban Spring Offensive’. 

“Basically, as winter draws to an end, with the falling of temperatures and the melting of snow, the Taliban revise their attacks typically in the month of April,” Dr Bose says. 

“The Taliban has argued and justified their continued resistance by identifying the American occupation. They have said, ‘if the Americans leave then we will bring peace to Afghanistan and we will talk to our Afghan brothers and sisters’.” 

But Dr Bose says many are sceptical of the Taliban’s promises, saying the group will just find another justification for war. 

“My great fear is that without American financial and military support, the Afghan government will be overrun. They will collapse,” Dr Bose says. 

“This is not to suggest that it will be an easy fight for the Taliban. The government could fall in a matter of months, it could lead to renewed civil war and you could see years of engagement,” he says. 

“But there are also a number of warlords, strongmen who command peoples and arms, who might coalesce against the Taliban, or they might have pockets of influence where they are fighting the Taliban. So what we might actually see is a fragmented country with multiple centres of power.

“So, there’s unlikely to be peace, instead it will be a state of war: of all against all. None of which is good for the Afghan people.”


Rachel Gray