US President Donald Trump’s point man for Afghanistan on Sunday held talks with Army Chief General Qamar Javed Bajwa to discuss the next steps for advancing the peace process that has moved slowly since the landmark deal signed between the United States and Afghan Taliban on February 29.
Zalmay Khalilzad, despite Covid-19 that otherwise restricted official engagements, is travelling to Islamabad, Doha and Kabul. His tour suggests the importance the Trump administration still attaches to the Afghan peace deal despite pandemic and anti-racism protests in the US.
Khalilzad, who was accompanied by senior American officials, met army chief General Qamar Javed Bajwa was assisted by Director General Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) Lt-Gen Faiz Hameed and other senior security personnel.
An official handout issued by the military’s media wing, Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR), said that during the meeting matters of “mutual interest, overall security situation including Afghan refugees issue and Afghan reconciliation process and Pak-Afghan border management” were discussed.
“Both shared steps taken in this regard and agreed to continue working towards mutually agreed goals,” the statement concluded.
Although, no further details were available, but it is believed Khalilzad’s latest visit was aimed at discussing the next steps in the fragile peace efforts.
The US and Afghan Taliban signed a landmark deal in February that envisaged a roadmap for the political solution to the long war in Afghanistan. The key clause has been the prisoners’ exchange between the Afghan government and the Taliban. The prisoners’ swap was to take place within days of the signing of US-Taliban deal but the process hit a roadblock when Afghan President Ashraf Ghani refused to free 5,000 Taliban inmates in one go. The deadlock prevented the start of crucial intra-Afghan talks, which were originally to take place in the second week of March.