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    AP EXCLUSIVE: US-Taliban talks were making headway

    KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) — Direct U.S. talks with the Taliban had evolved to a substantive negotiation before Afghan officials, nervous that the secret and independent talks would undercut President Hamid Karzai, scuttled them, Afghan and U.S. officials told The Associated Press.

    Featured prominently in the talks was the whereabouts and eventual release of U.S. Army Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl of Hailey, Idaho, who was captured more than two years ago in eastern Afghanistan, according to a senior Western diplomat in the region and a childhood friend of the Taliban negotiator, Tayyab Aga.

    The U.S. negotiators asked Aga what could be done to gain Bergdahl's release. The discussion did not get into specifics but Aga discussed the release of Afghan prisoners at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba and in Afghanistan at Bagram Air Field.

    Published reports about the clandestine meetings ended the talks abruptly, and sent Aga into hiding.

    Collapse of the direct talks between Aga and U.S. officials probably spoiled the best chance yet at reaching Mullah Mohammed Omar, considered the linchpin to ending the Taliban fight against the U.S.-backed government in Afghanistan. The contacts were preliminary but had begun to bear fruit, Afghan and U.S. officials said.

    Perhaps most importantly they offered the tantalizing prospect of a brokered agreement between the U.S. and the Taliban — one that would allow the larger reconciliation of the Taliban into Afghanistan political life to move forward. The United States has not committed to any such deal, but the Taliban wants security assurances from Washington.

    In a series of interviews with diplomats, current and former Taliban, Afghan government officials and a close childhood friend of Aga, the AP learned Aga is hiding in Europe, and is afraid to return to Pakistan fearing reprisals.

    The United States has had no direct contact with him for months.

    A senior U.S. official acknowledged that the talks imploded because of the leak and that Aga, while alive, had disappeared. The U.S. will continue to pursue talks, the official said. Current and former U.S. officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the talks.

    The U.S. acknowledged the meetings after Karzai, who apparently fears being sidelined by U.S.-Taliban talks, confirmed published accounts about them in June, but has never publicly detailed the content, format or participants.

    The first was held in late 2010 followed by at least two other meetings in early spring of this year, the former U.S. official said. The sessions were held in Germany and Qatar, the official said.

    The childhood friend of Aga's, who spoke to the AP on condition he not be identified because he feared retaliation, said Aga was in Germany. A diplomat in the region said Aga fled to a European country after his contacts with the United States were revealed.

    The talks were deliberately revealed by someone in the presidential palace, where Karzai's office is located, said a Western and an Afghan official. The reason was Karzai's animosity toward the U.S. and fear that any agreement Washington brokered would undermine his authority, they said.

    The AP sought comment from Karzai's office but was referred to palace press department spokesman Hamid Elmi, who did not answer his phone during repeated calls.

    Pakistan had also been kept in the dark about the talks, people knowledgeable about them said. An Afghan official with contacts with the Taliban said the insurgents decided not to tell Pakistan about the meetings with the United States.

    At the time of the leak, Washington had already offered small concessions as "confidence-building measures," a former senior U.S. official said. They were aimed at developing a rapport and moving talks forward, said a current U.S. official on condition he not be identified because of the sensitivity of the topic.

    The concessions included treating the Taliban and al-Qaida differently under international sanctions. The Taliban had argued that while al-Qaida is focused on worldwide jihad against the West, Taliban militants have focused on Afghanistan and have shown little interest in attacking targets abroad.

    Other goodwill gestures that were not made public included Aga's safe passage to Germany, U.S. officials said. The U.S. also offered assurances that it would not block the Taliban from opening an office in a third country, the official said.

    Aga slowly established his bona fides with the U.S. officials, who had initial doubts both about his identity and his level of contact and influence with Omar, former and current U.S. official with knowledge of the discussion said. For example, a coded reference to the talks appeared on a Taliban-affiliated website following one meeting, just as Aga said it would, one official said.

    Aga sought the freedom of Taliban fighters in U.S. custody in Guantanamo Bay and Bagram Air Field, north of the Afghan capital where an estimated 600 Afghans are being held. Still at Guantanamo Bay is former Taliban Defense Ministry Chief of Staff Mullah Mohammed Fazil, Taliban intelligence official Abdul Haq Wasiq and former Herat governor Mullah Khairullah Khairkhwa.

    Afghanistan's High Peace Council tasked by Karzai with finding a negotiated settlement with insurgents has requested Khairkhwa's release.

    A former U.S. official familiar with the talks said the loss of the Aga contact dismayed and angered the U.S. side, and further eroded thin trust in Karzai. There is a difference of opinion among U.S. diplomats, military officials and others about how directly Karzai should be blamed, but several officials agreed that the leak was an attempt to torpedo a diplomatic channel that Karzai and his inner circle worried would sideline and undercut the Afghan leader.

    As the Afghan war slides into its 10th year and Washington plans to withdraw its combat forces by the end of 2014, a negotiated settlement between the Karzai government and the Taliban has become a stated goal for the United States. It is the centerpiece of efforts by Marc Grossman, the U.S. special envoy to Afghanistan and Pakistan.

    Karzai has launched a separate peace outreach, with the High Peace Council representing numerous political factions.

    A member of that High Peace Council, who asked not to be identified by name so he could talk candidly, told the AP that the leaking of the talks reveals the level of mistrust and the lack of coordination among the key players in any eventual peace deal.

    He said all the key players — the United States, Afghan government, Afghan National Security Council and the High Peace Council — are holding separate and secret talks with their own contacts within the insurgency.

    The United States, for example, has also held secret talks with Ibrahim Haqqani, the brother of Jalaluddin Haqqani, who heads the notorious Haqqani network considered by U.S. and NATO troops in Afghanistan to be their biggest threat. That contact was confirmed by officials from Pakistan, Afghanistan and the U.S.

    Karzai met with representatives of wanted rebel leader Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, who is seeking greater involvement at the peace table and direct talks with the United States, said diplomats in the region.

    The flurry of meetings the United States is holding with the various factions in the Afghan conflict has also extended to Pakistan, where the most powerful insurgents have found safe havens.

    A month ago, U.S. Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman Sen. John Kerry and Pakistan's Army chief of staff Gen. Ashfaq Pervez Kayani met for a marathon eight hours in a Gulf country. Peace negotiations with Afghanistan's insurgents featured prominently, said both Pakistani and U.S. officials who would not be identified by name because of the secret nature of the meeting.

    A U.S. official familiar with the talks said Kayani made a pitch during his marathon meeting with Kerry that Pakistan take on a far larger role in Afghanistan peacemaking. The United States considers Pakistan an essential part of an eventual deal, but neither the U.S. nor Pakistan trusts the other's motives in Afghanistan.

    Meanwhile, an unexpected consequence of attempts to find peace with the Taliban has been the rearming of the so-called Northern Alliance, that represents Afghanistan's ethnic minorities and who were partnered with the coalition at the outset of Operation Enduring Freedom to topple the Taliban regime.

    For the warlords that make up the Northern Alliance, Martine van Bijlert, co-director and co-founder of the Afghan Analyst Network in the capital, Kabul, talk of peace threatens their survival.

    Warlords-cum-government ministers and vice presidents are watching attempts at finding a peaceful end to the war with trepidation, each wondering "what if it unravels, who is going to come after me? Will I be the weakest in the room? They are feeling very vulnerable," van Bijlert said.

    ___

    Gearan, AP National Security Writer, reported from Washington. Kathy Gannon is AP Special Regional Correspondent for Afghanistan and Pakistan. She can be followed on www.twitter.com/kathygannon

     

    313 comments

    • Chris  •  8 mths ago
      I was almost expecting, " spoke on condition of anonymity, because he wasn't authorized to speak to the media", to be somewhere in this. oh my mistake. Ever notice that when it's an AP news story 9 out of 10 times "condition of anonymity" is in it?
    • geronimo  •  8 mths ago
      Once a fox was going to swim across a river and a snake asked to ride over and the fox said no you would bite me and I will die. The snake said no if I bite you I would drown. About half way over the snake bit the fox. They fox said why did you do that and the snake said I'm a snake thats what I do. Moral - You can't make deals with snakes. EASOP
    • Thirdworlddatabankcentre ...  •  8 mths ago
      While it is hard to believe the news, the TWDC is elated with the development and considers it as a victory for peace, if true. As global peace advocate, TWDC supports any peace initiative between the US and the Taliban rebels.

      Some people may see the Taliban as a 'threat to world peace'. That can be true. But if the group (Taliban) is now willing to discuss the Afghan problem in the negotiating table, the door should always 'be opened' on the part of the US government and Karzai's regime. The Taliban might have some legitimate demands which can be settled through peaceful means instead of fighting it out via the 'barrel of the gun'.

      A team of TWDC researchers were tasked to dig deeper into some major 'peace overtures' around the world and the outcome of their findings are worth looking into:

      1. Some 'peace talks' succeeded because their is TRANSPARENCY between the contending parties; while others failed primarily because one party would attempt to outwit the opposite side.

      2. Some 'peace talks' succeeded because SINCERITY was given importance by the two contending parties; while some failed because one party is merely vying time for its own advantage.

      3. Some 'peace talks' succeeded because one party is taking full COGNIZANT of, and is LISTENING to, the clamor of the other party with OPENNESS and without prejudice; while the others failed because one party would insist that ALL OF ITS ARGUMENTS ARE CORRECT and is 'devoid of any error'. Such egoistic outlook is 'hurting' peace initiative.

      To rap it up, in order for any peace overtures to push through and end with a positive result, patience, self-restraint, respect and sympathy must be REAL on the part of the negotiators--whichever sides they are in!
    • Hesperos  •  8 mths ago
      The only talks should be about how many we kill on the way out.
    • Fighterpilot51  •  8 mths ago
      Progress? Can you say #$%$
    • jaundice  •  8 mths ago
      This may actually be the reason why the Taliban assasinated Karzai's brother. He sunk the talks so they took care of his brother since he was vulnerable.
    • Yuri Chenzenko  •  8 mths ago
      it just like henry kissenger, met with the v.c before withdraw from vietnam all over again.
      • Paul 8 mths ago
        We forot the lesson we learned in Vietnam, the Taliban knows it all to well. The Taliban doesn't have to win, the just have to not lose.. They have to outlast the American citizen's paitence, there getting close, if not already done it. Also where the heel is there leader Mullah Omar.
      • andy 8 mths ago
        what ever happened to ...unconditional surrender
    • Yuri Chenzenko  •  8 mths ago
      it just like henry kissenger, met with the v.c before withdraw from vietnam all over again.
    • Dave R  •  8 mths ago
      So, explain to me again why we're in Afghanistan? Why we're spending billions, and our kids are in harms way?

      Pack all our stuff up tomorrow bring it home and let their miserable "leader" have it all to himself.
      • franklin 8 mths ago
        right on
      • indianajonz 8 mths ago
        I heard we ran an oil pipeline down to the ocean when we 1st went in there.
      • For God and Country 8 mths ago
        In 08 Obama camapayned on ending both wars if elected. Three years now and what is the hold up? He lied just to get elected. It worked. Liberal idiots voted for a radical muslim born to be our president. What a disgrace to America.
    • Sig-P226  •  8 mths ago
      Peace in our time! remember that statment anyone? Histoy does repeat itself
    • Me  •  8 mths ago
      Geez....it is always the same with these LIBERAL administrations. Just like Carter! Is their any doubt these nuts would not hold up their end of the agreement???
    • leonardo  •  8 mths ago
      Munich sell out.
    • Ace Allen  •  8 mths ago
      ah, as a child i heard about the "peace talks" the U.S. had with North Vietnam and what they led to. Anyone who fought in Afghanistan must feel slightly ill at knowing our fool government is doing something like this. It figures though, we have a great big Kenyan Chicken sitting on the big cluck house on Pennsylvania Avenue.
      • Nahzuul 8 mths ago
        If you are so factually challenged as to refer to the President as a Kenyan, it matters not at all what you believe. If I were to believe that two plus two equals three, would it matter to anyone but myself? Perhaps yes, and not in a good way.
      • Ace Allen 8 mths ago
        Factually challenged? I think not. He is a Kenyan! Some of us know he is a total pretender. If it makes you feel good to think he is really an American, so be it. Many Americans believe in Bigfoot too, but that don't make them right. His name should be Barry Nairobi.
    • A Yahoo! User  •  8 mths ago
      How does this sound,,,tell them to get their shit together..work out some kind of agreement because we are packing up our shit and getting out. Like Ron Paul said when asked how he would end the two unproductive wars,,,"We marched in,,we can march right back out", ron paul2012 revolution
    • ObamaForTheLoss  •  8 mths ago
      AP EXCLUSIVE ~ We don't deal with piece of #$%$ terrorist! Kill every GD one of them!!
    • Jerry  •  8 mths ago
      4 RPG's (Rocket Propelled Grenades) lobbed into Kandahar Airfield this morning. Screw making deals with the Taliban. The US is going to do just what we did in Viet Nam. After trillions of dollars spent, make a few deals with what we've been calling bad guys for the last 10 years, and then tuck our tails between our legs and make an emergency exit out of here. Let the primative guys with a few RPG's and rifles drive out the high-tech "best" military forces in the world. Nobody was willing to do what it takes to win this "war".
      • ERIC 8 mths ago
        No one but the TROOPS !!!!
      • Austin 8 mths ago
        Good OPSEC
    • rbtrage  •  8 mths ago
      Russia and the UK both failed in Afghanistan. We were there for almost 9 years before Obama doubled down on our failed war. #$%$ are we there again?
    • FIRE IDIOT OBAMA  •  8 mths ago
      The problem with the obama strategy for any military action is his refusal to make WINNING, VICTORY or DEFEATING THE ENEMY as a goal…………….
      • Kevin 8 mths ago
        If only he knew where to get a sign that said "Mission Accomplished", everything would be magically resolved.
    • Fair and Balanced  •  8 mths ago
      langley virginia is where the CIA is located who trained and funded their agent Osama Bin Laden and where Agent Raymond Davis works who recently gave the taliban uranium.. Anwar al awlaki is hanging out at the pentagon. Im pretty sure the govt has been "in talks" with the taliban for decades now. Long before they were trained and funded to attack us and others. Im pretty sure they were "in talks" with the taliban when they helped them overthrow Gaddafi.

      You sheeple will just eat up anything thrown in your troughs. I advise you not to as it has made many of you mentally ill to eat those poisons.
    • Mark  •  8 mths ago
      We scuttle their talks, they scuttle our talks, and the money keeps flowing.
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