Kabul: Several Taliban negotiators have begun meeting with U.S. officials in Qatar, where they are discussing preliminary trust-building measures, including a possible prisoner exchange, several former Taliban officials said Saturday.
According to New York Times, the former officials said that four to eight Taliban representatives had traveled to Qatar from Pakistan to set up a political office for the exiled Afghan insurgent group.
The comments suggested that the Taliban, which have not publicly said they would engage in peace talks to end the war in Afghanistan, were at least gearing up for preliminary discussions.
But the former Taliban officials, interviewed Saturday here in Kabul, were careful not to call the discussions peace talks, and U.S. officials would not confirm or deny that meetings had taken place.
“Currently there are no peace talks going on,” said Maulavi Qalamuddin Latifi, the former minister of vice and virtue for the Taliban, who is now a member of the High Peace Council. “The only thing is the negotiations over release of Taliban prisoners from Guantanamo which is still under discussion between both sides in Qatar.
“We also want to strengthen the talks so we can create an environment of trust for further talks in the future.”
The State Department has said that Marc Grossman, the special representative for Afghanistan and Pakistan, had meetings related to Afghanistan when he visited Qatar last week.
“He did have a number of meetings in Qatar focused on national reconciliation issues,” a State Department spokeswoman, Victoria Nuland, said at a briefing in Washington on Thursday. “I’m not going to get into the blow-by-blow either with regard to that stop or with regard to future meetings that he might have, except to say that we are intently focused on working these issues closely with the Afghan government.”
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