Navigation
Join our brand new verified AMN Telegram channel and get important news uncensored!
  •  

At least 17 Afghans killed in Taliban attacks as US peace envoy heads to region

Doctor Zalmay Khalilzad, then U.S. Ambassador to Iraq, and Gen. George Casey, then Commanding General, Multi-National Force - Iraq, attend a transfer of security responsibility ceremony in Baghdad, Iraq, Sept. 21, 2006. (Department of Defense photo by Spc. Michael Pfaff)

This article was originally published by Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty and is reprinted with permission.

Officials in Afghanistan say Taliban attacks have killed at least 10 soldiers and seven police officers as U.S. peace envoy Zalmay Khalilzad opens a tour of the region to push for peace negotiations with the militants.

Taliban militants attacked an army outpost in the Khwaja Ghar district of the northern province of Takhar early on November 9, provincial police chief Abdul Rashid Bashir said.

At least 10 soldiers were killed and 12 were wounded in the hourlong battle before the militants were repulsed, Bashir said.

The militants suffered “heavy casualties,” Bashir added, but didn’t elaborate.

Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid claimed responsibility for that attack.

Late on November 8, Taliban militants also attacked police forces in Farah, the capital of the western province of the same name. Provincial council member Abdul Samad Salehi said seven police officers were killed and three were wounded there.

Khalilzad, who is a former ambassador to Kabul, will visit Afghanistan, Pakistan, the United Arab Emirates, and Qatar this month to push for peace negotiations with the Afghan Taliban, the State Department has said.

A statement said Khalilzad will travel to the region from November 8 to 20 and meet with Afghan government officials and “other interested parties to advance the goal of an intra-Afghan dialogue and negotiations that include the Taliban and lead to a sustainable peace.”

For years, the United States has been trying to persuade the Taliban to agree to negotiate an end to the 17-year conflict in Afghanistan, as the Afghan security forces continue to struggle to counter stepped-up attacks by the militant group in its drive to force the Western-backed government in Kabul from power.

U.S. efforts foundered over the militants’ insistence on negotiating directly with Washington rather than the Afghan government, which it calls a “puppet” of the United States.

Khalilzad, Trump’s special adviser on Afghanistan, last visited the region in October.

The State Department said he had been “encouraged” to see that both the government in Kabul and the Taliban are “taking steps” toward organizing “authoritative negotiating teams.”

“A sustainable peace requires that all Afghans have a say in their country’s future,” it also said.

“The United States remains committed to a political settlement that results in an end to the war and to the terrorist threat posed to the United States and the world,” the statement added. “A peaceful Afghanistan can play a catalytic role in regional trade and development.”

As recently as late October, U.S. and Taliban officials conducted preliminary talks in Qatar, where the militants have a political office that serves as a de facto embassy.